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2009–10 NCAA football bowl games

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2009–10 NCAA football bowl games
Number of bowl games per state.
Season2009
Number of bowls34
All-star games3
Bowl gamesDecember 19, 2009 –
February 6, 2010
National Championship2010 Citi BCS National Championship
Location of ChampionshipRose Bowl Stadium,
Template:City-state
Bowl record by conference
Conference Bowls Record Final AP poll
SEC 10 0–1 (0.000) 3
Big 12 8 0–0 (–) 3
ACC 7 1–2 (0.333) 3
Big Ten 7 0–0 (–) 4
Pac-10 7 1–2 (0.333) 4
Big East 6 2–0 (1.000) 3
Conference USA 6 2–2 (0.500) 0
MAC 5 0–1 (0.000) 1
Mountain West 5 3–0 (1.000) 3
WAC 4 0–2 (0.000) 1
Sun Belt 2 1–0 (1.000) 0
Independents 1 0–0 (–) 0


The 2009–10 NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision College Football Post-Season, follows the 2009 NCAA Division I FBS football season, contains 34 team-competitive bowl games, and three all-star games. The games begun play on December 19th, 2009 and include the 2010 BCS National Championship Game in Pasadena, California to be played on January 7th at the Rose Bowl Stadium. The three all-star games will be the East-West Shrine Game on January 23rd, the Senior Bowl on January 30th and the Texas vs. The Nation Game, to be played February 6th.

The NCAA divided Division I schools into two divisions starting in 1978: The Football Bowl Subdivision (known as Division I-A from 1978–2005) does not have a playoff system, but instead stages Bowl Games, whose participants are chosen based on their end-of-season conference standings and positions in national rankings (compiled by polls and computers). The Football Championship Subdivision (known through this same period as Division I-AA) plays in a sixteen-team, single elimination tournament for a recognized national championship, with the notable exception of the Ivy League and the Southwestern Athletic Conference, which abstain from participation in this playoff. The Ivies choose to limit their football schedule to 10 games and have a long-standing policy against playing postseason football, whereas the SWAC opts for a longer, more easily scheduled regular season, and profitable rivalry games like the nationally televised Bayou Classic in the Louisiana Superdome and the SWAC championship game. Between 1991 and 1999, the Heritage Bowl matched top teams from the historically black colleges and universities in a Division I-AA bowl game.

Selection of the teams

Number of bowl teams per state.

NCAA by-laws state that a school with a record of 6–6 in regular season play is eligible only if conferences cannot fill out available positions for bowl games with teams possessing seven (or more) wins (excluding games played in Hawaiʻi and conference championship games in the ACC, Big 12, Conference USA, Mid-American Conference and the SEC). An example was in 2008 when the Big Ten, the Big 12 and SEC each had two teams selected for the Bowl Championship Series games – Ohio State and Penn State from the Big Ten, Texas and Oklahoma from the Big 12 and Alabama and Florida from the SEC. With each conference sending two teams to the BCS, these three conferences forfeited several bowl game slots due to a lack of teams with a winning record.

As with the 2006 and 2008 seasons, all eligible teams with at least 7 wins made it in to a bowl game. Of the 71 eligible teams, only 68 could play in a game, and all three eligible teams that will sit out bowl season are 6-6: Louisiana-Lafayette, Louisiana-Monroe, and Notre Dame. In the case of Notre Dame, they chose not to play in a bowl game themselves.

Fox ends BCS contract

Fox Sports will no longer broadcast the Bowl Championship Series following the conclusion of the Orange Bowl on January 5th; the network had carried the first three BCS National Championship stand-alone games. ABC will broadcast this season's contest because of their separate agreement with the Pasadena Tournament of Roses, the organizers of the Rose Bowl Game and the hosts of the 2010 national championship. Beginning in 2011, ABC sister company ESPN will begin carrying all of the BCS bowls, in an agreement that will last through 2014. Fox has signed a long-term contract extension with the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic through 2014, with a new prime-time Friday night date starting in 2011.

