Thursday, November 16, 2006

College Football - Week 12 Predictions

The week that the dynamic Disney duo of ABC and ESPN has been praying for has mercifully arrived. If I see one more breakdown of this game or hear the words "Judgement Day" uttered by one of the media pundits, I swear that I will vomit. Fortunately, for this college football fan, I won't be watching this 'classic' Big 10 showdown, because the best rivalry in college football - the Iron Bowl between Auburn and Alabama - is slated for the same time slot. I am almost tempted to not even make a prediction on the supposed "Game of the Year", but of course, I don't want to disappoint my loyal readers by not covering this clash of the titans. So with the national title race still a mess and many bowl games scrambling to fill their spots, here are this week's Total System Failure Week 12 predictions:

#2 Michigan at #1 Ohio State - Well, the day has finally arrived... #1 vs. #2. Of course, this game took an unexpected turn yesterday when former Michigan head coach Bo Schembachler passed away at the age of 77. Last night, I heard the pundits discussing how the passing of the legendary head coach will impact this battle between #1 and #2. In my opinion, it won't matter one bit. Michigan will come out onto the football with a lot of emotion, but once the first hit of the game is made, it will just be a football game between two rivals. Both teams have explosive offenses lead by veteran quarterbacks who have plenty of weapons from which to choose. Both teams have defenses ranked amongst the top eight in the country. Big games like this usually come down to special teams and home field advantage. Both teams have explosive return games and solid punters...but where Michigan has its advantage is in the field goal kicking department with senior Garrett Rivas (15 of 18 this year on field goal attempts). However, this game is in Columbus, Ohio, and Jim Tressel seems to have Lloyd Carr's number as the Buckeyes have won 4 of 5 against Michigan since Tressel become the head coach. Make it 5 out of 6....Ohio State 24 Michigan 17

#17 California at #4 Southern Cal - This is the other marquee game of Week 12. USC could move right back into the driver's seat for a spot in the national title game if it can knock of California. California played a less than inspired game last week at Arizona, and it was obvious that the Golden Bears were looking ahead to the Trojans. USC always seems to get California's best shot, and I expect that the Golden Bears will be focused on the task at hand in spite of last week's letdown. Behind Nate Longshore, the California passing attack is ranked #12 in the country in, and the Trojans are only ranked #63 against the pass. USC will be focused on stopping California's running back tandem of Lynch and Forsett, so it will be on Longshore to exploit the USC secondary. For the Trojans offense, it will be up to John David Booty and his bevy of receivers to win this game, because the USC running backs are banged up. The Golden Bears are ranked #112 against the pass this year, so Booty will be lighting up the scoreboard in the Coleisum....Southern Cal 35 California 20

#5 Arkansas at Mississippi State - There are not a lot of great games on the docket this week in the SEC, but this showdown in Starkville does has some implications on the national title race. Mississippi State is starting to show signs of life under Sly Croom, and quarterback Matt Henig has been red-hot over the past three games. While Mississippi State has been showing steady improvement recently, no team in the SEC is hotter than the Arkansas Razorbacks. Arkansas can lock up a spot in the SEC Championship Game with a win in Starkville, and although Mississippi State has pulled some shockers before when nationally ranked teams have come to Scott Field, the Bulldogs have not had to stop a running back tandem quite like Darren McFadden and Felix Jones. The #70 ranked defense in the country doesn't have a shot to slow these two running backs down...Arkansas 31 Mississippi State 14

#7 Rutgers at Cincinnati - Rutgers is now officially the hunted, and the question is how will they respond in a nationally televised road game in a hostile environment. This game has less to do with what type of team Cincinnati is than how Rutgers can handle all of the attention it has received since knocking off Louisville last week. Fortunately, for Rutgers, Greg Schiano has been around major programs and knows how to maintain focus. Also, with 23 seniors on the roster, Schiano has a strong nucleus of experienced players to help try and maintain the focus on the task at hand. Cincinnati has been solid this year. The Bearcats gave Ohio State, Virginia Tech, and Louisville all they wanted this year. Neither one of these teams are exactly offensive juggernauts as both teams are ranked between #75 and #80 in total offense, but Rutgers uses its defense and running game to win ballgames. Those two elements are always key in stealing road wins in any conference....Rutgers 17 Cincinnati 10

