Tuesday, November 29, 2011

BCS MESS

It's important to note that I have always been anti-BCS, but now things might have changed. Am I all of a sudden pro-BCS? I don't even know anymore, but really, this BCS Mess is fun. Unfair, corrupt and crazy; but fun.

With three of the top five teams losing this week, the BCS is in complete chaos. My Top 5 might not even be close to the BCS Top 5. My Top 10 or Top 25 for that matter will be completely different because the polls have imploded. You can see my Top 25 here.

But really, the fact that we're talking about the BCS is great. If it wasn't for the BCS, then yesterday would have meant NOTHING. Absolutely nothing. Oklahoma State, Oregon and Oklahoma would all lose and say "That's OK, we're still making the playoffs." The finishes would not have been epic. The games would not have mattered. You want a playoff in college football? You had it. It started yesterday. Three teams were eliminated. Done. More to come.

You want to compete, you want to win every game. The BCS motivates you to win every game. This is what makes college football the greatest sport because every game matters. Did you not see the amazing finish in overtime between Tennessee and Vanderbilt? Does that game matter in terms of national championship talk? NO, but Tennessee is still alive to become bowl eligible thanks to that win.
My Bowl Projections

The top five of the BCS will have some order of these teams: LSU, Alabama, Arkansas, Stanford/Virginia Tech/Oklahoma State.

There are some key things to note:
1) Remember before Oklahoma State and they were No. 2 and everyone was talking about "No we can't have a rematch if Oklahoma State loses" and Alabama was at No. 3 and Oregon was at No. 4 and LSU already beat them both? Well, Oregon's out now with the loss at home to USC to give them two losses on the year. But with Oklahoma State losing AND Oklahoma losing, it seems almost certain we'll have a rematch in the BCS Championship Game for the first time.

2) If Stanford gets into the Top 4 of the BCS, it's just like last year. They won't win their conference but still receive an automatic bid to a BCS game if and only if they finish in the Top 4. Oregon will go to the Rose Bowl (assuming they win the championship game vs. UCLA/Arizona State/Utah) but Stanford could find its way into the Fiesta. If Stanford does not make the Top 4, and Oklahoma State beats Oklahoma and Houston goes undefeated, then Stanford is in serious jeopardy of not making a BCS game as a 1-loss team.

3) If the top three ends up being...1. LSU 2. Alabama 3. Arkansas, obviously, that's all SEC but it's also All-SEC West Division and three teams that have played each other. LSU has already beaten Alabama in Tuscaloosa. LSU plays Arkansas next. If LSU loses to Arkansas, Alabama will be No. 1, Arkansas will be No. 2 and LSU will be No. 3 and be left out of the championship game. But there's no way you can let Alabama vs. Arkansas be the BCS Championship Game. NO WAY. Alabama DOMINATED Arkansas already this season. It wasn't even close. It was so bad that the SEC's best quarterback, Tyler Wilson (Arkansas) got benched in the game.
But now, if LSU stays course and beats Arkansas, but then somehow loses to Georgia in the SEC Championship Game, the Tigers should still be okay. Alabama will move up to No 1, but then there will be no doubt that LSU is the best 1-loss team in the country (unless they shockingly get dominated by Georgia) and I can't see a way where LSU would drop lower than No. 2 and we would still have the LSU-Alabama title game, with the rankings flip-flopped. That's my take.

If LSU goes ahead and beats Georgia to win the SEC, that's all fine and dandy and we have the LSU-Alabama rematch in the national championship game, no? I was anti-rematch earlier because this is what bothers me. If LSU and Alabama play again, and Alabama wins this time, WHAT DOES THAT MEAN? WHAT DOES THAT PROVE? Yes, Alabama would be your "national champion" but they'd be 1-1 against LSU, a team that they lost to at home. If you really want to pick a national champion between LSU and Alabama, you'd have them play best 2 out of 3. I'm serious. If LSU wins the SEC and stays No. 1, just give them the national championship. They earned it on the field. They played the toughest schedule. They'll have wins over Oregon, West Virginia, Mississippi State, Florida, Tennessee, Auburn, Alabama, Arkansas, and Georgia. I MEAN COME ON, is that not your national champion right there? If they lose to Alabama in one more game, how is that fair? WHO HAS ALABAMA BEATEN? Penn State? Eh. Arkansas? OK. Florida? Alright.

So that's what happens if LSU loses.

Let's assume LSU wins. ....Houston is the only other undefeated team in the country. BCS championship contender? Not a chance. And Houston travels to Tulsa next week and then gets Southern Miss in the Conference USA Championship. No guarantee they stay undefeated.

So, who's the best one-loss team in the country? Oh wait, that's right, it's Alabama. Let me rephrase that, who's the best one-loss team in the country not named Alabama?

Is it Arkansas? No, because LSU will probably hand Arkansas another loss and Arkansas was dominated by Alabama.

Is it Stanford? No, because they were dominated by an overrated Oregon team at home and Stanford is slow and has no playmakers outside of Andrew Luck.

Is it Boise State? Are you kidding? The Boise State that allowed 473 passing yards to TCU? The one that gave up 350 yards to San Diego State when Ryan Lindley has no receivers to throw to?

Is it Virginia Tech? The Virginia Tech that almost lost to East Carolina? That almost lost to Miami at home? That almost lost to Duke? That DID lose to Clemson...by 20 points...at home? Well, the answer to this one is MAYBE. Virginia Tech has a chance to climb into the Top 5 by default and redeem itself in the ACC Championship Game against Clemson. If Virginia Tech wins, they could find themselves in the discussion.

What about Oklahoma State? The problem with Oklahoma State is they don't play defense. Virginia Tech
does. But still, Oklahoma State has the best offense in the country and they only lost to Iowa State on the road in double overtime because of turnovers. Fumbles by Joseph Randle and mistakes by Brandon Weeden and you have to understand, those don't happen often. If not for those mistakes, Oklahoma State is still undefeated today. If Oklahoma State beats Oklahoma, it could find itself in the heat of the title talk and back at No. 3. Thanks to the other losses, Oklahoma State won't drop to 6th or 7th in the rankings, they'll stay in the top five. Now, if Oklahoma continues its historical domination of Oklahoma State on December 3, then all bets are off for Oklahoma State, not only for the title game, but for a BCS game, period. A two-loss Cowboys team won't even be in the BCS. That Bedlam game just got a little bit bigger.

So what now? It has to be LSU vs. Alabama, right? They are the TWO BEST TEAMS. CLEARLY. And that's what the BCS is supposed to do: match up the two best teams. But the human voters are two-thirds of the BCS formula and it's no secret that a lot of the human voters are anti-rematch. Could they nudge Alabama down just enough to sneak Virginia Tech or Oklahoma State in? This could become a discussion in the next two weeks if Virginia Tech wins the ACC and Oklahoma State wins the Big 12, but those are still two big "IFs" to worry about.

So the BCS Championship Game could be any of the following...
1. LSU vs. Alabama
2. Alabama vs. LSU
3. Alabama vs. Arkansas
4. Alabama vs. Virginia Tech
5. LSU vs. Oklahoma State
6. LSU vs. Alabama
7. LSU vs. Alabama
8. LSU vs. Alabama
9. LSU vs. Alabama
10. LSU vs. Alabama

Let the BCS Mess continue...


Twitter: @P_Woo

Friday, November 4, 2011

End of an Era?

"Folks, this is why we love college football. It's unbelievable." Those were the words of ESPN/ABC commentator Brent Musburger and truer words have never been spoken. It was another wild week in college football that will be marked by one wild moment.

Tuesday night, Thursday night and Friday night each featured an upset as Arkansas State beat Florida International, UAB shocked Central Florida and Syracuse dismantled 15th-ranked West Virginia.

The upsets continued into Saturday with No. 23 Illinois going down to Purdue, No. 22 Georgia Tech being stuffed by Miami and the big one, No. 6 Wisconsin losing on a Hail Mary as time expired to No. 16 Michigan State on what the Spartans call "The Rocket Play".

Michigan State and Wisconsin went back and forth in the second half in what could be a preview of the Big Ten Conference Championship Game, but for right now, Penn State is on collision course with Michigan State. Yes, Penn State currently leads the Leaders Division with a one-game lead over Wisconsin after today's games.

If Michigan State's Keith Nichol wouldn't have crossed the goal line, the Spartans and Wisconsin would have headed to overtime. Another game was on the fringe of overtime and nobody watched. Buffalo went toe-to-toe with Northern Illinois and scored what would have been the game-tying touchdown in the final seconds but the missed extra point by Peter Fardon failed to send the game to overtime and the Huskies got the win.

Then there's Oklahoma, the Oklahoma Sooners that like to choke every year. All they needed to do was win and play for a national championship. Tonight, the Sooners lost at home to Texas Tech who got off to a hot start and never looked back. With Tech's passing attack carving up Oklahoma, the Bedlam vs. Oklahoma State has its hype raised up a lot more. Oklahoma State will have a chance to double Texas Tech's passing production, but Oklahoma will have a chance to prevent Oklahoma State from playing for a national championship and turn the BCS into a mess again.

Elsewhere in the top ten, Arkansas overcame a 17-0 deficit to Ole Miss to survive 29-24 while Alabama turned a 6-6 game at halftime against Tennessee into a 37-6 rout. Oklahoma State survived its trip to Columbia, Missouri using four turnovers (three interceptions by James Franklin) to pass the road test.

Boise State pulled away late from Air Force in a 37-26 win. I don't put too much stock into this performance by Boise's defense because seeing the triple-option offense of Air Force for the first time with no bye week is tough for any defense. Boise did a good job of playing bend but don't break defense. Air Force is a very physical football team too and Boise showed its physicality with tough running by Doug Martin. Boise State is just as physical as any team in the country. The only question with Boise in the national picture is if they have the speed to keep up with LSU and Alabama. Nothing is a guarantee yet for the Broncos yet with two big games against TCU and San Diego State on the road still left in the Mountain West schedule.

No LaMichael James? No Darron Thomas? No problem for the Oregon Ducks. Bryan Bennett and Kenjon Barner stepped right in to beat Colorado 49-2 following coach Chip Kelly's "next man in" philosophy.

What happened to the Big East? West Virginia should be bowl eligible by now but instead was picked apart in the Carrier Dome by Syracuse Friday night. Syracuse provided a formula to beat West Virginia, which was to add a lot of pressure on Geno Smith and then send your tight end over the middle and throw to him. Another Big East favorite by some experts, South Florida, dropped to 0-3 in conference play by losing a shootout to Cincinnati today. Cincinnati in Butch Jones' second year now leads the Big East at 6-1 and is the only bowl eligible Big East team at this point.

With week eight of the season completed, other teams joining Cincinnati in turning bowl eligible today are Michigan State, Nebraska, Oregon, Arkansas, Southern Miss and BYU.

Some upsets that got overlooked are North Carolina State over Virginia, UTEP over Colorado State, Bowling Green over Temple, Southern Miss over SMU and Western Kentucky, with 206 rushing yards from Bobby Rainey, beating Louisiana-Lafayette.

I went 5-4 in my Upset Picks this week getting Ball State, Miami, NC State, California and USC right while getting Kansas, Duke, Tulane, and Fresno State wrong.

Records fell today as well with Houston quarterback Case Keenum becoming the NCAA's all-time leader in offensive yards and East Carolina quarterback Dominique Davis setting the NCAA record with 26 straight completions by going 26-of-26 in the first half.

Boise State quarterback Kellen Moore tied former-Texas quarterback Colt McCoy for the most wins all-time by a player with 45 and Penn State coach Joe Paterno tied former-Grambling State coach Eddie Robinson for the most wins in Division I Football history with 408.

And then there was the End of an Era. Howard Schnellenberger, the coach that built Miami into a power house and current coach of Florida Atlantic, announced before the season that 2011 would be his last. However, there will be no last hurrah for Coach Schnellenberger as his FAU Owls lost today to Middle Tennessee to fall to 0-7. The Owls had to win six straight to end the season to become bowl eligible and have a chance to send Schnellenberger out with a postseason win. Sadly, it won't happen and Schnellenberger's last time on the sideline in a college football game will be Dec. 3 vs. Louisiana-Monroe.