Sponsorship and stadium changes

Pioneer is out as sponsor of the Las Vegas Bowl and Maaco becomes the new title sponsor, and has rebranded the game as the Maaco Bowl Las Vegas. In another change, the Motor City Bowl thanks to Little Caesars will now carry the name of the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl. Advocare will become the title sponsor of the Independence Bowl. In a stadium shift, the Cotton Bowl Classic moves from its self-named home for 73 years at the grounds of Fair Park to Jerry Jones's new Cowboys Stadium in Arlington. The St. Petersburg Bowl was initially to be played without a sponsor after being sponsored by MagicJack in 2008, but just a few weeks before the Bowl, Beef O'Brady's agreed to be the sponsor, so the game will now be the "St. Petersburg Bowl presented by Beef O'Brady's". [1]

New bowls in 2010–11

Fair Park will be the site of a new bowl game, tentatively named the Dallas Football Classic on New Years Day 2011, with the Big Ten and Conference USA providing opponents, and Yankee Stadium will host a game that is now dubbed as the Yankee Bowl in December 2010, pitting teams from the Big East and Big 12. This contest would be the first bowl game in the Metropolitan New York area since the now defunct Garden State Bowl, and the first in New York City since the now defunct Gotham Bowl was played in the original Yankee Stadium. The NCAA Football Issues Committee must approve of these games in the spring of 2010 to make them official.

Coaching changes

As a result of head coaching changes between the regular season and the bowl season, the following teams will play their postseason contests with interim head coaches:

Team Bowl Season coach Interim head coach Result 2010 head coach
Central Michigan GMAC Butch Jones Steve Stripling TBD TBA
Cincinnati Sugar Brian Kelly Jeff Quinn TBD Butch Jones
Marshall Little Caesars Pizza Mark Snyder Rick Minter Won 21–17 over Ohio Doc Holliday

In addition, the following teams have coaches that either resigned or retired from their teams, but will work in their bowl games:

Team Bowl Current coach Result 2010 head coach
Florida State Gator Bobby Bowden TBD Jimbo Fisher

Notes

  • Kelly left Cincinnati to take the same job at Notre Dame.
  • Jones left Central Michigan to fill the Cincinnati vacancy.
  • On December 26, Florida head coach Urban Meyer announced his resignation due to health concerns, effective after the Gators' Sugar Bowl appearance.[2] However, Meyer had a change of heart and announced the following day that he would instead take an indefinite leave of absence, and expected to be back coaching by the start of the 2010 season. Offensive coordinator Steve Addazio will take over Meyer's duties until he decides to return.[3]

Bowl schedule

All dates and game times for the 34 2009–10 season bowl games were announced on April 30, 2009, and are subject to change. They received licenses from the NCAA Football Issues Committee.[4][5]
NOTE: Rankings from final BCS Standings of December 6, 2009.

