2013–14 NCAA football bowl games: Difference between revisions
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* [[Big Ten Conference|Big Ten]] '''(2)''' : [[2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Penn State]] (via NCAA sanctions), [[2013 Purdue Boilermakers football team|Purdue ]] |
* [[Big Ten Conference|Big Ten]] '''(2)''' : [[2013 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Penn State]] (via NCAA sanctions), [[2013 Purdue Boilermakers football team|Purdue ]] |
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* [[Big 12 Conference|Big 12]] '''(1)''' : [[2013 Iowa State Cyclones football team|Iowa State]] |
* [[Big 12 Conference|Big 12]] '''(1)''' : [[2013 Iowa State Cyclones football team|Iowa State]] |
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* [[Conference USA]] '''(5)''' : [[2013 Southern Miss Golden Eagles football team|Southern Miss]], [[2013 FIU Panthers football team|FIU]], [[2013 UTEP Miners football team|UTEP]], [[2013 UAB Blazers football team|UAB]], [[2013 UTSA Roadrunners |
* [[Conference USA]] '''(5)''' : [[2013 Southern Miss Golden Eagles football team|Southern Miss]], [[2013 FIU Panthers football team|FIU]], [[2013 UTEP Miners football team|UTEP]], [[2013 UAB Blazers football team|UAB]], [[2013 UTSA Roadrunners football team|UTSA]] (2nd year of transition) |
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* [[NCAA Division I FBS independent schools|Independents]] '''(3)''' : [[2013 Idaho Vandals football team|Idaho]], [[2013 New Mexico State Aggies football team|New Mexico State]], [[2013 Army Black Knights football team|Army]] |
* [[NCAA Division I FBS independent schools|Independents]] '''(3)''' : [[2013 Idaho Vandals football team|Idaho]], [[2013 New Mexico State Aggies football team|New Mexico State]], [[2013 Army Black Knights football team|Army]] |
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* [[Mid-American Conference|MAC]] '''(6)''' : [[2013 Akron Zips football team|Akron]], [[2013 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team|Eastern Michigan]], [[2013 Kent State Golden Flashes football team|Kent State]], [[2013 Miami RedHawks football team|Miami (OH)]], [[2013 UMass Minutemen football team|UMass]], [[2013 Western Michigan Broncos football team|Western Michigan]] |
* [[Mid-American Conference|MAC]] '''(6)''' : [[2013 Akron Zips football team|Akron]], [[2013 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team|Eastern Michigan]], [[2013 Kent State Golden Flashes football team|Kent State]], [[2013 Miami RedHawks football team|Miami (OH)]], [[2013 UMass Minutemen football team|UMass]], [[2013 Western Michigan Broncos football team|Western Michigan]] |
Revision as of 21:36, 9 November 2013
2013–14 NCAA football bowl games | |||||||||
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Season | 2013 | ||||||||
Regular season | August 29, 2013 – December 14, 2013 | ||||||||
Number of bowls | 35 | ||||||||
All-star games | 2 | ||||||||
Bowl games | December 21, 2013 – January 6, 2014 | ||||||||
National Championship | 2014 BCS National Championship | ||||||||
Location of Championship | Rose Bowl Pasadena, CA | ||||||||
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The 2013–14 NCAA football bowl games is a series of college football bowl games. They will conclude the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season, and include 35 team-competitive games and two all-star games. The games began on Saturday December 21, 2013 and, aside from the all-star games, will conclude with the 2014 BCS National Championship at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena that will be played on January 6, 2014.
Selection of the teams
As per the 2010, 2011, and 2012 seasons, initial bowl eligibility would go to teams with no lower than a non-losing record (6-6) for the season. On August 2, 2012, the NCAA Division I Board of Directors approved a significant change to the process to determine bowl eligible teams, going so far as to potentially allow 5-7 teams to go to a bowl, in case there were not enough regular bowl-eligible teams to fill every game.
If a bowl has one or more conferences/teams unable to meet their contractual commitments and there are no available bowl-eligible teams, the open spots can be filled – by the particular bowl's sponsoring agencies – as follows:[1]
- Teams finishing 6-6 with one win against a team from the lower Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), regardless of whether that FCS school meets NCAA scholarship requirements. Until now, an FCS win counted only if that opponent met the scholarship requirements—specifically, that school had to award at least 90% of the FCS maximum of 63 scholarship equivalents over a two-year period. In the 2013 season, programs in four FCS conferences cannot meet the 90% requirement (56.7 equivalents)—the Ivy League, which prohibits all athletic scholarships; the Patriot League and Pioneer Football League, which do not currently award football scholarships; and the Northeast Conference, which limits football scholarships to 40 equivalents.
- 6-6 teams with two wins over FCS schools.
- 6-7 teams that normally play a 13-team schedule, such as Hawaii's home opponents. Although Hawaii normally plays a 13-game schedule, it is only playing 12 games this season.