My New Top After Week 8
(x) = last week's ranking
1. LSU (1) - beat Auburn 45-10; Next: at Alabama (Nov. 5)
2. Alabama (2) - beat Tennessee 37-6; Next: vs. LSU (Nov. 5)
3. Stanford (7) - beat Washington 65-21; Next: at USC
4. Oklahoma State (6) - beat Missouri 45-24; Next: vs. Baylor
5. Clemson (8) - beat North Carolina 59-38; Next: at Georgia Tech
6. Boise State (4) - beat Air Force 37-26; Next: at UNLV (Nov. 5)
7. Oregon (9) - beat Colorado 45-2; Next: vs. Washington State
8. Arkansas (10) - beat Ole Miss 29-24; Next: at Vanderbilt
9. Oklahoma (3) - lost to Texas Tech; Next: at Kansas State
10. Michigan State (15) - beat Wisconsin 37-31; Next: at Nebraska
11. Wisconsin (5) - lost to Michigan State; Next: at Ohio State
12. Nebraska (12) - beat Minnesota 41-14; Next: vs. Michigan State
13. Virginia Tech (13) - beat Boston College 30-14; Next: at Duke
14. South Carolina (14) - off week; Next: at Tennessee
15. Texas A&M (16) - beat Iowa State 33-17; Next: vs. Missouri
16. Arizona State (22) - off week; Next: vs. Colorado
17. Kansas State (18) - beat Kansas 59-21; Next: vs. Oklahoma
18. Penn State (NR) - beat Northwestern 34-24; Next: vs. Illinois
19. USC (NR) - beat Notre Dame 31-17; Next: vs. Stanford
20. Michigan (19) - off week; Next: vs. Purdue
21. Georgia (21) - off week; Next: vs. Florida
22. West Virginia (11) - lost to Syracuse; Next: at Rutgers
23. Texas (25) - off week; Next: vs. Kansas
24. Houston (NR) - beat Marshall 63-28; Next: vs. Rice (Thursday)
25. Cincinnati (NR) - beat South Florida 37-34; Next: at Pittsburgh (Nov. 5)
Out: Notre Dame (17), Auburn (20), Washington (23), Georgia Tech (24)
Bubble: Southern Miss, Texas Tech, Florida State, TCU, BYU, Iowa, Wake Forest

Quick Glance at Week 9's Big Games
BYU at TCU (Friday)
Saturday:
Michigan State at Nebraska - the winner likely gets the Big Ten Legends Division crown
Illinois at Penn State - can Penn State keep a hold on the Big Ten Leaders Division?
Missouri at Texas A&M - two really good offenses and two pretty good defenses
Baylor at Oklahoma State - Robert Griffin gets more time to shine, will he take advantage of it and shake up the BCS?
Georgia vs. Florida - the world's largest cocktail party. Gators must rebound. The winner of this game can still take the SEC East.
SMU at Tulsa - SMU needs the win to stay in the Conference USA race
South Carolina at Tennessee - This might be the only game South Carolina wins for the rest of the season...if they win. The bye week should help.
Wisconsin at Ohio State - Ohio State should be ready coming off the bye week. Will Wisconsin be ready?
Clemson at Georgia Tech - Clemson doesn't get a bye week to prepare for the triple-option. That always spells danger.
Stanford at USC - How good is Stanford? The Cardinal have yet to be tested with Washington being the only win against a team with a winning record.

Additional upset alerts to...
Virginia Tech - at Duke
Maryland - vs. Boston College
West Virginia - at Rutgers
Washington - vs. Arizona

My BCS Update:
Had Wisconsin beat Michigan State, it likely would have jumped Boise State for the No. 5 spot in the BCS Standings. But Wisconsin lost, and so did No. 3 Oklahoma while Boise State sits at No. 5. No. 4 Oklahoma State still has room to lose and undefeated Stanford has tough games against USC and Oregon and maybe a Pac-12 Championship Game left to play. And of course, LSU and Alabama, one will eliminate the other. Boise State has a legitimate shot to finish No. 2 in the BCS Standings for a right to play the SEC Champion.



No. 1 LSU at No. 2 ALABAMA COMING TO A TV NEAR YOU ON NOV. 5, 2011. 

My Top 10 "What If" Moments of the 2010 College Football Season

April 9, 2011


10. Kellen Moore leads the game-winning touchdown drive against Virginia Tech and derails the Hokies’ season from the start. (Sept. 6)
What could have been…
Virginia Tech lost a heartbreaker to Boise State and when you lose your first game in college football it’s hard to block out the fact that the rest of the season will be an uphill battle for the BCS. The loss to Boise State hit the Hokies’ mentality and they came out flat after a short week in their next game against James Madison. The Hokies were upset 21-16. Looking back now, if the Madison loss had never happened, Virginia Tech would have been widely considered the best one-loss team in the nation for much of the season.

9. Penn State quarterback Rob Bolden gets injured against Minnesota. (Oct. 23)
What could have been…
Granted, it was against the Minnesota defense, but true freshman Rob Bolden was finally having a great game and got help from the running game as well. Then Bolden got hit and suffered a concussion and was relieved by Matt McGloin. The rest is history for Penn State fans as McGloin became the full-time starter for the rest of the year, Bolden is displeased that he did not see playing time when he got healthy, and now there is major QB drama in Happy Valley. If Bolden never gets hurt, does he finish out the season playing well and carry that over to 2011? We can only speculate.

8. Vick Ballard has a career day against Arkansas…then fumbles it away. (Nov. 20)
What could have been…
Vick Ballard put together career highs in rushing yards and touchdowns for Mississipi State against Arkansas en route to almost pulling off the upset. The turn of events at the end of this one were nothing short of dramatic as Arkansas RB Knile Davis fumbled the ball to give Mississippi State the opportunity to tie the game and send it into overtime (ironically Davis also set his career high in rushing in this game). Then in overtime, the Bulldogs were in perfect position to win the game and Ballard headed for the endzone and was tackled at the 1-yard line and fumbled the ball through the endzone. Arkansas got the ball and won the game. Had Ballard not fumbled the ball and Mississippi State retained possession, it’s safe to say they would have won and Arkansas would not have played in the Sugar Bowl, perhaps opening the door for Boise State or Michigan State to get into a BCS Bowl and now we know how ugly it would’ve been if it was Michigan State.

7. Danny O’Brien throws a crucial interception against Florida State. (Nov. 20)
What could have been…
Maryland needed one win to clinch the ACC Coastal Division a year after going 2-10. They outplayed Florida State for most of the game before letting the Seminoles take the lead in the second half. Down 23-16, Maryland put together one last drive and Danny O’Brien threw an interception in the endzone. Had that not happened, the game would have gone to overtime and we can only speculate from there but if Maryland would have won that game, they would have represented the Division in the ACC Championship Game, but more importantly for their fans, would have been in a better bowl game than the Military Bowl.

6. Arkansas blocks Ohio State’s punt in the Sugar Bowl…and falls on it? (Jan. 4)
What could have been…
Arkansas needed a defensive stop and then a miraculous blocked punt to have a chance to beat Ohio State in the Sugar Bowl. Well, it happened. Arkansas got the blocked punt and had a clear path to the endzone had the Razorbacks scooped the ball up and ran forward. However, they did what they are fundamentally taught to do and fell on the ball to save the possession. You can’t blame them for it but Ryan Mallett went on to throw an interception and Arkansas lost. It’s hard to get the idea out your mind that Arkansas had the Sugar Bowl win gift wrapped with that punt block and rejected it.

5. Ryan Clarke fumbles the ball at the goal-line and UConn wins. (Oct. 29)
What could have been…
West Virginia had never lost to UConn in six meetings but found themselves in a physical Big East battle. The game went to overtime tied at 13-13 and Ryan Clarke picked the worst time for his first career fumble as he coughed in up in overtime and Lawrence Wilson recovered it for UConn. Next in overtime, UConn’s Dave Teggart kicked the game-winning 27-yard field goal. Looking back at how the Big East played out now, this was the moment where UConn gained the right to play in the Fiesta Bowl representing the Big East. It could’ve been West Virginia in the Fiesta Bowl beating Oklahoma (okay…more speculating…) or at the very least, it would have been a more entertaining Fiesta Bowl.

4. Jerrod Johnson throws one away. (Sept. 30)
What could have been…
It was the first conference game of the season for both Oklahoma State and Texas A&M so what’s the big deal? Turns out that this game defined the Big 12 South Champion.
The two teams were tied at 35-35 and Texas A&M QB Jerrod Johnson was simply throwing the ball away but it was intercepted by Oklahoma State and they got possession with just over a minute to go and ran the hurry-up offense to perfection and set up Dan Bailey’s game-winning field goal as time expired.
The Big 12 South Division ended up in a three-way tie between Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Texas A&M and the Aggies beat the Sooners so they would have won the tiebreaker and represented the South in the Big 12 Conference Championship Game. In other words, Oklahoma would have never made the BCS and the Fiesta Bowl would have hosted Nebraska or Texas A&M instead. Oh my, how things could have been.

3. Auburn survives thanks to two Clemson miscues. (Sept. 19)
What could have been…
Can we imagine how the BCS would have shaped out if Auburn did not go undefeated? Clemson had a chance to end Auburn’s 13-game win streak against them but gave away two opportunities to win.
First the Tigers blew the 17-0 lead, but in overtime tied at 24-24, Auburn took the lead 27-24 off a Wes Byrum field goal in overtime’s first possession. Clemson had a chance to tie or win. Going for the win, Kyle Parker found a wide open Jaron Brown in the endzone and the ball came off of Brown’s fingertips. What if he had caught that? Clemson wins and Auburn doesn’t play for the BCS title. Next, Clemson has a chance to at least send the game to double overtime. Freshman kicker Chandler Catanzaro makes the 26-yard attempt to go for double overtime but Clemson got called for an illegal snap. Catanzaro had to kick again from 32 yards and missed it. Auburn survived. Imagine if they didn’t. Does TCU then play for the national championship? Wow.

2. California misses a costly field goal. (Nov. 13)
What could have been…
The entire landscape in the BCS could have been changed as California slowed down the nation’s top scoring offense in Oregon. Rob Beard missed two field goals for Oregon from 37 yards and 48 yards that could have come back to haunt the Ducks but luckily the Cal Bears weren’t having sweet dreams. The end result was an Oregon 15-13 win to remain undefeated. What’s remembered is that California allegedly faked injuries to slow down Oregon and Oregon survived. What’s forgotten is that California should have won, but Giorgio Tavecchio missed a 29-yard field goal at the beginning of the fourth quarter that would have gave Cal a 16-15 lead over Oregon that as we saw would have been enough to win. What if Cal makes that field goal and beats Oregon? Everything would have changed.

1. Kyle Brotzman has a nightmare in Reno. (Nov. 26)
What could have been…
I’m sure Kyle Brotzman is still having nightmares about that night in Reno, Nevada. The consensus was that Boise State needed just a win to overtake TCU in the BCS Standings and book a trip to the Rose Bowl, perhaps the national championship game. Nevada made a furious comeback in the fourth quarter but Kellen Moore and Boise State had a knack for finding ways to win the game. In theory, they found a way to win again.
Kellen Moore, as we know is majoring in clockwork with the Boise offense, had 13 seconds to win the game. He threw a bomb down the field as Titus Young laid out for a miraculous catch inside the 10-yard line and all of a sudden Boise State was going to win the game. But Kyle Brotzman missed the field goal and the game goes to overtime. But Boise is composed, they’ll find a way to win in overtime, right?
Brotzman missed another field goal from 29 yards in overtime that would have given Boise State the lead. The rest is history. Nevada’s Anthony Martinez kicks the game-winning field goal and the “Boise Bus” breaks down and their dreams are snatched away from them. Boise State ends up shunned from the BCS and plays in the Maaco Las Vegas Bowl.
One can only think, “What if Brotzman didn’t miss?”

Ranking the Bowl Games 35-1 and my All-Bowl Team

January 13, 2011

Who won the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl? If you can't answer this question off the top of your head then you've certainly missed out on yet another great bowl season in college football with epic finishes and moments. As always, it's another winter and between the days of Dec. 18 and Jan. 10 I watched all 35 bowl games. It's the best time of year and it really doesn't get better than this.

Now, I will admit that last year's bowl season was better. We had some great finishes here, but just one overtime game this year (four last year) and it took about a week's worth of games until we had that so-called "great" game to finally get us all locked into bowl season.

I have a lot here for you in this post and I hope you enjoy most, if not all, of it.

Before you continue, this link will take you to my final rankings of the year and my early rankings for 2011 and here are my bowl rankings from last year.


I begin by giving you some of the disappointments from bowl season, but after that, it's all of the highlights.