#19 Virginia Tech at #14 Wake Forest - Wake Forest just continues to disprove all of the doubters out there. I thought for sure that Florida State would dominate the Demon Deacons on a Saturday night in Doak Campbell Stadium, but it was Jim Grobe's team that did the dominating. You would think it is time to start giving Wake Forest the respect they deserve, but people (including myself) still have doubts, especially because a suddenly resurgent Virginia Tech team comes to Winston-Salem, NC this week. Wake Forest is #101 in total offense, and Virginia Tech has the #1 ranked defense in the country. Only two teams have scored more than 20 points against the Hokies this year (Georgia Tech and Boston College), and those are the two games that Frank Beamer's team have lost this year. Of course, it's not like Virginia Tech has an explosive offense either, but the difference in the defenses will be the key in this game...Virginia Tech 16 Wake Forest 9

#15 Auburn at Alabama - While the rest of the free world is watching Ohio State and Michigan battle for the national title in Columbus, Ohio, the entire state of Alabama will come to a stop to watch the Iron Bowl. Had Auburn won last week against Georgia, this game would mean a lot more, but today, this game is just about bragging rights for the next 365 days in a state where college football is all that matters. One stat that really jumped out at me this week is that Auburn leads the all-time series 11-2 in games played on the campuses of each team. Auburn is still yet to lose in Tuscaloosa, and the higher ranked team is 37-10 in the rivalry since 1955. All of this points to an Auburn victory, but something just seems missing from this Auburn team. There is just no leadership, no spark, and no desire. The defense is reeling, and the offense just does not have enough playmakers at wide receiver to keep the opposing defense honest. Alabama has a solid running game, a hot quarterback in John Parker Wilson, and an explosive receiving corps. Auburn's secondary was exploited by a freshman quarterback last week, and Alabama is much more talented at receiver and quarterback. Plus, I think Auburn has jinxed itself with all of this "Fear the Thumb" crap. Look for Alabama to give Auburn the finger...Alabama 20 Auburn 16

And now predictions for other games this week...

#3 Florida 63 Western Carolina 0
#6 Notre Dame 45 Army 10
#9 LSU 41 Ole Miss 6
#10 Louisville 28 South Florida 14
#12 Wisconsin 28 Buffalo 7
#13 Boise State 56 Utah State 10
#16 Oklahoma 28 Baylor 13
#18 Georgia Tech 31 Duke 14
#20 Boston College 17 #21 Maryland 10
#22 Tennessee 24 Vanderbilt 10
#23 Brigham Young 38 New Mexico 17
North Carolina State 20 North Carolina 13
Missouri 31 Iowa State 17
Oklahoma State 38 Texas Tech 35
Kansas State 24 Kansas 21
Purdue 20 Indiana 10
Iowa 28 Minnesota 14
Oregon 35 Arizona 20
Arizona State 42 UCLA 31
South Carolina 24 Middle Tennessee State 17
East Carolina 28 Rice 17

Note: Through 4 weeks of making predictions, season record is: 86-23 (0.788)



Tuesday, November 14, 2006

College Football - Week 11 Review

Random Musings on Week 11

Editors Note: With this being the start of Iron Bowl week in the state of Alabama, it only seems fitting to use one of the truly great unknown bands from the state as the inspiration for this week's musings...and that band is Birmingham's own Brother Cane.

1. Hard Act to Follow - I had assumed that most of my musings on anything related to Big East sports would occur during the heart of the college basketball season. However, the past two Thursday evenings, the college football world has been treated to back-to-back nationally televised games featuring Big East teams ranked amongst the top 15 teams in the country. The first week, we all had the opportunity to watch two high octane offenses do battle, and ultimately, Louisville was able to use its home crowd to its advantage and outlast West Virginia. The second straight Big East Thursday night showdown surely could not have lived up to the hype surrounding the first game, but the Rutgers victory over then #3 ranked Louisville lived up to the standard set by Louisville and West Virginia and then went past it. Rutgers did the job in a much different fashion...by playing good, hard nosed defense. It almost reminded me of a SEC defense. Rutgers head coach Greg Schiano is on the verge of creating something very special in New Brunswick, NJ. People had to think he was absolutely insane when he left the comforts of Butch Davis's University of Miami staff to take over the head coaching job at Rutgers, but now, after taking Rutgers to its first bowl game since the now defunct Garden State Bowl in 1978, Schiano has Rutgers on the verge of a BCS bowl game. With a stout defense and the dynamic running back duo of Brian Leonard and Ray Rice, this Rutgers team may not challenge for the national title, but it can certainly announce itself as a program on the rise. So now that Rutgers has officially put itself on the college football map with its first win over a ranked opponent since 1988 and a spot in the Top 10, the question is....how will Rutgers handle being the hunted rather than the hunter? Tough road games at Cincinnait this week and at West Virginia to end the season will give the Scarlet Knights plenty of opportunity to prove their worth, and any team with a defense and rushing attack like Rutgers has will certainly have a shot to defeat an opponent.