Non BCS Contests.
Date Game Site Score
12/19[6] New Mexico Bowl University Stadium
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM
Wyoming 35 (7–6, 4–4 MWC)
Fresno State 28 (8–5, 6–2 WAC) (2 OT)
St. Petersburg Bowl presented by Beef 'O' Brady's Tropicana Field
St. Petersburg, FL
Rutgers 45 (9–4, 3–4 Big East)
UCF 24 (8–5, 6–2 C-USA)
12/20[7] R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans, LA
Middle Tennessee 42 (10–3, 7–1 Sun Belt)[N 1]
Southern Miss 32 (7–6, 3–5 C-USA)
12/22[8] Maaco Bowl Las Vegas Sam Boyd Stadium
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Las Vegas, NV
(14) BYU 44 (11–2, 7–1 MWC)
(18) Oregon State 20 (8–5, 6–3 Pac-10)
12/23 SDCCU Poinsettia Bowl Qualcomm Stadium
San Diego, CA
(23) Utah 37 (10–3, 6–2 MWC)
California 27 (8–5, 5–4 Pac-10)
12/24 Sheraton Hawaiʻi Bowl Aloha Stadium
ʻAiea, HI
SMU 45 (8–5, 6–2 C-USA)
Nevada 10 (8–5, 7–1 WAC)[N 2]
12/26 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl[9] Ford Field
Detroit, MI
Marshall 21 (7–6, 4–4 C-USA)[N 3]
Ohio 17 (9–5, 7–1 MAC)
Meineke Car Care Bowl[10] Bank of America Stadium
Charlotte, NC
(17) Pittsburgh 19 (10–3, 5–2 Big East)
North Carolina 17 (8–5, 4–4 ACC)
Emerald Bowl[11] AT&T Park
San Francisco, CA
(24) USC 24 (9–4, 5–4 Pac-10)
Boston College 13 (8–5, 5–3 ACC)
12/27[12] Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl LP Field
Nashville, TN
Clemson 21 (9–5, 6–2 ACC)[13]
Kentucky 13 (7–6, 3–5 SEC)[14]
Date Game Site Time
(US EST)
TV Matchup
12/28[15] Advocare V100 Independence Bowl Independence Stadium
Shreveport, LA
5 PM ESPN2 Texas A&M (6–6, 3–5 Big 12) vs.
Georgia[16] (7–5, 4–4 SEC)
12/29[17] EagleBank Bowl RFK Stadium
Washington, DC
4:30 PM ESPN UCLA (6–6, 3–6 Pac-10) [18] [N 4]
vs. Temple[N 5][18] (9–3, 7–1 MAC)
Champs Sports Bowl Citrus Bowl
Orlando, FL
8 PM ESPN (15) Miami (FL) (9–3, 5–3 ACC) vs.
(25) Wisconsin (9–3, 5–3 Big Ten)
12/30[19] Roady's Humanitarian Bowl Bronco Stadium
Boise State University
Boise, ID
4:30 PM ESPN Bowling Green[N 6] (7–5, 6–2 MAC) vs.
Idaho (7–5, 4–4 WAC)
Pacific Life Holiday Bowl Qualcomm Stadium
San Diego, CA
8 PM ESPN (20) Arizona (8–4, 6–3 Pac-10) vs.
(22) Nebraska (9–4, 6–2 Big 12)
12/31[20] Bell Helicopters Armed Forces Bowl Amon G. Carter Stadium
Texas Christian University
Fort Worth, TX
12 noon ESPN Air Force (7–5, 5–3 MWC) vs.
Houston[21] (10–3, 6–2 C–USA)
Brut Sun Bowl Sun Bowl Stadium
University of Texas at El Paso
El Paso, TX
2:00 PM CBS (21) Stanford (8–4, 6–3 Pac-10) vs.
Oklahoma[22] (7–5, 5–3 Big 12)
Texas Bowl Reliant Stadium
Houston, TX
3:30 PM ESPN Missouri[23] (8–4, 4–4 Big 12) vs.
Navy[N 7] (9–4)
Insight Bowl Sun Devil Stadium
Arizona State University
Tempe, AZ
6:00 PM NFL Network Minnesota (6–6, 3–5 Big Ten) vs.
Iowa State[24] (6–6, 3–5 Big 12)
Chick-fil-A Bowl Georgia Dome
Atlanta, GA
7:30 PM ESPN (11) Virginia Tech[16] (9–3, 6–2 ACC) vs.
Tennessee[16] (7–5, 4–4 SEC)
1/1[25] Outback Bowl Raymond James Stadium
Tampa, FL
11 AM ESPN Northwestern (8–4, 5–3 Big Ten) vs.
Auburn (7–5, 3–5 SEC)
Konica Minolta Gator Bowl Jacksonville Municipal Stadium
Jacksonville, FL
1 PM CBS Florida State (6–6, 4–4 ACC) vs.
(16) West Virginia (9–3, 5–2 Big East)
Capital One Bowl Citrus Bowl
Orlando, FL
1 PM ABC (13) Penn State (10–2, 6–2 Big Ten) vs.
(12) LSU[16] (9–3, 5–3 SEC)
1/2 International Bowl Rogers Centre
Toronto, ON, CAN
Noon ESPN 2 South Florida (7–5, 3–4 Big East) vs.
Northern Illinois (7–5, 5–3 MAC)
PapaJohns.com Bowl Legion Field
Birmingham, AL
2 PM ESPN UConn (7–5, 3–4 Big East) vs.
South Carolina[16] (7–5, 3–5 SEC)
AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic Cowboys Stadium
Arlington, TX
2 PM FOX (19) Oklahoma State (9–3, 6–2 Big 12) vs.
Ole Miss (8–4, 4–4 SEC)
AutoZone Liberty Bowl Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium
Memphis, TN
5:30 PM ESPN East Carolina (9–4, 7–1 C–USA) vs.
Arkansas[16] (7–5, 3–5 SEC)
Valero Energy Alamo Bowl Alamodome
San Antonio, TX
9 PM ESPN Michigan State (6–6, 4–4 Big Ten) vs.
Texas Tech[22] (8–4, 5–3 Big 12)
1/6 GMAC Bowl Ladd Peebles Stadium
Mobile, AL
7:00 PM ESPN Troy [N 8] (9–3, 8–0 Sun Belt) vs.
Central Michigan (11–2, 8–0 MAC)
Bowl Championship Series 2010 Schedule
Date Game Site Time
(US EST)
TV Matchup
1/1 Rose Bowl Game presented by citi Rose Bowl
Pasadena, CA
5 PM ABC (8) Ohio State (10–2, 7–1 Big Ten) vs.
(7) Oregon (10–2, 8–1 Pac-10)
Allstate Sugar Bowl Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans, LA
8:30 PM FOX (3) Cincinnati (12–0, 7–0 Big East) vs.
(5) Florida (12–1, 8–0 SEC)
1/4 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl University of Phoenix Stadium
Glendale, AZ
8 PM FOX (6) Boise State (13–0, 8–0 WAC) vs.
(4) TCU (12–0, 8–0 MWC)
1/5 FedEx Orange Bowl Dolphin Stadium
Miami Gardens, FL
8 PM FOX (10) Iowa (10–2, 6–2 Big Ten) vs.
(9) Georgia Tech (11–2, 7–1 ACC)
1/7 2010 Citi BCS National Championship Game Rose Bowl
Pasadena, CA
8 PM ABC (2) Texas (13–0, 8–0 Big 12) vs.
(1) Alabama (13–0, 8–0 SEC)
  1. ^ Troy finished their regular season with a perfect 8–0 conference record, earning the Sun Belt title and the conference's lone automatic bowl bid; however, the New Orleans Bowl opted for Middle Tennessee, a Sun Belt team guaranteed an at-large, because Troy and Southern Miss had played each other in the 2008 New Orleans Bowl.
  2. ^ Hawaiʻi played a 13-game schedule this season, and lost to Wisconsin on December 5 to finish the season at 6–7, rendering them ineligible for a bowl game. As a result, the berth passed to another WAC team, Nevada.
  3. ^ Because the Big Ten received two bids into the BCS, the spot normally filled by the #7 Big Ten team was instead be filled by the at-large Thundering Herd.
  4. ^ Army, had to defeat Navy in its final game to be bowl-eligible, but lost 17–3 December 12. Conference USA has a contingency contract for this slot if Army fails to beat Navy; however, all bowl-eligible C–USA teams were already in bowls.
  5. ^ The ACC had only seven bowl-eligible teams this season. The MAC has a contingency slot with this bowl if the ACC does not produce eight bowl-eligible teams, and all five of its bowl-eligible teams have at least 7 wins, so Temple received this berth.
  6. ^ The MWC did not qualify enough teams to fill all of its bowl bids as a result of TCU receiving a BCS bid.
  7. ^ Navy won seven games to be bowl-eligible, as they are playing a 13-game schedule. They secured the bid on November 7 with a 23–21 win over Notre Dame.
  8. ^ This slot became an at-large slot after the ACC produced only seven bowl-eligible teams.