Top 5 Disappointing Teams in their bowl game:
1. Nebraska
2. Miami
3. Arizona
4. Virginia Tech
5. Texas A&M

Top 10 Finishes of the 2010 Bowl Season
Again, bowl games are just so exciting and some of the ways these games finish gets your blood pumping whether your team is going to win or lose. Let's count down what, in my opinion, the top ten finishes were this bowl season. Again,there is a difference between a great game and a great finish so if these should not match up exactly with where I have the bowl ranked.
10. Meineke Car Care Bowl: Clemson's late rally
Down 31-13 to South Florida in the fourth quarter, Clemson seemed down, but then in the final four minutes, Tajh Boyd hit Brandon Ford for a touchdown, Clemson recovered the onside kick, Brandon Ford caught another TD catch and before you knew it Clemson was within five points at 31-26. The next onside kick however failed as DeAndre McDaniel recovered the ball for Clemson but touched it before it went ten yards. The play was confirmed by replay and South Florida got in victory formation.
9. TicketCity Bowl: Northwestern didn't have a chance...and then they did
This game was dominated by Texas Tech who at one point had a 31-9 lead, but in the final quarter and a half, Northwestern outscored the Red Raiders 28-14. In the fourth quarter, Northwestern pulled within 38-31 but the defense couldn't hold as Tech scored another touchdown, but on Tech's next possession Jordan Mabin returned an interception for a touchdown to make it a one-score game at 45-38. Then Northwestern got the much needed stop on defense and with one last chance to tie the game, Evan Watkins was intercepted at the 16-yard line to end the game. Northwestern was 16 yards away from coming back from 31-9 and forcing overtime.
8. Insight Bowl: The one throw Blaine Gabbert wants back
Missouri took the 24-20 lead at the end of the third quarter and both defenses were playing well, but Missouri couldn't run the ball effectively to secure the lead and had to keep throwing. At about the five minute mark in the fourth quarter, Blaine Gabbert threw one high and it was intercepted by Micah Hyde, who ran it back 72 yards for the game-winning touchdown. Missouri got the ball back but turned it over on turns in its final possession.
7. Outback Bowl: The Gunslinger slung one too many
Penn State quarterback Matt McGloin was criticized for throwing five interceptions against Florida, but despite the first four turnovers, Penn State had one last possession to go down the field and force overtime, down 31-24. It was then that McGloin threw his fifth interception that taken back for a Gator touchdown by Ahmad Black to secure Urban Meyer's final win, 37-24.
6. Pinstripe Bowl: "The Salute"
You'll read more about this game as you continue through my bowl rankings and you'll find out how this game has permanently scarred me. But about the finish, Kansas State was down eight to Syracuse and scored a touchdown on a big play from Adrian Hilburn, but after the touchdown he gave the crowd a salute (yes, an actual salute) and was controversially flagged for excessive celebration. That pushed Kansas State's potential game-tying two-point conversion back 15 yards and instead of a normal two-point try, it ended up being like a long 4th-down-and-goal situation. Carson Coffman threw to the end zone to Hilburn to force overtime and it was incomplete, Syracuse wins.
5. Rose Bowl: Can't get past the Tank
Down by eight to TCU, Wisconsin marched down the field in a methodical drive and scored the game's final touchdown to pull within two at 21-19. To try to force overtime, Wisconsin's went for the two-point conversion on a quick tight end stick play and had Lance Kendricks open but Scott Tolzien's throw was knocked down by TCU's Tank Carder. TCU recovered the Wisconsin onside kick attempt and the celebration was on.
4. AllState Sugar Bowl: The Legend doesn't accept gifts
Arkansas came back from down 28-10 to get within 31-26 and forced an Ohio State punt. The punt was blocked by Colton Miles-Nash who then recovered the ball by falling on it, but there was nothing but end zone ahead with no Ohio State players around him to make a tackle. He had an opportunity to pick the ball up and walk into the end zone. Instead, he stuck with fundamentals and fell on the ball and let Ryan "The Legend" Mallett take the field for a game-winning drive. With the ball on the Ohio State 18-yard line, Ohio State gift-wrapped this win for Arkansas after the blocked punt but on Mallett's second throw, he was intercepted by Solomon Thomas and that was your ball game.
3. Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl: The Les Miles approved ending
Tennessee had a 20-17 lead after an extra-point attempt was blocked. North Carolina drove down the field with no timeouts and got within field goal range when chaos ensued. UNC started sending out the field goal team, but TJ Yates wanted to spike the ball. The field goal team didn't get off the field in time, Yates spiked it, the clock hit 0:00 and Tennessee ran onto the field celebrating. The game was declared over by the referee. Then after declaring the game over, the play went under review and it turns out UNC spiked the ball with 0:01 remaining on the clock and accepted a five-yard penalty for having too many men on the field. Casey Barth came out to try the tying field goal and after that chaos, Tennessee coach Derek Dooley opted not to ice the kicker thinking the previous events had rattled him enough, but Barth was true. The game went to overtime where Barth then kicked the game-winning field goal. If you're one of the people who consider the game over when it is declared over, then Tennessee actually won.
2. Tostitos BCS National Championship Game: "This is for all the Tostitos." 
Oregon tied the game at 19-19 after a LaMichael James touchdown and two-point conversion with 2:33 left in the game. Cam Newton and Auburn took the ball down the field assisted by a huge run by Michael Dyer where he rolled over a defender, froze, then kept running until the rest of the men on the field realized the play was still live. Then Dyer got the ball again and headed for the end zone and was ruled down at the one-yard line. Then Wes Byrum came out for the championship-winning 19-yard field goal as Brent Musburger spoke the famous "This is for all the Tostitos" line and Byrum nailed it. Auburn Tigers win the national championship.
1. Little Caesars Pizza Bowl: Special delivery: FIU's first ever bowl. "That is awesome!"
Toledo led 24-7 in this game and found themselves down 31-24 in the games final minutes. With 1:13 to go, Terrance Owens sprinted into the end zone to pull within in 31-30 and Toledo coach Tim Beckman knows it's a bowl game and there's nothing to lose so he goes for the game-winning two-point conversion and it was good: Owens to Eric Page. Toledo takes the 32-31 lead and what they thought would be a win, but here came Florida International. A great return by TY Hilton set them up in good field position, but then the Panthers needed to convert a 4th-down-and-17 to keep the game alive and Wes Carroll completed the pass to Jacob Younger who flipped it to TY Hilton, the hook-and-ladder! and Hilton got the first down. That set up a 34-yard field goal attempt for Jack Griffin and he nailed it was time expired, FIU wins the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl and they go crazy on the field. Head coach Mario Cristobal runs around like a little kid and finally catches up with ESPN for a very high-energy press conference finishes with: "THAT IS AWESOME! THAT IS AWESOME!"

So there are my Top 10 finishes of the bowl season from the Meineke Car Care Bowl to the Little Caesars Bowl. Now, one more thing before we get to my full Bowl Rankings. I now present to you the top five coaches moments from bowl season. Enjoy.

TOP FIVE COACHES' MOMENTS
5. Jim Harbaugh jukes all questions
After the Stanford win in the Orange Bowl, Jim Harbaugh was repeatedly asked about his future and each time he pulled a perfect juke move. He walked away from Michelle Tafoya on the field and on the podium he just started calling his team, "Champions." Praising your team is always the best way to avoid awkward situations. Harbaugh knows best.
4. Skip Holtz butts in
Skip Holtz is a funny guy and has a reputation of telling jokes to keep his players loose. After the Meineke Car Care Bowl, Holtz just butts right into BJ Daniels' interview and starts confessing his love for Daniels and his team. Nicely done, Skip.
3. You better listen to Gary Patterson
TCU was out on the field in victory formation and the team was getting ready to give Gary Patterson the gatorade bath but he sensed it. He turned around at the right moment and scolded his players. Why? Because the game wasn't over. 21-19 TCU with a few seconds left. If the game hasn't ended then it hasn't been won, yet. The guys simply gave the "yes, sir" gesture and backed away with the gatorade coolers. Priceless.
Then on the podium, Gary Patterson pronounced to the world, "We just won the Rose Bowl!" Only him saying that makes it official, I guess.
2. In this edition of Interim Head Coaches have the most fun, we present Tom Matukiewicz
Northern Illinois interim coach Tom Matukiewicz iced the kicker twice before halftime and had a third timeout but didn't use it. He was asked about that before heading to the locker room and man is an entertainer. He said there was no strategy of icing the kicker he was simply having fun as a head coach for a day and wanted to make it last longer. Loved it. I'll buy that explanation any day. By the way, you knew he was inexperienced at being interviewed because he stared directly into the camera the whole time from only three feet away. It was creepy.
1. Mario Cristobal, "THAT IS AWESOME!"
Mario Cristobal led FIU to its first ever bowl game this year and won it in dramatic fashion and he was running all over the place like a little kid. He gave a great upbeat interview and was so excited he was out of breath and jumbled his words, but his final statement said it all as he had an eye on the crowd around him: "Look at that over there! THAT IS AWESOME! THAT IS AWESOME!" That's college football.


AND NOW, here my full Bowl Rankings from No. 35 to No. 1


No. 35 BBVA Compass Bowl, Jan. 8
Pittsburgh (8-5) 27, Kentucky (6-7) 10
With the exception of last year, it just seems like every Pittsburgh bowl game is boring. Every time I just pray for more points than that one 3-0 Sun Bowl against Oregon State. That game was so bad I can’t even remember which team had those 3 points, Pittsburgh or Oregon State?
Anyway, with defensive coordinator Phil Bennett taking over as interim head coach (he’ll leave to be the DC at Baylor next year), the Pittsburgh defense really dialed in and offensively Dion Lewis and Ray Graham ran the ball well. This game was pretty boring, at times I was wondering why I woke up on a Saturday morning for this. Pitt took a 20-3 lead before Kentucky scored its first touchdown. I expected a big day out of Kentucky QB Morgan Newton and didn’t get it and Randall Cobb was fairly quiet. What made this game worth watching was that Dion Lewis pretty much announced before the game that he was headed to the NFL so you knew it would be the last time you see him in college.
My MVP: Pitt DE Justin Hargrove
Co-MVP: Pitt RB’s Dion Lewis and Ray Graham 39 carries for 195 yards, TD

No. 34 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl, Jan. 1
Oklahoma (12-2) 48, Connecticut (8-5) 20
Oklahoma got lucky that they got matched up with a lowly opponent like UConn in a BCS game—and that’s with all due respect to UConn. It was just a mismatch and now that we know Randy Edsall was scheming to leave UConn before this game was even played, what does that say about that program? Or does it say more about Edsall? Either way, this was, as expected, the worst BCS game match (although you could argue the Orange Bowl was more lopsided but I was there in-person and it was fun so I don’t believe that). Oklahoma had its way offensively and UConn’s offense only really scored two field goals. The other 14 points were a pick-six (nothing new for Landry Jones) and a kick return. We saw three pick sixes in this game though, I don’t think I’ve seen that many in one game ever. UConn had one and Oklahoma had two (Tony Jefferson and Jamell Fleming). But, this was the only BCS game where I sat there and kept asking myself, “Is it over yet?” and you all know how painful it was for me to sit there and watch Oklahoma win a game.
My MVP: Oklahoma WR Ryan Broyles 13 catches for 170 yards, TD and announced he’s coming back for his senior season.

No. 33 R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl, Dec. 18
Troy (8-5) 48, Ohio (8-5) 21
The Sun Belt proved too fast for the MAC again and Ohio couldn’t keep up with the pace of Troy at all. Troy took a 38-7 halftime lead and I was having a hard time justifying watching that game over the Penn State volleyball match. Troy redshirt sophomore QB Corey Robinson had 285 yards and four touchdowns—at halftime. Ohio senior QB Boo Jackson didn’t start because of academic issues and by the time he got going it was too late. This game was not nearly as close as the score suggests and this game ended a dud of a Saturday on bowl season’s opening weekend.
My MVP: Troy QB Corey Robinson 32-42 387 yards, 4 TD

No. 32 Bridgepoint Education Holiday Bowl, Dec. 30
Washington (7-6) 19, Nebraska (10-4) 7
In my preview, I wrote the ONLY chance Washington had of beating Nebraska was if Nebraska didn’t show up motivated and ready to play. Then guess what happened…Nebraska didn’t show up motivated and ready to play. That made this game an automatic dud. Taylor Martinez got hurt for the Huskers, not that it mattered because the effort wasn’t there while he was playing. 12 penalties on Nebraska—12. Karma caught up to Bo Pelini for complaining about bad calls on penalties all year because all 12 of those penalties were legit. Washington dominated on both fronts and ran for 268 yards. Washington was really in full control the whole way, Jake Locker goes out a winner. Nebraska gets embarrassed and so does everyone who picked them. A lot of people admitted they never gave Washington a chance to win. At least I gave them a chance, right?
My MVP: Washington QB Jake Locker 5-16 56 yards; 13 carries for 83 yards, TD
Co-MVP: Washington LB Mason Foster

No. 31 Military Bowl, Dec. 29
Maryland (9-4) 51, East Carolina (6-7) 20
A lot of penalties in this game, 15 for East Carolina and 11 for Maryland. The players were chippy with each other a lot and one team played inspired for its departing coach and the other team couldn’t get going. East Carolina’s Air Raid offense was held to three points in the first half. The Pirates pulled within 13 in the third but it never had the feel of a competitive game. Maryland ran away with it thanks to 61-yard and 91-yard touchdowns run by Da’Rel Scott.
My MVP: Maryland RB Da’Rel Scott 13 carries for 200 yards, 2 TD