2. And Fools Shine On - Arkansas head coach Houston Nutt has never been considered as having one of the more stable personalities amongst his coaching colleagues around the country....in some circles, he might even be considered a fool. Sure, Coach Nutt is a little off his rocker, and his inability to get the Razorbacks to bowl games in 2004 and 2005 put him squarely on the hot seat heading into the 2006 season. A 50-14 home loss to Southern Cal to open the 2006 season gave the Arkansas faithful ample ammunition to start up on-line petitions to fire the resident fool of Fayetteville. However, since surviving close calls against Vanderbilt and Alabama, Houston Nutt has not only turned the season around for Razorbacks and saved his own job, but he now has Arkansas squarely in the race for the BCS Title Game...that is, if you believe the Total System Failure bowl projections! Saturday night's thorough domination of Tennessee on ESPN proved to the college football world that this Razorback team and its crazy coach are the real deal. I will be the first to say it - Darren McFadden is the best running back in America, and in my opinion, is the best college football player in America. He should win the Heisman, if you ask me, but alas, I don't have a vote. Here's the reason that I think McFadden should win the Heisman...it doesn't matter who plays quaterback for the Razorbacks - Dick or Mustain - they just keep rolling right along. McFadden is single handedly carrying this team, and oh yeah, he is only a sophomore. Arkansas will clinch a spot in Atlanta on Saturday when the Razorbacks will drill Mississippi State in Starville, and the resident fool of Fayetteville may just laugh his crazy ass all the way to Glendale, Arizona.

3. Pressure - Georgia Tech fans are used to their team letting them down. My buddy MJ at work told me after Georgia Tech was thumped by Clemson a few weeks ago that Georgia Tech blowing it on the national stage is just expected by all true Tech fans. So you've got to believe that the Yellow Jacket faithful were sweating profusely watching their team try to clinch a spot in the ACC Championship Game against a lowly North Carolina team. Fortunately, on this occassion, the Yellow Jackets were able to survive with a pathetic 7-0 victory over a North Carolina team that has yet to win a game this season against a Division I opponent. As he has done throughout his four years on the Flats, Georgia Tech senior quarterback Reggie Ball lost his accuracy, and the big play passing attack for the Jackets was non-existent against a statistically solid Tar Heel pass defense (ranked #34 nationally against the pass). For the game, Ball was a mere 10 of 24 passing for a total of 78 yards. Although the Tech passing attack was slowed by the Tar Heel defense, running back Tashard Choice gained 119 yards on the ground and toted the ball over 30 times. If the Jackets want to claim the ACC title this year and play in a BCS bowl game, then offensive coordinator (and former Auburn quarterback) Pat Nix is going to have to get consistent offensive production from Reggie Ball and the Tech passing game. Georgia Tech only ranks 76th in the country in total offense, but the telling statistic is that the Jackets are ranked 97th in passing with a senior quarterback and the best wide receiver in college football. Tech's offensive woes won't matter much this weekend against Duke, but if the Jackets want to win in Athens against Georgia and then in Jacksonville against the ACC Atlantic Division champion, Reggie Ball is going to have to be able to handle the pressure of quarterbacking a championship team.

4. Hung on a Rope - Well, the 2006 college football season has claimed yet another victim amongst Division I head coaches. Michigan State's John L. Smith and North Carolina's John Bunting were the first casualties this year, and now Iowa State Dan McCarney has joined them as ex-head coaches. McCarney resigned from his position at Iowa State after 12 years in Ames, Iowa and while the Cyclones have struggled this year (3-7 overall, 0-6 in Big 12 play), McCarney being forced to resign is a joke. Prior to Dan McCarney becoming the head coach at Iowa State in 1994, the Cycylones had not been to a bowl game since the 1978 Hall of Fame Bowl. After taking six years to build the Iowa State football program to respectability, McCarney took Iowa State to its first bowl game in 22 years after the 2000 sesaon. Since the 2000 season, Iowa State, a team that had only been to 4 bowl games in its history prior to McCarney becoming head coach, has been to 5 bowl games. So this begs the question of why would Iowa State fire a head coach that has more than doubled the number of bowl appearances in school history during his 12 year tenure? Sure, McCarney had a less than stellar overall record (55-84 through Week 11 of the 2006 season), but the strength of the past 5 years should have bought McCarney at least one down season. I believe that the answer is that athletic diretor Jamie Pollard is a little trigger happy...he's fired three head coaches of Iowa State athletic teams in the past year! Dan McCarney deserved better from Iowa State.

