Good inspiring story of a great team. Not quite as informative as some other documentaries, they sort of gloss over some of the details, but then again it's very hard to condense 13 games, an entire season, into 90 minutes. I guess what was really missing was some focal point, like a superstar, but that's just the way the team was, a true team without a superstar player with every player rising to the occasion. It's the lack of a single hero, that made this documentary seem like it was missing something compared to others, but that's my own bias and not the fault of the movie makers so I gave it 5 stars.
The director also didn't choose to overemphasize the "little guy" aspect of the story, perhaps to its detriment. In not choosing to whine or portray Utah as victims of a BCS system that never gives small teams a chance at the national title, the documentary takes a high road and leaves the viewers to decide if this Utah team was worthy of a title shot.
I thought the documentary should have mentioned that Utah finished #2 in the final AP polls, the highest ever final ranking for a non-BCS small school. And despite the fact that they finished undefeated, they were not named the national champions, the title going to a Florida team that went 13-1 and had a harder time beating common opponent Alabama. Again, this is not a preachy documentary, it only shows a great team and what they did during a remarkable season, leaving the viewer to decide for themselves if they are worthy of being called the national champion. Perhaps more documentaries should follow this example.