No. 30 New Mexico Bowl, Dec. 18
BYU (7-6) 52, UTEP (6-7) 24
UTEP had negative five total yards in the first quarter while BYU’s offense clicked on every level. Freshman quarterback Jake Heaps had precision passing going for 264 yards and four touchdowns. UTEP senior quarterback Trevor Vittatoe was clearly bothered by a preexisting ankle injury as he threw three key interceptions. Senior running back Donald Buckram was also hobbled by a preexisting injury and was ineffective. Not the most exciting way to start this year’s bowl season but it was fun to watch the development of Jake Heaps. Tough to beat last year’s first bowl game that was the double overtime Wyoming win over Fresno State, anyway.
My MVP: BYU QB Jake Heaps 25-34 264 yards, 4 TD

No. 29 Progressive Gator Bowl, Jan. 1
Mississippi State (9-4) 52, Michigan (7-6) 14
Hopefully football in the state of Michigan on New Year’s Day isn’t a sign of what’s to come for the state of Michigan in 2011. Michigan State was clobbered by Alabama and Michigan didn’t do much either. Denard Robinson made a few plays but couldn’t do it himself against Mississippi State’s defense. The Bulldogs really came to play as they poured 52 points on the Michigan defense that didn’t come to play. Oh wait, they did come to play, they’re just that bad. It’s harder to score against air than it is to score against Michigan’s defense. Although I thought this game would be interesting when Michigan somehow led 14-10 at halftime, but Mississippi State scored 42 unanswered points as Chris Relf, yes CHRIS RELF, dissected the Michigan secondary. With three other bowl games going on at the same time as this one, this was the one that was the least appealing. My eyes wandered often from the screen that this game was on.
My MVP: Mississippi State QB Chris Relf 18-23 281 yards, 3 TD

No. 28 Sheraton Hawaii Bowl, Dec. 24
Tulsa (10-3) 62, Hawaii (10-4) 35
It was a shootout alright, but even shootouts can turn into one-sided affairs when one team turns it over as often as Hawaii did with six turnovers despite having more total yards than Tulsa. The two teams combined for four touchdowns in a span of two minutes and thirty-one seconds. Damaris Johnson broke the all-time record for most all-purpose yards while averaging 21.7 yards per touch. Hawaii’s defense was overmatched. Turnovers killed them, but Tulsa’s offensive onslaught was still fun to watch.
My MVP: Tulsa WR Damaris Johnson 4 receptions for 101 yards, TD; 98 rushing yards, 2 TD

No. 27 Hyundai Sun Bowl, Dec. 31
Notre Dame (8-5) 33, Miami (7-6) 17
This game did not come close to living up to the hype of the “Catholics vs. Convicts” remake. One team showed up to play and the other didn’t. Miami’s Jacory Harris threw three interceptions right off the bat before Stephen Morris took over and also threw a pick. Notre Dame took a 27-3 lead into halftime, Miami got a last-second field goal to get on the board before the half was over. In the second half though, Miami’s defense really started to lock down but the offense wasn’t producing which kept this game from getting real interesting. Miami didn’t quit though and they got two late touchdowns in the fourth quarter. It was great to see Miami fight back, but they didn’t make it interesting enough for me so I rank this game low.
My MVP: Notre Dame WR Michael Floyd 9 receptions for 109 yards, 2 TD

No. 26 San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl, Dec. 23
San Diego State (9-4) 35, Navy (9-4) 14
Navy didn’t have an answer for San Diego State’s passing game. They tried to keep everything in front but gave up chunks of yardage all game long. We had a scoreless third quarter making it seem like Navy had a chance but San Diego State erupted on offense in the fourth quarter and it was over. Navy couldn’t tackle the receivers in space or stop the run game with Ronnie Hillman. San Diego State won its first bowl game since 1969. The Aztecs are fun to watch.
My MVP: San Diego State RB Ronnie Hillman 28 carries for 228 yards, 3 TD

No. 25 Champs Sports Bowl, Dec. 28
NC State (9-4) 23, West Virginia (9-4) 7
There were a lot of distractions within the West Virginia organization and it seemed to have taken a toll from the coaching staff shakeups to Noel Devine’s injury to the loss of center Joe Madsen due to academics. West Virginia ran a reverse with Jock Sanders on the first play of the game but then got away from running jet sweeps. Tavon Austin and Jock Sanders were involved on quick screens but the NC State defense swarmed.
West Virginia lost three fumbles, turned it over on downs and Geno Smith threw an interception, not to mention a second missed field goal—all in the second half as NC State took advantage of field position. Russell Wilson put on a clinic of keeping plays alive and finding guys downfield and pretty much moved the ball at will against what was an underrated West Virginia defense.
My MVP: NC State QB Russell Wilson 28-45 275 yards, 2 TD

No. 24 uDrove Humanitarian Bowl, Dec. 18
Northern Illinois (11-3) 40, Fresno State (8-5) 17
Fresno State opened with a nice drive to score first but it was all Northern Illinois after that. Playing for interim head coach Tom Matukewicz, NIU came out with all the energy on offense and defense. Matukewicz himself was pure entertainment. Cool guy. NIU junior QB Chandler Harnish had another great day and burned Fresno on QB Draw plays for his two rushing touchdowns. NIU’s defense got pressure on Fresno senior QB Ryan Colburn all day long and Fresno sophomore running back Robbie Rouse was not 100% as he played with a club on his broken hand. NIU got the run game with Chad Spann going in the second half and it was over. The Huskies win a school-record 11 games this season. In another impressive offensive display.
My MVP: Northern Illinois QB Chandler Harnish 17-26 300 yards, TD; 72 rushing yards, 2 TD

No. 23 Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl, Dec. 30
Army (7-6) 16, SMU (7-7) 14
What a tale of two halves as Army’s defense dominated the first as they put 16 points on the board and then SMU shut down Army’s triple-option in the second half and scored touchdowns on their first two possessions. But SMU kicker Mike Szymanski missed what could have been the game-winning field goal with 4:05 left. SMU had one timeout and Army was able to pick up crucial first downs. Three first half turnovers killed SMU while Army went the entire game without a penalty. Maybe that’s why it was boring, not a lot of offense and no penalties to get fired up about.
My MVP: Army RB Jared Hassin 18 carries for 82 yards

No. 22 Valero Alamo Bowl, Dec. 29
Oklahoma State (11-2) 36, Arizona (7-6) 10
Another one-sided shootout. Seems like we had a lot of those this year. Arizona goes on to lose five straight games to finish the season but they fought hard. A lot of pressure on Nick Foles and he threw three interceptions and Arizona couldn’t run. The Blackmon and Criner Show was fun for the first few minutes until Juron Criner became just another guy on the Arizona offense while Justin Blackmon continued to put on a clinic. Not a lot of excitement out of this game except watching Blackmon though.
My MVP: Oklahoma State WR Justin Blackmon 9 receptions for 117 yards, 2 TD

No. 21 Texas Bowl, Dec. 29
Illinois (7-6) 38, Baylor (7-6) 14
Looked like Baylor was content with just getting to a bowl game for the first time since 1994. Illinois took a 24-0 nothing lead and Nathan Scheelhaase was perfect passing in the first half. Mikel Leshoure and Jason Ford ran all over Baylor as that mismatch was exposed. Baylor’s Robert Griffin III got going in the second half but it was too late and the defense wasn’t helping him at all. Nice end to the game though as Scheelhaase scored on a 55-yard touchdown run on a wide-open bootleg and then Illinois kicked off with a linebacker and Art Briles didn’t appreciate that and his Baylor team spent the last seconds of the game shooting for the end zone. Gotta love that.
My MVP: Illinois RB Mikel LeShoure 29 carries for 184 yards, 3 TD

No. 20 AT&T Cotton Bowl, Jan. 7
LSU (11-2) 41, Texas A&M (9-4) 24
See whenever we expect defensive battles, we get a lot of points and vice versa. Who knew Jordan Jefferson could make some of the throws he made in this games (well you knew if you watched Jefferson play as a freshman in 2008 but that’s a distant memory). LSU actually scoring points on offense and Texas A&M committing turnovers with Ryan Tannehill throwing three interceptions made this game somewhat enjoyable. There was a lot of action to say the least. The most surprising part was that Patrick Peterson was quiet in this game for LSU as freshman corner Tyrann Mathieu stole the spotlight. Texas A&M didn’t end their season on a good note with the four turnovers and an interception and a fumble on their last two possessions, but the biggest disappointment was Les Miles’ postgame interview. It wasn’t classic Les. I don’t know what happened, I guess he didn’t eat his grass.
My MVP: LSU WR Terrence Tolliver 5 catches for 112 yards, 3 TD
Co-MVP: LSU CB Tyrann Mathieu INT, sack

No. 19 Chick-fil-A Bowl, Dec. 31
Florida State (10-4) 26, South Carolina (9-5) 17
In the 20 minutes of this game, Stephen Garcia had already thrown three interceptions and Marcus Lattimore was lot with a concussion. Florida State also lost Christian Ponder. And after all that, we had a heck of a second half. South Carolina found a run game without Lattimore with Kenny Miles and Tommy Maddox filling in, but they couldn’t stop the FSU running of Chris Thompson and EJ Manuel kept driving and creating plays against South Carolina’s defense. Play of the game was the SC trick play with Ace Sanders throwing a touchdown pass to Garcia, but FSU marched right back down the field and a late touchdown made it a two possession game.
My MVP: Florida State CB Greg Reid 2 forced fumbles, dynamic returns
Co-MVP: Florida State RB Chris Thompson 25 carries for 147 yards, TD

No. 18 Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl, Jan. 9
Nevada (13-1) 20, Boston College (7-6) 13
This was the matchup of Nevada’s No. 1 rush offense vs. Boston College’s No. 2 rush defense, but because the schedules aren’t similar, you can’t always go on those stats. Well, those stats were true. You just waited all game long for Nevada’s offense to break out a big play and in the end, Nevada had just one run for double digit yardage that I can remember and there was only one big play on a screen pass to Rishard Matthews. Boston College’s defense really stood strong against Nevada’s pistol offense but they only mustered 13 points against Nevada, which is my problem, against Nevada. Nevada’s defense isn’t that good, BC on offense is just that bad. The finish to this game where Boston College got within a touchdown late in the game and had a game-tying drive set up didn’t quite make up for the rest of the boring game. The game was dull despite being Sunday night primetime and a fairly close game although it felt like Nevada had it in the bag. Chase Rettig threw an interception to close out the game on what could have been the drive where BC sent it to overtime. After the game, Nevada coach Chris Ault said, “That’s Boston College; that’s a BCS football team. They’re pretty damn good.” Not sure if I buy that. Just saying.
My MVP: Nevada WR Rishard Matthews 7 catches for 86 yards, TD; 72 yard punt return TD

No. 17 Beef ‘O’ Brady’s St. Petersburg Bowl, Dec. 21
Louisville (7-6) 31, Southern Miss (7-6) 28
A 21-21 game at halftime stayed that way through the third quarter before both teams scored touchdowns in the first twenty seconds of the fourth quarter. Southern Miss did a great job of defending the run in the first half, but Louisville gained a lot of yards through the “Wildcard” formation with Bilal Powell and were able to ice the game. Louisville CB Johnny Patrick is my MVP and had a crucial blocked field goal while Jeremy Wright’s 95 yard kickoff return turned all the momentum Louisville’s way. Those were the two most exciting plays of the night, both favoring Louisville, but we also can’t forget about that insane one-handed snag that Southern Miss quarterback Austin Davis made on a wide-receiver pass play for a touchdown. By far, the best play of the bowl season.
My MVP: Louisville CB Johnny Patrick fumble recovery and blocked field goal

No. 16 AdvoCare V100 Independence Bowl, Dec. 27
Air Force (7-6) 14, Georgia Tech (6-7) 7
At least I was right saying Air Force’s defense and ability to pass would be the difference in this one. Just thought there would be more big plays though. We still got a great show of triple-option offenses. The Air Force falcon provided some entertainment by flying into downtown Shreveport and ESPN reporting on the search for the runaway falcon.
Georgia Tech’s three lost fumbles, two muffed punts, didn’t help and Air Force took advantage. Air Force also had a very nicely executed fake punt reverse. Georgia Tech made it interesting in the end before Tevin Washington threw an interception to Jon Davis on the one yard line to end it.
My MVP: Air Force QB Tim Jefferson 11-23 117 yards, 25 rushing yards