5. The Last Time - It had been almost one year to the day since the Stanford Cardinal won a football game when Walt Harris's team took the field this past Saturday against the University of Washington. Having surrended over 20 points a game in their previous 9 games and being ranked 101th in total defense, not even the most hardcore Stanford fan would have guessed that the Cardinal could beat Washington. After all, this was a Washington team that had almost upset California without its star quarterback (and Total System Failure cult hero) Isaiah Stanbeck. To make matters worse, Stanford has the 118th ranked offense in the country...and yes, there are 119 teams in Division I football...and was without starting quarterback Trent Edwards. In spite of all of those strikes against them, Stanford was able to pull off a shocking 20-3 upset over the once might Huskies and avoid becoming the first team in Pac-10 history to finish the season with a 0-12 record. The 101th ranked defense in the country held the Washington offense to a mere 161 yards of total offense and forced three turnovers, one of which was returned for a touchdown. Walt Harris still has a long way to go to restore some pride to the Stanford football program, but at least for one Saturday, Stanford fans could feel the joy of victory and stop trying to recall the last time they felt that way.

6. Don't Turn Your Back on Me - After having its Pac-10 win streak snapped in Corvallis, Oregon of all places, it appeared that the Southern California Trojans were on the verge of being out of the national title picture for the first time in 4 years. At the time of Oregon State's upset win over the Trojans, there were a bevy of undefeated and one loss teams ahead of Pete Carroll's team. Then, upsets hit some of the nation's best teams...Louisville went down at Rutgers. Georgia waltzed into Jordan-Hare Stadium and dominated Auburn. Arizona shocked California in Tuscon. All of a suddent, Southern Cal was right back in the #3 spot in the BCS rankings and in great position to play against the winner of Ohio State-Michigan for the national championship. Since losing to Oregon State, the Trojans have dominated Stanford and Oregon by a combined score of 77-10. Of course, there is nothing to brag about when you beat Stanford 42-0, but this past weekend's 35-10 victory over Oregon, definitely brought the spotlight back to the USC football team. While I do not believe that many people thought that Oregon could actually pull off the upset, it was shocking to see just how badly they were beaten by the Trojans. The vaunted Oregon rushing attack was held to 2.6 yards per carry, and the Ducks' star running back Jonathan Stewart was held to only 42 yards on 14 carries. Oregon won the turnover battle 3 to 2 and won the time of possession battle by over 7 minutes, but it wasn't enough to beat the Trojans. The bottomline is that just when we all thought we were going to get a break from the USC dynasty they've moved back into the national title race again. Maybe California or Notre Dame can do all college football fans outside of southern California a favor and prevent the Trojans from playing in a fourth straight national title game.

7. Rise on Water - Late Saturday evening, the head coaches, athletic directors, and boosters from major college football conferences were not focused on the developments in the LSU-Alabama game, the Tennessee-Arkansas game, or even the USC-Oregon game. All eyes were on the scoring updates for the Boise State vs. San Jose State game. $14 million dollars to a major conference was on the line if San Jose State could knock Boise State from the ranks of the unbeaten and prevent the potential WAC champion from stealing a BCS bowl slot. It took a huge late fourth quarter punt return by Boise State's Marty Tadman for the Broncos to rise up after trailing the entire game to the Spartans of San Jose State. After Tadman's 44 yard punt return to the 37 yard line of San Jose State, Jared Zabransky and the Boise State offense kept the ball for the final two minutes of the game and moved to 10-0 on the season with a last second field goal to escape with 22-20 victory. Boise State is now two games away from crashing the BCS party and clinching a spot in the Fiesta Bowl. All that stands in the way of Boise State and the $14 million pot of gold are a home game on the smurf turf against 1-9 Utah State team and a trip to Reno to battle the 7-3 Wolfpack of Nevada. I'm sure that there will be more than a few eyes around the country will be watching the scoring updates from Reno on Thanksgiving weekend, and everyone outside of Boise, Idaho will be hoping that the Broncos won't be able to rise up and rally to stay unbeaten.

