Latest Bowl Games Stories
Posted: Nov 22nd 2009 8:30 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Bowl Games

With not many upsets -- outside of the Wild, Wild West Conference or better known as the Pac-10 -- the top nine teams in my Associated Press Top 25 ballot remained the same as last week.
So unless
Alabama loses to
Auburn,
Florida loses to
Florida State or
Texas loses to Texas A&M this weekend, the BCS title game seems pretty cut and dried between the SEC champion (Alabama/Florida) against Texas. That is, as long as the Longhorns don't lose to
Nebraska in the Big 12 title game next week.
With the BCS title game participants pretty much locked in, college football's favorite pastime has already begun. No, not figuring out who will be
Notre Dame's next coach, but lobbying for the best possible bowl berth.
Posted: Nov 16th 2009 4:00 PM ET by Terence Moore (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Alabama, Boise State, Cincinnati, Florida, TCU, Texas, BCS, Big 12, Mountain West, SEC, Bowl Games

It's that silly time of year again. There are so many significant teams among the big boys of college football, but there are just two slots on Jan. 7 in Pasadena, Calif., for that title game of the Bowl Championship Series. So the voice of the older Jim Mora is screaming in my subconscious.
Playoffs,
playoffs?
We don't need playoffs in this situation.
Posted: Nov 5th 2009 5:07 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: General CFB Insanity, Bowl Games
The six BCS leagues already get most of the BCS bowl game slots and now there's a greater chance they'll start gobbling up all of the at-large bids to the minor bowls beginning in 2010.
Last week, the NCAA's Division I Board of Directors agreed to sponsor legislation that would treat football teams with .500 records the same as teams with winning records for bowl participation. If the legislation passes, it would allow a bowl, that has to go outside its conference affiliation to fill a spot, to select a more attractive 6-6 BCS school over a 7- or 8-win non-BCS school.
Which is exactly why the Big 12 proposed the legislation. Sources told FanHouse that the Big East and ACC support the legislation, while the other BCS leagues (Big Ten, Pac-10 and SEC) also are expected to support it.
Posted: Oct 20th 2009 4:45 PM ET by Clay Travis (RSS feed)
Filed Under: General CFB Insanity, Bowl Games

We've had
BCS outrage across the land, two anti-trust hearings in Congress, and enough fan anger to power a trip to Mars (if spaceships ran on rage). None of it has changed the BCS. At least, not yet. Now there's a new front in the fan war against college football's broken system. Meet the Playoff PAC, a political action committee, that is raising money to fight the powers-that-be in the BCS. Their goal? Donate money to candidates who also support a college football playoff until they've remade Congress in their pro-playoff image.
Don't believe me?
Read their mission statement including this stirring finale "To that end, Playoff PAC helps elect pro-reform political candidates, mobilizes public support, and provides a centralized source of pro-reform news, thought and scholarship." Already the PAC has received the commendation of three elected officials in Congress, Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah and Representatives Neil Abercrombie of Hawaii and Joe Barton of Texas.
Posted: Sep 22nd 2009 6:45 PM ET by David Whitley (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Boise State, Brigham Young, Florida State, WAC, Bowl Games

Unless the NCAA takes the win away,
Bobby Bowden just did
college football a big favor. His
Florida State team beat
Brigham Young, knocking out a pretender to the throne.
Then
Oregon beat fellow pretender
Utah. Now if somebody could dump
Boise State, we'll all have a merry Christmas.
That's not likely because the
Broncos have already gone unbeaten in their one-game season. It's all over but the routing of San Jose State, Idaho, UC Davis, UC Chula Vista and UC Schwarzenegger.
Posted: Aug 13th 2009 5:50 PM ET by Mark Hasty (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Big 10, Pac 10, Rumors, Bowl Games

In the least secret secret negotiations ever, it appears that the Alamo Bowl is about to
ditch the Big Ten for the Pac 10. The San Antonio-based bowl has already moved its game into January and is increasing its per-team payout to $3 million.
If the rumored plan is true the Pac 10's No. 2 team would head to San Antonio to play the Big 12's No. 3. Currently the Pac 10's runner-up plays in the Holiday Bowl.
As a college football fan, I can only applaud the move. It's been no secret that the Pac 10's bowl tie-ins have been, how shall we say, a little weak. Maybe it's because they don't play any games outside their home territory, apart from the Sun Bowl in that well-known media hotspot El Paso.
But isn't this a huge insult to the Big Ten?
Posted: Aug 3rd 2009 7:27 PM ET by Mark Hasty (RSS feed)
Filed Under: General CFB Insanity, Bowl Games

In case you're wondering how the Motor City Bowl is doing these days with Michigan's economy running like an anemic hamster on an exercise wheel, the answer is "Not so hot." Chrysler used to be one of the bowl's big sponsors, but dropped out a while back. General Motors is too busy trying to get out of bankruptcy to muck about with bowl games. Ford's still in the picture, but crikey, are there any Detroit-area businesses healthy enough to save the Motor City Bowl?
Yes yes.
Little Caesars Pizza, long-time friend of cash-strapped college students, is entertaining the thought of becoming the game's sponsor, and their sponsorship could lead to a new name for college football's most maligned bowl game. But what will they call it?
Posted: Jul 29th 2009 12:21 PM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Texas Tech, Big 12, Bowl Games

DALLAS --Texas Tech coach
Mike Leach has always cut against the grain.
You can look at his career choice after graduating law school, or his fascination with pirates, and, of course, his wacky offensive system.
So go figure when it comes to his stance on a college football playoff. Leach has long been an advocate of some type of playoff system in Division I-A football to determine the national champion.
Posted: Jul 25th 2009 12:05 PM ET by Mark Hasty (RSS feed)
Filed Under: BCS, Fans, General CFB Insanity, Bowl Games

So it has come to this: Brandon Kennedy, a 21-year-old former college football player, is currently living on the streets of Washington, DC in support of a cause dear to his heart. Health care reform? Foreign policy? Third World debt relief?
Of course not. He's
agitating for playoffs in college football.
Kennedy played football at Central Washington, which is a Division II school. They have playoffs in Division II. The very highest level of college football does not. Few people are happy with this. None have gone so far as to live on the streets so they can be closer to the seats of power.
Brandon Kennedy has a plan, and he wants it to get a fair hearing.