No. 15 Maaco Bowl Las Vegas, Dec. 22
Boise State (12-1) 26, Utah (10-3) 3
This was a great game to watch to see a lot of fumbling from both sides. It was a sloppy performance all around. Utah shut out Boise State in the first quarter for the first time all year but for the rest of the game it was all about Boise State’s defense. Utah got nothing done offensively even though some huge dropped passes really hurt them and cost them some touchdowns. It could have been a different game. Boise State’s offense clicked as usual as Kellen Moore continues towards his clockwork degree. Boise State, offensively and defensively, is just so much fun to watch no matter what the score is. I enjoyed this game.
My MVP: Boise State WR Austin Pettis 12 receptions for 147 yards, TD

No. 14 Discover Orange Bowl, Jan. 3
Stanford (12-1) 40, Virginia Tech (11-3) 12
Because I was at this game in-person and had a great time, I may be biased a little bit towards this game. The score suggests a blowout but being there in Section 140, it did not feel like a blowout at all. The Virginia Tech fans left early so yeah they were disappointed, but it felt like a meaningful game all the way through my own eyes. There was no way a 40-12 score was going to make me leave early or stop being intently focused on what was happening on the field. It was just a great showing by Stanford. A 13-12 game at halftime suggested a good game until Stanford’s defense dominated the second half and the offensive line opened up huge holes for the running backs and Andrew Luck finally carved up the VT defense that anchored Stanford’s wide receivers in Stanford’s first two possessions. Getting an opportunity to see Andrew Luck live is something I was so humbled for and will never forget. I think that in itself made this a great game to watch for me, so yes, I’m biased towards this game.
My MVP: Stanford QB Andrew Luck 18-23 287 yards, 4 TD
Co-MVP: Stanford TE Coby Fleener 6 catches for 173 yards, 3 TD

No. 13 TicketCity Bowl, Jan. 1
Texas Tech (8-5) 45, Northwestern (7-6) 38
This game was really overshadowed by the three other bowl games that were going on at the same time but with the help of an extra TV and computer I was able to keep an eye on this one. When Texas Tech took the 31-9 lead, it looked over but Northwestern opened up the playbook, got Kain Colter involved, and roared all the way back. Jordan Mabin had a pick six to bring Northwestern within a touchdown with five minutes to go, but Texas Tech was able to control the ball the rest of the way. Taylor Potts had a huge day for Tech which kept Steven Sheffield off the field.
My MVP: Texas Tech QB Taylor Potts 43-56 369 yards, 4 TD
Co-MVP: Texas Tech RB Eric Stephens 14 carries for 126 yards, TD

No. 12 Meineke Car Care Bowl, Dec. 31
South Florida (8-5) 31, Clemson (6-7) 26
Kyle Parker started off a rough day for ACC quarterbacks as he broke his ribs just before halftime and later on that day Miami’s QB’s threw a bunch of picks and Ponder went out for FSU. Clemson got absolutely nothing from the run game. South Florida was putting on a smooth sailing clinic offensively with BJ Daniels, but they almost lost a 31-13 lead and Tajh Boyd brought Clemson back in the final two minutes of the game with a touchdown, onside kick, touchdown and almost another onside kick but DeAndre McDaniel touched it inches before it went ten yards for the illegal touching penalty and South Florida kneeled the game to an end. Skip Holtz jumping into Daniels’ postgame interview moves this game’s entertainment value up a little.
My MVP: South Florida QB BJ Daniels 20-27 189 yards, 2 TD

No. 11 Capital One Bowl, Jan. 1
Alabama (10-3) 49, Michigan State (11-2) 7
This was the most entertaining 49-7 game I have ever watched. I was a little worried for how motivated Alabama would be. A score of 49-0 later, I got my answer. Michigan State was completely overmatched and they have no argument that they got snubbed by the BCS anymore. It was humiliating for the Spartans. Alabama’s defense was dominant, getting to Kirk Cousins every time and shutting down the MSU run game. 21 carries for 28 yards for Sparty. Michigan State finally scored a touchdown on a trick play against Alabama’s third string defenders. Luckily for Bama, their fourth string guys didn’t make the trip, otherwise they might have given up two touchdowns. Alabama is still the best team in the country on paper, and they showed it. They dominated both sides of the ball, Eddie Lacy had the biggest day for the three running backs and Greg McElroy was precision passing in his final game and even AJ McCarron came in and didn’t throw an incompletion. I never root for Alabama, I hate Alabama, but this was just so much fun to watch. It was so dominating that it was fun to see Alabama pour it on.
My MVP: Alabama Running backs Mark Ingram, Trent Richardson and Eddie Lacy 27 carries for 187 yards, 5 TD
Co-MVP: Alabama QB Greg McElroy 13-17 220 yards, TD
Co-MVP: Alabama DT Marcel Dareus

No. 10 GoDaddy.com Bowl, Jan. 6
Miami of Ohio (10-4) 35, Middle Tennessee (6-7) 21
If you didn’t watch this game you missed you out. There are not too many bowls, and there’s definitely not too much where you can’t watch them all. Miami is a great story, these guys went 1-11 last year and now finish 10-4. Even after winning the MAC Championship they got stuck in the MAC’s third-tier bowl and they lost head coach Mike Haywood. And after all that, they became the first, and likely the last, college football team to go from a season of double-digit losses to a season of double-digit wins. Truly remarkable. It honestly is. If you watched the game, you saw history from start to finish. If you didn’t, don’t pretend you did. I actually had the Blue Raiders in this game because of the talent level and I expected Dwight Dasher to play well in his final collegiate game and likely his final game ever as a quarterback but five turnovers including four interceptions did not result in a good night. Midway through the game though I found myself rooting for the RedHawks for all they’ve accomplished. A 21-21 game in the third quarter and looked like we were headed for a shootout, it had been back-and-forth all game but Middle Tennessee’s offense was stymied for the rest of the game. We had rumors that Miami was stealing Middle Tennessee’s signs because their offensive coordinator was the OC at Middle Tennessee last year so he knew all the signals and was relaying what the play call was to the Miami defense. If true, shame on Middle Tennessee for not changing its offensive signals, but it sure did look like the RedHawks’ defense knew what was coming for the rest of the game, it really did. In the fourth quarter, they had plenty of chances to come back but Dasher continued to throw picks. Miami scored a touchdown with five minutes to go to ice the game and Dasher threw another pick to end his career.
My MVP: Miami (OH) WR Nick Harwell 7 catches for 86 yards, TD
Co-MVP: Miami (OH) QB Austin Boucher 22-35 289 yards, 2 TD…and kissed Danica Patrick on the Awards Podium

No. 9 Insight Bowl, Dec. 28
Iowa (8-5) 27, Missouri (10-3) 24
Iowa led 20-10 in the third quarter before Missouri’s offense really started clicking. Blaine Gabbert was precision passing all game long until his second big interception that Micah Hyde returned 72 yards for Iowa’s winning touchdown with five minutes to go in the fourth quarter. At the time, Missouri led 24-20 but could not put the Hawkeyes away in the fourth quarter as they punted it away twice before that crucial interception. Gabbert finished 41-57 for 434 yards for a bowl record in completions while Iowa true freshman running back Marcus Coker set the bowl record of 219 rushing yards.
A controversial foruth down conversion by Missouri on its last breath was overturned by replay and Iowa got the ball back and converted a third-and-three with a deep bootleg pass to Allen Reisner who was down at the one-yard line. Iowa kneeled it from there to win despite being shorthanded due to suspensions. Missouri’s TJ Moe also set the bowl record for receptions with 15, but it was his 16th catch that was overturned that might have been the difference.
My MVP: Iowa RB Marcus Coker 33 carries for 219 yards, 2 TD

No. 8 AutoZone Liberty Bowl, Dec. 31
Central Florida (11-3) 10, Georgia (6-7) 6
What a wonderful opportunity Central Florida of Conference USA got to take down a SEC team. Tenacious, underappreciated defense of Central Florida absolutely shut down AJ Green and the Georgia offense. Loved watching that. No one gave this UCF defense enough credit and that got to my head thinking maybe I should doubt them so I gave Georgia 25 points in my prediction. Should’ve stuck with my gut, this is a special UCF team. The SEC defense did prove a tougher challenge for UCF but nothing a George O’Leary coached team couldn’t handle. Jeff Godfrey threw two interceptions but the defense bailed him out and UCF finally went on an 11-play drive that ended with a Latavius Murray rushing touchdown for the only touchdown of the game that was enough to win it. Georgia got one last opportunity to win the game and a endzone shot to AJ Green fell incomplete and the officials, wary of what happened in the Music City Bowl, reviewed the play before declaring the game over and added two seconds to the clock for Georgia to try one last Hail Mary that got UCF knocked away and the celebration was on. Huge win. Great game despite the lack of offense.
My MVP: Central Florida DE Bruce Miller

No. 7 AllState Sugar Bowl, Jan. 4
Ohio State (12-1) 31, Arkansas (10-3) 26
All you can say about this game is wow, Arkansas had the game handed to them by Ohio State and they blew it. I remember watching the end of this game in the hotel in Miami and telling my brother Arkansas was going throw a pick. Two plays later, Ryan Mallett threw the interception into the arms of Solomon Thomas, one of the “Tat 5” that should or should not have been suspended for this game. If you really look at it, the “Tat 5” played an instrumental role in winning this game for Ohio State. Thomas had the least amount of impact but his would be the biggest as it sealed the game. Arkansas was down 28-10 at halftime but some key defensive adjustments made this a game as Arkansas made a furious comeback. Once it got to 31-26 I thought just maybe Arkansas would score a touchdown and make my prediction of Arkansas 33, Ohio State 31 right on. Nope, I’m not that lucky. Arkansas would go on to block the Ohio State field goal and then throw an interception. The image that sticks in my head is that Arkansas just had to scoop the ball up and walk into the end zone but instead they fell on it to ensure possession. Can’t blame him, that’s what your taught to do. What else stands out? All the Arkansas drops, not only by the receivers, but on potential interceptions, too.
My MVP: Ohio State QB Terrelle Pryor 14-25 221 yards, 2 TD; 115 rushing yards

No. 6 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, Dec. 26
Florida International (7-6) 34, Toledo (8-5) 32
What an epic game and congratulations to Florida International on winning its first ever bowl game. Just the reaction at the end was amazing. FIU coach Mario Cristobal exhausted and out of breath in his interview and finishing by saying, “That is awesome! That is awesome!” That’s the excitement of college football. You don’t get this in the NFL or in any other sport. ESPN’s JC Pearson said it best, “That is what college football is all about.”
FIU’s offense got off to a slow start but a 17-point deficit faded away as the Golden Panthers scored two touchdowns in five minutes on a TY Hilton 89-yard kick return and an interception that resulted in an eventual touchdown.
FIU took a 31-24 lead, but Toledo’s QB Terrance Owens is really something. I was so impressed with him against Bowling Green and Central Michigan and after some interceptions today he took Toledo on what was almost a game-winning drive as he dove into the end-zone on a zone-read play and Toledo converted the two-point conversion to take a 32-31 lead. But the Rockets left 1:31 on the clock and FIU took it downfield, converted a 4th-and-17 on a hook-and-ladder and set up a game-winning 34 yard field goal for Jack Griffin to win it. What a game.
And people say that bowl games like these don’t matter. This is college football. I love it.
My MVP: FIU WR T.Y. Hilton receiving TD, 89-yard game-changing kick return TD

No. 5 New Era Pinstripe Bowl, Dec. 30
Syracuse (8-5) 36, Kansas State (7-6) 34
What a game. Got exactly what we expected out of the Syracuse offense pounding with Delone Carter against K-State’s 119th ranked rush defense. Kansas State had a lot more balance offensively especially passing. Both coaches pulled out the good old flea flicker. Just such an entertaining game with back and forth scoring. And what a controversial ending as Adrian Hilburn was flagged for excessive celebration after saluting the crowd after his TD which pushed the two-point conversion game-tying attempt to the 18 yard line and Carson Coffman overshot his receiver and it was game over. What a great game though.
My MVP: Syracuse RB Delone Carter 27 carries for 202 yards, 2 TD

No. 4 Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl, Dec. 30
North Carolina (8-5) 30, Tennessee (6-7) 27 (double overtime)
Can you believe that Derek Dooley had to go through this twice? The last two minutes of the first half was the best two minute stretch of football we had up to this point. Tyler Bray hit Da’Rick Rogers on a dime for a long Tennessee touchdown and North Carolina came right back with TJ Yates to Erik Highsmith before the half. Tennessee took the lead after a scoreless third quarter but the extra point was blocked. That hurt. Then, North Carolina’s final drive: Yates to Todd Harrelson for 28 yards + 15 yard penalty on Janzen Jackson, Yates 12 yards to Dwight Jones (catch was reviewed and upheld), Shaun Draugh run but the clock is ticking down, UNC field goal unit running onto the field, no timeouts, Yates wants to spike it, GETS IT but the clock hit zero. Game over. Handshake. Tennessee celebrates. Game is DECLARED OVER. Then under review, one second added to the clock. Carolina lines up for the field goal to send it to overtime and IT’S GOOD. Derek Dooley is an extremely made fellow. North Carolina goes on to win in double overtime after a Tyler Bray interception to the man, Quan Sturdivant. It doesn’t get more hectic than that, folks. Worst part about it, North Carolina was penalized five yards for having 17 guys on the field when they spiked the ball. Otherwise game would have been over as it should have been with a Tennessee win. Such a joke.
My MVP: North Carolina RB Shaun Draughn 23 carries for 160 yards, TD

