This is misleading for several reasons.
Schedules are not secure more than 3 years out so just look at 2015, 2016, and 2017. The sources for information more than 3 years out are very scketchy and the information may not be reliable:
http://www.fbschedules.com/ncaa/ncaa-football-schedules.phpALL Power 5 FBS schools play a lot of easy OOC games. It's extremely rare when a school doesn't do this like FSU this year (Notre Dame, Florida, and Oklahoma St). Please list all the schools from the Power 5 conferences that don't play 2 or 3 easy OOC games (mid-major FBS schools or FCS schools). FSU was truly the exception this year only playing one such easy game (Citadel).
Also, the Big 10 and SEC only play 8 conference games, not 9 like the Big 12. So the SEC and Big 10 play 4 OOC games. When they play a decent OOC game (say, Alabama playing West Virginia, or Michigan St playing Oregon), that just makes up for the lack of an extra conference game that the Big 12 plays. If an SEC or Big 10 school plays a decent OOC game, they still have 3 easy OOC games, just like Baylor and the rest of the Big 12 teams.
Now for an important but unnoticed fact. When Alabama does play a decent OOC team, they avoid playing on the road. No home and away series with OOC schools. They play at neutral sites.
2012 - Michigan in Arlington, TX at Cowboys Stadium
2013 - Virginia Tech in Atlanta, GA at the Georgia Dome
2014 - West Virginia in Atlanta, GA at the Georgia Dome
2015 - Wisconsin in Arlington, TX at Cowboys Stadium
2016 - USC in Arlington, TX at Cowboys Stadium
Nick Saban likes to make it look like he plays a tough schedule, but he manipulates the situation into his favor by avoiding road games for tough OOC opponents.