Post-BCS all-star games

Date All-Star Game Location Time
US EST
TV
1/23 East-West Shrine Game Citrus Bowl
Orlando, FL
3 PM ESPN2
1/31 Under Armour Senior Bowl[26] Ladd-Peebles Stadium,
Mobile, AL
4 PM NFL Network
2/6 Texas vs. The Nation Game[27] Sun Bowl Stadium
University of Texas at El Paso
El Paso, TX
2 PM CBS College Sports Network

References

  1. ^ http://stpetersburgbowl.com/BOB-release.php
  2. ^ "Meyer to coach final game at Sugar Bowl". ESPN.com. 2009-12-26. Retrieved 2009-12-26. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ "Meyer has change of heart". ESPN.com. 2009-12-27. Retrieved 2009-12-27. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ Future BCS Schedules
  5. ^ The NCAA News:2009–10 Bowl Schedule
  6. ^ http://www.espnplus.com/releaseStPete2.php
  7. ^ http://neworleansbowl.com/2007/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=32&Itemid=1
  8. ^ http://www.lvbowl.com/media.php?id=43
  9. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=4210018
  10. ^ http://www.meinekecarcarebowl.com/media/article_09date.html
  11. ^ http://emeraldbowl.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/040809aab.html
  12. ^ http://www.musiccitybowl.com/newsroom/news.php?nid=169
  13. ^ http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/football/teams/ccl
  14. ^ http://www.kentucky.com/836/story/1041995.html
  15. ^ http://www.independencebowl.org
  16. ^ a b c d e f http://www.tennessean.com/article/20091202/SPORTS0601/912020394/Music+City++UT+bowl+games+are+set
  17. ^ http://www.eaglebankbowl.com/pdf/press/2009EagleBank%20Bowl_4_23_09.pdf
  18. ^ a b http://www.insidesocal.com/ucla/2009/12/breaking-news-ucla-headed-to-e.html
  19. ^ http://www.holidaybowl.com/2009/game-dates-set-for-san-diego-bowl-games.html
  20. ^ http://www.chick-fil-abowl.com/PressBox/News/20090311GameDate/tabid/161/Default.aspx
  21. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=4719464
  22. ^ a b http://www.newsok.com/ou-to-take-on-stanford-in-sun-bowl/article/3423075?custom_click=lead_story_title
  23. ^ http://www.kmbc.com/news/21881409/detail.html
  24. ^ http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jrM6f5NpC7Z17TQQoWitOUUtpyDQD9CE2NKO0
  25. ^ http://www.outbackbowl.com/facts/about.html
  26. ^ http://www.seniorbowl.com
  27. ^ http://texasvsthenation.cstv.com/

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