No. 3 Outback Bowl, Jan. 1
Florida (8-5) 37, Penn State (7-6) 24
This had all the makings of a great game from two historical programs who had similar seasons to a matchup of the Big Ten vs. the SEC to the storylines behind the game with Urban Meyer’s retirement and Joe Paterno’s 400th win. The game lived up to the hype.
Back and forth action with one of Florida’s touchdowns coming on a blocked punt return. Florida really didn’t have a lot going offensively but it capitalized on field position from special teams. Five interceptions from Penn State QB Matt McGloin was the deciding factor. Down 30-24, Penn State had one last chance for a game-winning drive and I felt like Urban Meyer’s career could have come to an end in two different ways that would have been appropriate: 1) a win or 2) a last second loss to a Joe Paterno coached team. Either one had a chance to happen. McGloin threw another interception and it was an 80-yard pick six by Ahmad Black to seal the deal for Urban Meyer and Florida.
My MVP: Florida S Ahmad Black 2 interceptions, TD

No. 2 Rose Bowl presented by Vizio, Jan. 1
TCU (13-0) 21, Wisconsin (11-2) 19
This was the game for “all the little guys.” So much was made of the size advantage that Wisconsin had over TCU, but the two teams combined for the highest scoring first quarter in Rose Bowl history. Then the two defenses started getting some key stops and the second half was full of defensive stands as neither team turned the ball over. TCU took an eight point lead into the fourth quarter and Wisconsin got the ball with about seven minutes left and pounded it with their running game finally wearing down TCU and scored a touchdown with about two minutes left in the game. That methodical drive eliminated all chances that they would get the ball back so the two-point conversion for the tie was a must. After pounding the ball the entire drive, Wisconsin lined up in shotgun for the two-point try and the pass was knocked down by TCU linebacker Tank Carder. I just don’t get why Wisconsin lined up in shotgun, but I remember the anxiety I felt at the end of this game. Every blood cell was dancing. This was an epic Rose Bowl with Gary Patterson saying, “We just won the Rose Bowl!” Now, all the talk about TCU winning it for the little guys out there, I don’t buy that at all, they were playing for three letters: T-C-U.
My MVP: TCU LB Tank Carder
Co-MVP: TCU QB Andy Dalton 15-23 219 yards, TD; 28 rushing yards, TD

No. 1 BCS National Championship Game, Jan. 10
Auburn (14-0) 22, Oregon (12-1) 19
Last year, the BCS Championship Game ranked fourth. This year, it lived up the hype and it will be number one (also partially because the other bowl games this year just weren’t that great). We didn’t get all the points we wanted, but we got the up-tempo nonstop action style of football that we all crave for the sake of energy and excitement. I was on the edge of my seat (if I wasn’t standing) for almost every snap of this game. Oregon threw in a lot of new wrinkles to mix things up, some worked some didn’t. What worked: the fake kick and option pitch from punter to kicker. After a scoreless first quarter we had a one possession game the rest for the entire game and Oregon finally broke through to tie the game with 2:33 left. All Auburn would do is march right down the field and set up a championship-winning field goal by Wes Byrum, the school’s all-time leading scorer, as time expired on the 2010 college football season. There’s not much more to say about this game because we all saw it, right? What a way to finish. Congratulations Auburn, you were dubbed my Team of Destiny and you didn’t make me look like an idiot. Oh and don’t let me forget to say this: Cam Newton did not come close Vince Young’s performance on Jan. 4, 2006.
My MVP: Auburn DT Nick Fairley had a monster game
Co-MVP: Auburn RB Michael Dyer 22 carries for 143 yards, 37 yard run set up game-winning field goal
Honorable Mention: Auburn QB Cam Newton 20-34 265 yards, 2 TD; 64 rushing yards
Honorable Mention: Auburn FS Zac Etheridge, interception and quarterbacked the secondary that gave up big plays when he wasn’t in there.

It's been a while since the BCS National Championship Game ranked as my No. 1 game.


MY 2010-11 ALL-BOWL TEAM
Quarterback:
Corey Robinson, Fr., Troy
Andrew Luck, So., Stanford

Running back:
Marcus Coker, Fr., Iowa
Ronnie Hillman, So., San Diego State

Fullback:
Henry Hynoski, Jr., Pittsburgh

Tight End:
Coby Fleener, Sr., Stanford

Receivers:
Ryan Broyles, Jr., Oklahoma
Michael Floyd, Jr., Notre Dame
Justin Blackmon, So., Oklahoma State

Defensive Linemen:
Nick Fairley, Jr., Auburn
Corey Liuget, Jr., Illinois
Marcel Dareus Jr., Alabama
Bruce Miller, Sr., Central Florida

Linebackers:
Mason Foster, Sr., Washington
Martez Wilson, Jr., Illinois
Alex Wujciak, Sr., Maryland
Terrell Manning, So., NC State

Safety:
Jeron Johnson, Sr., Boise State
Delano Howell, Jr., Stanford

Corner:
Greg Reid, So., Florida State
Tyrann Mathieu, Fr., LSU

Kicker: Wes Byrum, Sr., Auburn

Punter: Bill Claus, Jr., Toledo

See y'all next year.

Little Sisters of the Poor? "That's ridiculous"

November 24, 2010

Whether or not a football program like Boise State or TCU should be considered for playing in college football's national championship game is a big debate, but some people need to get over it and realize that 2010 is a unique season. Rather than doing that, they still want to bash two very good football programs and belittle their accomplishments, most notably Ohio State University President E. Gordon Gee with his comments today.

Ohio State sits at No. 8 in the BCS Standings with a 10-1 record and is a long-shot to play for the national championship. College football's current system, the Bowl Championship Series (BCS), pits the No. 1 vs. the No. 2 in the national championship game, without a playoff.

Boise State president Bob Kustra calls Ohio State's president's comments "ridiculous"

Many times there is a debate as to who really is No. 1 or No. 2. In 2009, the college football season ended with five undefeated teams (Alabama, Texas, Cincinnati, TCU and Boise State). All were national championship contenders with the exception of Cincinnati who was overrated and played through a weak Big East schedule.

But that is exactly President Gee's argument--the weak schedule that Boise State and TCU play by not being in a power conference. Should he not have said the same thing about Cincinnati last year? Or what if there was an undefeated team in the Big East this year? One can only speculate what Boise State and TCU would do if they were in the Big East, considered a power conference.

"I do know, having been both a Southeastern Conference president and a Big Ten president, that it's like murderer's row every week for these schools. We do not play the Little Sisters of the Poor. We play very fine schools on any given day," Gee said.

"Little Sisters of the Poor" may be a bit excessive.

TCU plays in the Mountain West Conference and played as tough a non-conference schedule that Gee's Ohio State did. In fact, a much better non-conference schedule. Ohio State played Marshall, Miami, Ohio, and Eastern Michigan in non-conference games. TCU beat Oregon State, Baylor and SMU. Not to mention that the Mountain West is a tough conference and TCU continues to dominate it every year. Air Force, BYU (although a bit down this year) and Utah are consistently good football teams and Wyoming and San Diego State are on the rise.

For Boise State, they beat Virginia Tech who is undefeated in the ACC, and Oregon State. Boise State plays opponents in the WAC like Fresno State and Nevada. In fact, Fresno State scored 38 on an SEC team and beat Cincinnati and was shut out 51-0 by Boise State.

The teams that TCU play aren't exactly the "little sisters of the poor" nor are the Fresno State's and Nevada's that Boise goes against. Nevada is 10-1 and No. 19 in the BCS Standings. Virginia Tech is No. 16 in the BCS Standings. Nevada went and destroyed a California team from the Pac-10 that almost, and in fact should have, beaten No. 1 Oregon. Ohio State has played two teams ranked in the Top 25: edged No. 24 Iowa and was controlled by Wisconsin.

With the current BCS system in place and the current situation, an undefeated Boise State or TCU will surely play in the national championship game before President Gee's one-loss Ohio State. In fact, Gee brought up 2007 when Ohio State was selected to play in the national championship game after being No. 8 in the BCS Standings and rising all the way to No. 1. Unfortunately, that can't happen this year because Boise State and TCU stand in the way sitting at No. 3 and No. 4, respectively, and neither are in position to lose a game.

Gee's argument that a one-loss team from a power conference deserves to play for the national championship while an undefeated team from a non-power conference does not is respectful. In some years that may be the case, but this is a unique season. What one-loss team deserves to play in the national championship game this year? Name one.

"The BCS exists to protect those in power. And now that their power is being threatened, they're resorting to making it personal, because the place they should settle the debate -- on the field -- is incompatible with their entire M.O." -Death to the BCS

I watch all of these teams play, I rank them with what I see on the field, and I have Boise State as my No. 1 team. In other years I would have never thought of putting Boise State No. 1. This year, I just don't see a one-loss team that is better than an undefeated Boise State or TCU.

LSU is the highest ranked one-loss team in the BCS and looking back at its season, there are three games that it should have lost. LSU's only loss is to No. 2 Auburn while it should have lost Oct. 2 vs. Tennessee if not for that lucky debacle and free play and again the Tigers should have lost Oct. 9 in Florida if not for a fortunate bounce on a fake field goal attempt (although I am glad that happened since I picked LSU for the upset in that game). You can even go back to opening night on Sept. 4 in LSU's 30-24 win against North Carolina. I had North Carolina winning that game if half of its team would not have been suspended for violations of NCAA rules. LSU is not worthy of a national championship opportunity in 2010.

Then there is Wisconsin, Stanford and Ohio State who have valid arguments but don't meet my qualifications in the Eye Test. I am certain that Boise State and TCU would beat all three of those teams head-to-head.

President E. Gordon Gee's comments

President Gee also had this to say: "So I think until a university runs through that gantlet that there's some reason to believe that they not be the best teams to [be] in the big ballgame."

Running through a gauntlett is not a guarantee of a berth in the national championship game. Look at 2008, when the University of Texas sat as the No. 1 team in the BCS and had to go through its gauntlett. Texas had to play then-No. 1 Oklahoma, then-No. 11 Missouri, then-No. 7 Oklahoma State and then-No. 6 Texas Tech all in consecutive weeks and almost made it through before losing to Texas Tech with one second left on the clock. Texas was one second away from surviving that gauntlett, but they lost one game. Gee's argument is that that one loss should not hurt a team from a power conference. That one loss left Texas out of the national championship game in 2008. The one loss Ohio State suffered this year will keep them out of the national championship game. The difference, Ohio State was dominated in its loss.

At the end of the day, Boise State will have beaten two Top 25 teams, three in the Top 30. Ohio State will have beaten one.

This truly is a unique season, we will never see anything like this again. For just one year, let us throw all of the differences aside and believe that a system can be fair to all schools of all sizes of all backgrounds.

Let us believe in the BCS. Should No. 1 Oregon or No. 2 Auburn lose, Boise State or TCU is the rightful team to step up into the top two.

Boise State or TCU versus the field in the national championship game. Who ya got? I'll take the the Broncos or the Frogs.

Reaction to the BCS Standings

October 17, 2010

Remember Wednesday when ESPN BCS Analyst Brad Edwards released his Mock BCS Standings and had Boise State at No. 1 and we all questioned how long that would last, how long Boise State could hold onto the No. 1 spot? Well, the answer could be one of two ways depending how you want to look at it: count the Mock Standings and say Boise lasted a week, or just go off the first official standings today and say Boise never was, and never will be No. 1. Really is a shame...

Edwards updated his Mock BCS Standings early this morning with Oklahoma as No. 1 and what do you know, Oklahoma is No. 1. Oklahoma should thank arch-rival Texas for that, while Boise State can be mad at Oregon State for going for the two-point conversion in only the second overtime last night.

Here's my immediate reaction. OKLAHOMA?! WTF I HATE THEM SO MUCH. Now, take away all emotions and all my hate for Oklahoma as a Texas guy, it makes sense. Oklahoma is not the best team in the nation, but their No. 1 BCS Ranking makes sense.

Boise was projected as No. 1 because they were number one in most of the computers. After Oregon State's loss to Washington last night, Boise's strength of schedule fell through the floor and they dropped in the computers while Texas went on to beat Nebraska and Oklahoma beat Texas (or Texas beat Texas that day) so Oklahoma's strength of schedule which was already the nation's best, just soared through the roof.