- FCS teams who are in the final year of the two-year FBS transition process, if they have at least a 6-6 record.
- Finally, 5-7 teams that have a top-5 Academic Progress Rate (APR) score. This was later adjusted to allow other 5-7 teams to be selected thereafter—in order of their APR.[2]
Under a rule change approved by the NCAA Legislative Council on May 3, 2013, teams that enter a conference championship game with a 6–6 record are bowl-eligible regardless of the result of the championship game, without the team having to seek an NCAA waiver.[3]
Bowl Championship Series
Ten teams were selected for the Bowl Championship Series:
Conference Champions
Schedule
The 2013-14 bowl season also will be the last for the current Bowl Championship Series format in one way or another. Starting in 2014-15, a new system, the College Football Playoff, will be used with two national semi-finals rotated among with Rose and Sugar, Orange and Fiesta, along with the Cotton and Peach Bowls and a championship game played at a neutral site two weeks later. The Rose and Sugar Bowls will be the two permanent games played on January 1, while the other four will play on December 31. In addition, the number of bowls will expand to 39 games that year with four new games - the Camellia Bowl, scheduled for Crampton Bowl in Montgomery, Alabama pitting the Sun Belt against the MAC; the Bahamas Bowl to be played in Nassau between the MAC and the American Athletic Conference; the Miami Beach Bowl to be played in Marlins Park with an American Athletic Conference team as host; and the Boca Raton Bowl, to be played at FAU Stadium, with a third MAC team taking on a team from Conference USA.
The 2013 – 2014 bowl game schedule was announced in May 2013.[4]
Note: All times are EST (UTC−5).
Non-BCS games
*if bowl-eligible
BCS Games
Date | Game | Site | Television | Teams | Affiliations | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jan. 1 | Rose Bowl presented by Vizio | Rose Bowl Pasadena, CA 5:00 pm |
ESPN | Pac-12 Big Ten |
||
Tostitos Fiesta Bowl | University of Phoenix Stadium Glendale, AZ 8:30 pm |
Big 12 at large |
||||
Jan. 2 | Allstate Sugar Bowl | Mercedes-Benz Superdome New Orleans, LA 8:30 pm |
SEC at large |
|||
Jan. 3 | Discover Orange Bowl | Sun Life Stadium Miami Gardens, FL TBD |
ACC at large |
|||
Jan. 6 | Vizio BCS National Championship Game | Rose Bowl Pasadena, CA 8:30 pm |
BCS #1 BCS #2 |
All Star Games
Bowl eligibility
To play in a bowl game, a college football team must qualify to do so according to the NCAA rules of bowl eligibility.
Eligible
- AAC (4) : Cincinnati, Houston, Louisville, UCF
- ACC (6) : Clemson, Duke, Florida State, Miami (FL), Virginia Tech, Georgia Tech
- Big Ten (7) : Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Ohio State, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Iowa
- Big 12 (5) : Baylor, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, Texas
- Conference USA (5) : Rice, Tulane, North Texas, East Carolina, Marshall
- Independents (2) : BYU, Notre Dame
- MAC (6) : Ball State, Buffalo, Northern Illinois, Ohio, Toledo, Bowling Green
- Mountain West (2) : Fresno State, Boise State
- Pac-12 (6) : Oregon, Oregon State, Stanford, Arizona State, Arizona, UCLA
- SEC (8) : Alabama, Auburn, LSU, Missouri, South Carolina, Texas A&M, Ole Miss, Georgia
- Sun Belt (3) : Louisiana–Lafayette, Texas State, Western Kentucky
Number of bowl berths available: 70
Number of teams assured of bowl eligibility: 54
Teams unable to become bowl-eligible
- AAC (2) : Connecticut, Temple
- ACC (1) : Virginia
- Big Ten (2) : Penn State (via NCAA sanctions), Purdue
- Big 12 (1) : Iowa State
- Conference USA (5) : Southern Miss, FIU, UTEP, UAB, UTSA (2nd year of transition)
- Independents (3) : Idaho, New Mexico State, Army
- MAC (6) : Akron, Eastern Michigan, Kent State, Miami (OH), UMass, Western Michigan
- Mountain West (2) : Air Force, Hawaii
- Pac-12 (1) : California
- SEC (2) : Kentucky, Arkansas
- Sun Belt (1) : Georgia State
Number of teams assured of bowl ineligibility: 26
References
- ^ Johnson, Greg. "DI Board approves process to fill football bowls in case of shortfall". Retrieved August 2, 2012.
- ^ Palm, Jerry. "Possible fallout from Canes' self-imposed bowl ban".
- ^ "Midnight Madness to start earlier". ESPN.com. May 3, 2013. Retrieved May 4, 2013.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ "2013–14 Bowl Schedule", ESPN, May 22, 2013. Retrieved October 20, 2013.