And in case you forgot and think FSU played poorly because the game "didn't count".... UMD beat Cal-poly who beat FSU, so this win isn't surprising if you look at it like that.
I am not buying that either. I will give you two perfect examples of why these games do not mean as much to teams.
2002 St. Louis
Arizona plays Sonoma in the quarterfinals on one field and Stanford plays CSU in another quarterfinal on the adjacent field.
Arizona and Stanford lose devastating overtime games in which they led for a majority of the game.
The next day, in the consolation round, Arizona lost to Texas A and M by a few I believe and Stanford lost to Michigan 6-4.
This is the press release from Michigan's web page after their win:
A day after a season-ending loss can be a difficult time to play for some teams, and this was true for both 6th-seeded Stanford and 4th-seeded Michigan today at the USLIA National Championships consolation round. Michigan lost a tough game to 5th-seeded Brigham Young, 10-3, and Stanford saw a 7-2 lead disappear in a 10-9 overtime loss to 3rd-seeded Colorado State. However, the two teams still played for fun in an exhibition-style game that featured shortened quarters and more frequent substitution.
The Wolverines (18-3) built a 3-0 lead after the first quarter and held on in the second half for a 6-4 win. Junior midfielder Chip Thomas (Tenafly, NJ/Dwight-Englewood) led Michigan with two goals and junior attackman Sloan Buchan-McGilliard (Ann Arbor, MI/Pioneer) added a goal and an assist. Freshman midfielder Mike O'Leary (St. Louis, MO/Clayton) also scored a goal in front of a home crowd. Every healthy Michigan player saw game action.
Michigan may have been better than Stanford. For all I know, Stanford may have played all their backups. The quote above clearly shows that, even in a 6-4 win over a top 10 team, they played all their players. Do you expect me to believe that Michigan would do that if they were still alive in the tournament? Give me a break. Do you think it is possible that Stanford did not want to be there at all? I will answer that one for you. They left right after the game and did not stick around to watch the National Championship game.
Arizona lost to Texas & M and I have a hard time believing that they fielded their starters. They just lost an overtime game to the eventual champions that year! Would you be excited to play in some crap consolation game against a team who got waxed in the first round by Stanford 18-10?
A & M lost to Sonoma by 10 goals and Cal by 9 goals during the 2002 regular season. In turn, Arizona beat Cal in the first round 12-9.
So, your claim that the outcome doesn't surprise you and/or that all teams take these games seriously does not seem to be applicable in many cases.