Do we really understand these computers? Do we really need them? The only reason they're there is to stop the human voters from voting with bias or any kind of other agenda. But these computers have a bigger impact than we think. But then again, if you're Oklahoma, you want to be number one in the Human Polls, not the computers at this point. Things in the computers can change so fast, as Boise State could tell you.

This is ridiculous. I still can't get over the fact that Oklahoma is number one. Yes, they have played the toughest schedule in the nation, but squeaking by Utah State and barely holding on against Air Force? Not to mention they should have lost to Cincinnati and Texas, great job Cincy and Texas for giving away those two games to let Oklahoma look good in the computers. The computers don't look at how the games were won, just that they were won. That's enough for Oklahoma.

Oklahoma plays Missouri this Saturday on the road. The only time I've ever been a bigger Missouri fan was December 6, 2008 when I needed them to beat Oklahoma for Texas' national championship hopes. But we all know that 2008 was a rigged year.

I can bash Oklahoma all day, but on paper, yes they are a good football team. They are a top five team on paper, they just haven't played consistently. But Oklahoma couldn't win a title with Sam Bradford, now they get a chance to do with Landry Jones at the expense of Boise State and possibly TCU or Auburn?

BCS = Bull Crap System to put it politely.

Boise State is No. 3, they need an Oklahoma loss, an Oregon loss, AND another Alabama loss to make it a Boise State-Auburn match. Or they could simply get an Oklahoma-Boise State matchup too if Oregon and Alabama and Auburn lose.
Where is Oklahoma going to lose in this schedule? Missouri? Oklahoma State? Please someone. Don't let Oklahoma go to another big game and not show up. Have some integrity for the love of college football.

1. Oklahoma 2. Oregon 3. Boise State 4. Auburn 5. TCU
1. Boise State 2. Auburn 3. Oklahoma 4. Oregon 5. TCU
Hm... which one looks better.

How about Michigan State at No. 7 and Missouri at No. 11? I have Iowa in my Top 10. I still think Iowa goes to the Rose Bowl, but Michigan State can make things really interesting.
Missouri won't stick around much longer with the Oklahoma game coming up, but it's still very surprising to see them up there. Same for Oklahoma State who comes in two spots ahead of Nebraska. That Oklahoma State-Nebraska game is going to be a good one this Saturday. If Oklahoma State and Missouri win, things get real interesting for Texas, assuming Texas goes undefeated for the rest of the year.

LSU at No. 6 won't last. Alabama still plays LSU and Auburn. LSU is a win. Auburn, I need more time to think about even though I said Auburn wins that game back in August.

What is the BCS going to come down to if Boise State and TCU somehow someway end up No. 1 and No. 2? I don't want that happening either. Wouldn't that be crazy. Just throwing that out there, it is an unlikely scenario, but I love to speculate.

Remember guys, the lowest starting point in the BCS has been No. 12 for a team that went on to the national championship. That was LSU in the 2007 season. Thanks to a crazy final weekend, LSU jumped five spots to No. 2 that year. Stanford sits at No. 12 this year. Stanford is just too slow defensively though to keep up with the better offenses. So with that said, my only outsider that has a chance is Iowa at 15. But a lot needs to happen.

Auburn, LSU, and Alabama all still play each other.
TCU and Utah still play each other. That could provide a boost for the Horned Frogs.
Michigan State only has Iowa in it's way barring any huge upsets (cough cough can Penn State pull it off cough cough)

The season got real interesting the last couple of weeks, but now with two teams atop the BCS Standings that have winnable schedules from here to the end, some fun has been taken away. The college football world is going to need some major upsets to get rid of Oklahoma and Oregon to make things right.

2010 BCS Standings, Oct. 17, 2010
1. Oklahoma .9215
2. Oregon .8921
3. Boise State .8898
4. Auburn .8641
5. TCU .8573
6. LSU .8245
7. Michigan State .7628
8. Alabama .6654
9. Utah .6540
10. Ohio State .5726
11. Missouri .5491
12. Stanford .5374
13. Wisconsin .5335
14. Oklahoma State .5261
15. Iowa .4824
16. Nebraska .4295
17. Florida State .4267
18. Arizona .3807
19. Texas .2214
20. West Virginia .1812
21. South Carolina .1555
22. Kansas State .1422
23. Arkansas .1302
24. Mississippi State .1253
25. Virginia Tech .0658

My Rankings  

Let me throw in something about Boise State now.
This is a team that brought back 21 of 22 starters from an undefeated football team. They are the most balanced team in the country, great offense, great defense, great special teams.
Too much is made of how they barely beat Virginia Tech. That was Week One okay, teams play sloppy in week one no matter who you are. If they played again today, Boise wins by double digits. What can't be discounted is that Boise State's defense shut down Ryan Williams and shut down Jacquizz Rodgers and yes I'm going to pull out this card, too: they shut down Oregon last year, and to me, Oregon is not as good as they were last year. Give Boise State a week to prepare for any of those teams and they win.


Ranking the 2009 Bowl Games Worst to Best

January 10, 2010

Freshman year I missed eight bowl games because I was in New York with my cousins. I was devastated haha. Since then, I haven’t missed another one. 34 bowl games later this year, for the first time I decided to rank them from worst game to best game. Here they are.

No. 34: International Bowl
My Pick: South Florida 24-10
Result: South Florida 27, Northern Illinois 3

Both offenses were really sloppy in the first half while both defenses played well, but it was just a boring game to watch and USF QB BJ Daniels didn’t really come to life until the second half, but the jolt in the second half came from USF RB Mike Ford who put on a show with 200+ yards in the second half.

No. 33: St. Petersburg Bowl
My Pick: Rutgers 27-20
Result: Rutgers 45, Central Florida 24

This game was dominated by Rutgers on both sides of the ball. It was never close. The only reason to have watched was to see the freshman tandem on offense for Rutgers of Tom Savage and Mohamed Sanu. Rutgers was too fast and too athletic for Central Florida to keep up.

No. 32: Independence Bowl
My Pick: Texas A&M 40-33
Result: Georgia 44, Texas A&M 20

This game never lived up to the shootout hype. Georgia lived up to it, but A&M didn’t. A&M QB Jerrod Johnson struggled which is why the offense couldn’t get going. Got a taste of Logan Gray at the end of the ballgame, could possibly be Georgia’s starting QB next year but there will be a fierce competition for the job in the spring.

No. 31 Texas Bowl
My Pick: Missouri 41-16
Result: Navy 35, Missouri 13

Missouri was not ready for this game and that’s on the coaches. Navy’s offense is fun to watch and Missouri had a good time watching it. They had a poor game plan going into the game and didn’t work and they refused to run the ball despite the two man fronts from Navy and dropping eight back into coverage. Navy was giving Missouri all the space in the world to run the ball and they didn’t do it and couldn’t get things going through the air so it turned out to be not that exciting of a game.

No. 30 Papajohns.com Bowl
My Pick: South Carolina 23-20
Result: Connecticut 20, South Carolina 7

We were rooting for UConn to win this one to honor their fallen teammate Jasper Howard. UConn really pulled together after Jasper’s death and won five of their last six games including upsets here and against Notre Dame. It was a good battle of two defenses, but UConn’s run game just pounded away at South Carolina and UConn didn’t pass enough for us to see Eric Norwood’s pass rushing ability in this game.

No. 29 AT&T Cotton Bowl
My Pick: Ole Miss 33-24
Result: Ole Miss 21, Oklahoma State 7

Another supposed to be a shootout turned into a defensive struggle. Ole Miss didn’t really get going until the 4th quarter and Oklahoma State never got anything started. It was a dud of a game that had no excitement, no emotion, just no energy at all. It was one of those where you want to fall asleep and wake up with five minutes left in the game, cuz those were the most exciting.

No. 28 Holiday Bowl
My Pick: Arizona 19-16
Result: Nebraska 33, Arizona 0

Arizona’s defense looked so good all year, EXCEPT against the zone-read of Oregon. So what does Nebraska do in the two weeks they had to prepare for this game? They incorporated the zone-read into their offense, and I was actually surprised they did it because I actually went and typed up in my blog that the way Nebraska wins this game is if they use the zone-read. They did it, and they won, scoring quickly in the beginning with zone-read plays. Yes, it was a complete blowout, Arizona’s offense was bad, but as a fan you watch this game with enthusiasm because it was the last time you got see Ndamukong Suh in the Nebraska defense.

No. 27 Hawaii Bowl
My Pick: Nevada 41-30
Result: SMU 45, Nevada 10

June Jones brought SMU’s program back to life. That said, he crushed his former conference rival Nevada. This was supposed to be a shootout given Nevada’s nation’s best rushing offense vs. SMU’s nation’s worst rush defense and SMU’s big strike passing attack vs. Nevada’s nation’s worst pass offense. SMU delivered, Nevada didn’t. Nevada’s pistol offense didn’t pose any problems for SMU. This was just another classic case of good coaches having too much time to prepare, therefore, it results in perfect preparation and execution in SMU’s defense.

No. 26 FedEx Orange Bowl
My Pick: Iowa 31-24
Result: Iowa 24, Georgia Tech 14

A BCS bowl ranked so low? Why, you ask? I start with asking were these two BCS bowl quality teams? Iowa proved so, Georgia Tech did not. Iowa’s defense was stout and shut down Georgia Tech like I knew they would given a month to prepare for the spread option. Georgia Tech’s defense was exactly what we thought it was, nonexistent.

No. 25 Emerald Bowl
My Pick: USC 34-10
Result: USC 24, Boston College 13

This game got off to a hot start with a quick 14-0 USC lead and it looked like a blowout that wouldn’t be worth watching but Boston College did its best to keep it interesting and USC struggled down the stretch to make it anyone’s game but BC couldn’t capitalize.

No. 24 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl
My Pick: Ohio 21-17
Result: Marshall 21, Ohio 17

I predicted the score of this game right, just swap the two teams and I got it right on the money. It looked like Marshall was going to run away with it at the beginning, but Ohio fought back and a late rally wasn’t good enough.

No. 23 Armed Forces Bowl
My Pick: Houston 45-38
Result: Air Force 47, Houston 20

A 27 point lead is never enough when playing Houston. Most teams learn that the hard way. It was just a rough day for Houston QB Case Keenum though as he threw an ungodly six interceptions and the Houston offense never found a rhythm. I guess Air Force really was the number one pass defense in America despite who they played against in conference.

No. 22 Maaco Las Vegas Bowl
My Pick: Brigham Young 38-34
Result: BYU 44, Oregon State 20

BYU came into the game as the higher ranked team, but the underdog. It doesn’t happen very often, but BYU came out hot and showed up Oregon State’s defense that hasn’t been good all year. None of the Pac-10 defenses were really any good other than Arizona. Max Hall had a great finale to his BYU career and we wanted to see him off in a good way like that.

No. 21 Champs Sports Bowl
My Pick: Miami 31-24
Result: Wisconsin 20, Miami 14

This game actually wasn’t as close as the score suggests, but Miami’s very late rally made it one of the better games. A failed onside kick attempt iced the game, but Miami almost pulled it off after Wisconsin had dominated the entire game and the defense shut Miami down. Miami QB Jacory Harris had a rough day with his offensive line unable to block at all and Miami lost RB Graig Cooper to a torn ACL and MCL in the second quarter.

No. 20 Insight Bowl
My Pick: Iowa State 21-20
Result: Iowa State 14, Minnesota 13

Well, I got the one point margin of victory part right. This game had a majority of dull moments, but the end is what most people remember and that’s what matters and that’s what made this game better than the others.

No. 19 EagleBank Bowl
My Pick: UCLA 31-14
Result: UCLA 30, Temple 21

Temple was so excited to be in a bowl game. It’s a huge step forward for their program, but they couldn’t match up with a UCLA team that’s filled with skilled athletes. Temple stayed in it though and went toe-to-toe with the Bruins after jumping out to a quick lead. They had a chance to win it at the end, but an Akeem Ayers pick six right along the goal line was one of the top plays of bowl season and sealed the win for UCLA. A loss would have been drastic for the UCLA recruiting circuit.

No. 18 Poinsettia Bowl
My Pick: Utah 31-24
Result: Utah 37, California 27

Another team from the Mountain West and another win. Utah was another one of those teams that was ranked higher, but labeled as the underdog. Utah freshman QB Jordan Wynn grew up ever since the TCU game and had a great night putting on a show for his hometown in San Diego. Cal didn’t have Jahvid Best, but Shane Vereen broke off a few big runs. The Utah defense stepped up big. This was one of the better early games.

No. 17 Capital One Bowl
My Pick: LSU 27-24
Result: Penn State 19, LSU 17

This game came down to a last second field goal by Penn State, yet it wasn’t all that exciting. The weather was bad, the field was torn up, there was mud puddles and chunks of sod all over the field and it felt miserable seeing it through the TV. The conditions were so bad, both teams struggled mightily, LSU receivers dropped passes everywhere. LSU thought they won tho with a go-ahead field goal at the end, but Penn State was able to set up a game-winning field goal for themselves.

No. 16 Sugar Bowl
My Pick: Florida 45-24
Result: Florida 51, Cincinnati 24

Why does a blowout get ranked so high? I just found this game to be really really entertaining. I enjoyed seeing Cincinnati get blown out and I enjoyed seeing their defense picked apart. It made me rejoice in knowing that I was right all along about how horribly overrated Cincinnati was all year. It was Tim Tebow’s final college game, so that was another reason to keep watching, to watch his farewell, and boy did he put on a show with the best game of his career. And if it wasn’t for that one last extra touchdown before taking Tebow out of the game, I would guessed this score perfectly dead on.

No. 15 Gator Bowl
My Pick: Florida State 34-30
Result: Florida State 33, West Virginia 21

You knew there was no way Florida State could lose Bobby Bowden’s last game, right? The Noles were 6-6 going into this game, and through Bowden’s 34 years of coaching at FSU he had NEVER had a losing season. A loss in this one would have been his first and it would been a very distasteful ending but the football gods were with him and his team as they handled a good West Virginia offense even though the Mountaineers lost their QB in the first half. It was more surprising that Florida State scored so easily against the WVU defense, but it was winnable for WVU at the end, they just blew it, but we caught a glimpse of the future with Geno Smith at QB.

No. 14 Rose Bowl
My Pick: Oregon 30-21
Result: Ohio State 26, Oregon 17

There was so much hype about this Rose Bowl because Ohio State was in it and USC wasn’t. Oregon didn’t even get much love, it was all about how Ohio State made it and how USC didn’t and Oregon ended up there. Ohio State QB Terrelle Pryor had the best game of his career setting himself up for a breakout season next year. Oregon’s offense was slowed down by Ohio State, but got a big gain here and there and you never knew when the big burst would just come out of Oregon’s offense so it was worth watching all the way.

No. 13 Music City Bowl
My Pick: Clemson 30-17
Result: Clemson 21, Kentucky 13

Clemson RB CJ Spiller led the winningest senior class in school history. Spiller is one of my all-time favorites and you had to watch his final game. I’m still trying to find out how he wasn’t a Heisman finalist. Kentucky had some playmakers of their own in this one and made it a tough game for Clemson to win.

No. 12 Chick-fil-A Bowl
My Pick: Virginia Tech 20-16
Result: Virginia Tech 37, Tennessee 14

Virginia Tech didn’t get the message that they were on upset alert, or did they? They came out on fire and torched this Tennessee defense. This is the same Tennessee defense that shut down both Alabama and Florida, but gave up 37 to Virginia Tech. This game was exciting just because the way Tech played with that swagger and the running of Ryan Williams is a great thing to watch. Despite the blowout, it was one of the games I enjoyed watching the most, not to mention it was the final college football came of the decade.

No. 11 New Orleans Bowl
My Pick: Southern Miss 31-27
Result: Middle Tennessee 42, Southern Miss 32

It wasn’t exactly the greatest matchup but it proved to be a great game highlighted by a great performance. Middle Tennessee QB Dwight Dasher went wild and showed he was the most exciting player in the Sun Belt Conference. Southern Miss never had an answer for Dasher’s running ability has he accumulated over 200 yards rushing despite twisting his knees on the artificial turf twice, and the Blue Raiders held off a late Southern Miss rally that kept the crowd the in the game.

No. 10 Alamo Bowl
My Pick: Texas Tech 41-28
Result: Texas Tech 41, Michigan State 31

All the media attention towards this game was about Michigan State’s eleven suspended players for a campus fight and about Texas Tech firing Mike Leach for locking Adam James in a closet. Yeah, yeah we still don’t know all the truths of the Mike Leach story and there’s a bunch of lawsuits, but the fact that Ruffin McNeill took over on an interim basis and had his team fired to play was great. Except for a MSU field goal, I had the score of this game dead on. Damn Brett Swenson. It looked Tech was going to blow the game late, but Steven Sheffield came in to relieve Taylor Potts and the crowd went crazy and Sheffield let the Red Raiders to the game-winning drive that included two fourth down conversions on gutsy calls by McNeill and he proved that he should have the interim labeled remove, but school officials apparently disagreed and hired Tommy Tuberville as their next head coach.

No. 9 Sun Bowl
My Pick: Oklahoma 33-20
Result: Oklahoma 31, Stanford 27

This was one of the most anticipated matchups to see if Stanford’s physical power running game with Toby Gerhart could work against the strong Oklahoma defense. Despite having eight potential first day NFL draft picks on that Oklahoma defense, Gerhart fared pretty well, but he couldn’t do it by himself. Oklahoma got off to a quick start so I thought they were going to prove right away they’re still a top team, but they tailed off and Stanford rallied at the end. You can’t help but wonder, would Stanford have won at the end if they had QB Andrew Luck (was out with a broken finger on his throwing hand)? Oklahoma did not assert itself as the potentially dominate team they could have been, and Stanford proved their season was not a fluke and Gerhart raised his draft stock.

No. 8 Meineke Car Care Bowl
My Pick: Pittsburgh 27-21
Result: Pittsburgh 19, North Carolina 17

We knew it was going to be a defensive struggle and this was an all around exciting game. We had some big plays here and there from both offenses, but in the end both defenses triumphed. It was fun to watch Pitt RB Dion Lewis try to shed tackles from the outstanding UNC linebackers, and after the game, Bruce Carter, Quinton Sturdivant, Deunta Williams, Marvin Austin—all those studs on the UNC defense announced their returning next season rather than opting for the NFL. It might make UNC the sleeper team to watch in the ACC next season. Dion Lewis still got his hard earned 100 yards in this game, but QB Bill Stull struggled and WR Jonathan Baldwin was neutralized and after UNC took a late lead, Pitt won it with a Dan Hutchins field goal as time expired.

No. 7 Liberty Bowl
My Pick: Arkansas 44-21
Result: Arkansas 20, East Carolina 17 (overtime)

Five missed field goals in this game. Five of them. Four of which were by East Carolina’s Ben Hartman and ultimately cost ECU the win. Arkansas was supposed to blow out the Pirates, but the weather was freezing and Arkansas’s passing attack couldn’t get going and receivers had frozen hands and weren’t used to that and dropped passes every which way. Ryan Mallett needed a huge day to be a first round NFL draft pick, didn’t have it, and will return for his junior year. The Arkansas offensive line could not protect against ECU’s very underrated defensive front. The two defenses kept the game close, but and ECU could have won it, but in a 17-17 tie, Hartman missed a field goal with over a minute to go, and ECU got the ball back, and Hartman missed a field goal as time expired that would have won it. Then ECU started with the ball in overtime and Hartman missed another game-winning field goal and Alex Tejada nailed a 36 yarder (I think it was) to win for Arkansas.

No. 6 New Mexico Bowl
My Pick: Fresno State 38-17
Result: Wyoming 35, Fresno State 28 (overtime)

Bowl season got off an exciting start with this game on Dec. 19. Fresno State came into the game as the heavy favorite and I had only seen Wyoming play once (against Texas) and back when I watched that game, Austyn Carta-Samuels was not Wyoming’s quarterback, so I had never seen him. Well that true freshman put on a show and his dual talents kept Fresno’s defense on its heels. In Dave Christenson’s first year as Wyoming head coach he got them bowl eligible at 6-6 and then pulled off the huge upset of Fresno State in an intense overtime game.

No. 5 Fiesta Bowl
My Pick: TCU 27-20
Result: Boise State 17, TCU 13

The “Buster Bowl” with two undefeated BCS busters playing each other. It was the first BCS game where two undefeateds were playing for something that’s not a national championship so that made it worth watching. I mean it was a rematch of last year’s Poinsettia Bowl that TCU won 17-16 despite gaining 200 some more yards than Boise. In this game though, neither team dominated offensively, it was a very even game with two strong defenses. We knew we’d see tricks from Chris Peterson and Boise and their fake field goal pass extended what ended up being the game-winning drive for Boise. Despite the lack of flashyness and explosive plays in this game, both teams proved that this matchup was better than say a Boise-Iowa and TCU-Georgia Tech.

No. 4 BCS National Championship Game
My Pick: Texas 23-20
Result: Alabama 37, Texas 21

You’d look at the score and then heart Colt McCoy got knocked on in the first quarter and think to yourself Alabama must have dominated. That wasn’t the case, this was a very close game that if you turned it off at halftime during an Alabama 24-6 lead, you made a mistake. Texas true freshman QB Garrett Gilbert found a rhythm after removing the jitters at halftime and almost led Texas to one of the greatest comebacks in history. Questionable coaching decisions in the first half by both staffs almost cost Alabama the game, but then gave it right back to them. It was a 24-21 game at with three minutes to go in the fourth quarter thanks to the Texas defense that lost all its energy in the first half after being shocked of McCoy’s depature, smothering Alabama in the second half, but then ultimately it came down the experience factor of the freshman not being able to read defenses with the mind of a seasoned veteran and Gilbert didn’t read the backside blitz, admitted it was a bad read by him and one that Colt would have made, and Alabama recovered the fumble scored again, and put the game away to stop the late Texas rally.

No. 3 GMAC Bowl
My Pick: Central Michigan 38-30
Result: Central Michigan 44, Troy 41 (double overtime)

Dan LeFevour’s last game for Central Michigan sure was a thrilling one, but you count on him winning it. These offenses started out real slow in the first half but the shootout began after intermission. Troy’s offense actually fared better than Central Michigan’s and Troy’s defense was a little better, but hey that’s why we have special teams. Antonio Brown’s touchdown return put Central Michigan within one score of tying and then LeFevour did it with a perfect throw to send it to overtime. Both teams scored in the first overtime, CMU on a LeFevour 13 yard run, but in the second overtime, CMU blocked a Troy field goal which set up Andrew Aguila to win it for the Chippewas and send LeFevour out a winner. This game was a great precursor for the national championship the following night.

No. 2 Outback Bowl
My Pick: Auburn 34-17
Result: Auburn 38, Northwestern 35 (overtime)

This was just a crazy game. First of all, Auburn prepared for the physical Northwestern running game, and didn’t get it. Northwestern QB Mike Kafka attempted over 70 passes and threw four touchdowns, along with five interceptions. Auburn capitalized on the first few turnovers and had a 21-7 lead at halftime and looked like they’d put Northwestern away, but the Auburn offense fell asleep in the third quarter, and so did the defense as Kafka found a rhythm. Then Auburn took control in the fourth quarter only to turn it over at the end let Auburn score twice in three minutes to tie the game and then a Ben Tate fumble and Auburn penalties put Northwestern in position for a game-winning field goal but Stefan Demos missed it. It went to overtime, and Demos missed another one, but that wasn’t all that happened in overtime. Auburn rushed the field three times thinking they had won, at first on a fumble recovery, then on a field goal miss, then on a Kafka fumble recovery, but the first was overturned and ruled incomplete, then the field goal miss didn’t count because Auburn got flagged for roughing the kicker, then the Kafka fumble that Auburn recovered was overturned as Kafka as ruled down before the ball came out. Then Northwestern lined up to try the tying field goal but faked it and didn’t make it into the endzone. It was a crazy finish and Auburn finally won and rushed the field for a fourth time in about five minutes.

No. 1 Humanitarian Bowl
My Pick: Bowling Green 41-28
Result: Idaho 43, Bowling Green 42

Here it was, on Boise State’s blue turf, the most best bowl game of 2009 was played. Both offenses scored at will. It was mostly a back and forth display of the two explosive offenses going against poor defenses. Bowling Green QB Tyler Sheehan almost put threw for 400 yards while Freddie Barnes had 17 catches for 219 yards to break the FBS single season record for catches. Barnes’ big day looked like it would lead Bowling Green to the win as his 51 yard touchdown reception with 30 seconds left in the game gave the Falcons a 42-35 lead. 30 seconds? No problem said Idaho. Idaho QB Nate Enderle got pressured and heaved up a deep ball to Preston Davis and Davis somehow came down with it and that put Idaho within striking distance of the endzone with the clock ticking down. Max Komar was Idaho’s leading receiver and he was shut out the whole game, but Enderle hit him in the endzone with a second left to make it 42-41, and what do you know, it’s bowl season, you have nothing to lose, so Idaho coach Robb Akey called for a 2 point play to win the game and there was Preston Davis in the back of the endzone to win it 43-42 in the best finish of bowl game this year. Akey told the audience through ESPN’s cameras at halftime with enthusiasm to “watch the second, you’re gonna love it!” Akey was right.