8. I Lie in the Bed I Make - Bobby Bowden has no one to blame but himself. When Mark Richt left to become the head coach at the University of Georgia, Coach Bowden decided to play the nepotism card and name his son Jeff as the new offensive coordinator. That decision sent the Florida State offense into a steady decline that finally hit rock bottom against Wake Forest on Saturday night in Tallahassee. With Wake Forest's 30-0 victory over the Seminoles, Florida State was shutout for the first time since the opening game of the 1988 football season. Even more revealing was that this was the first shutout of Bobby Bowden coached Florida State in Doak Campbell Stadium.. That covers a 31 year period! Florida State's offense is ranked 65th in the nation this year and averages 338 yards of total offense each game. Just as a point of comparison, in Mark Richt's final year as the Florida State offensive coordinator, the Seminoles averaged over 549 yards of total offense each game. We all know that Florida State is still recruiting the same talented players to Tallahassee, so the obvious answer is that Jeff Bowden is problem with the Seminoles' offense. With an over $500,000 offer by alumni to buyout his contract and on-line petition for his removal gaining more support, Jeff Bowden saved his father the public disgrace of having to fire his son by resigning this week...giving hope to Florida State fans everywhere that their offense might one day exhibit some firepower and avoid shutouts to teams like Wake Forest.

9. Come Alive Again - The last the college football world saw of the Arizona football program was the thorough domination of the Wildcats by LSU back in the second week of the season. After the performance, the buzz surrounding the rebuilding job Mike Stoops is doing at Arizona went silent. All talk regarding a return to prominence for Arizona really disappeared when the Wildcats went on to lose 4 of their 6 games after the LSU game. Arizona started to show some signs of life with a win over Washington State two weeks ago, but no one gave them much a chance to knock off Cal this past Saturday. However, the Arizona defense caused three turnovers and held the #34 ranked rushing attack in the nation to a mere 106 yards, and the Wildcats shocked the BCS hopeful Golden Bears 24-20 in Tuscson. In addition to knocking Lee Corso's national title pick out of the picture, Arizona has positioned itself for a bowl game by getting back to 0.500 on the season with a record of 5-5, but reaching a bowl game is not going to be easy. The Wildcats last two games include a road trip to Eugene, Oregon to battle the Ducks and then a home date with their in-state rival Arizona State. The Wildcats have not played in a bowl game since the 1998 season when they defeated Nebraska 23-20 in the Holiday Bowl, and while this season may not end with a bowl berth, Mike Stoops is on the verge of bringing the Arizona program back to life after the embarrassment of the John Mackovic era of Arizona football.

10. That Don't Satisfy Me - I put off writing about what I witnessed in Jordan-Hare Stadium this past Saturday as long as I could. I even thought about not including anything on Auburn's pathetic performance against Georgia in this week's musings, but that just wouldn't be proper. The gutless, heartless performance by Tommy Tuberville's Tigers needs to be pointed out and addressed. Of course, if you listen to the sycophants on the Inside the Auburn Tigers premium message board, you'll hear that the 2006 season can be saved by defeating a 6-5 Alabama football team. To quote Damon Johnson's most famous Brother Cane song....THAT DON'T SATISFY ME! What I saw firsthand on Saturday proved to me that just being an ordindary solid 9 win (and possibly a ten win season) team and not a true championship team does satisfy this Auburn football team, because there was absolutely no fire, no heart, no desire. The excuses for the performance are plentiful and can be spouted off by any sunshine pumping Auburn sycophants...Brandon Cox isn't a 100 percent....Kenny Irons hasn't been healthy since the LSU game...starting safety Eric Brock was out with a sprained ankle. However, those same Auburn fans will fail to mention that the Auburn defense yielded over 225 yards rushing to the #64 ranked rushing attack in the country. They will also fail to tell you that the overhyped cornerback tandem of Jonathan Wilhite and David Irons allowed a true freshman quaterback that had 51% completion percentage coming into the game to complete 70% of his passes. Did I mention that this particular freshman quarterback had thrown 8 interceptions in the three games prior to the Auburn game? It was truly a disgraceful performance, and I wish Tommy Tuberville would strip the 'AUs' of the helmets of this Auburn football team until they have earned the right to wear them again. A victory over Alabama doesn't mean anything outside the state of Alabama, and it's time that Auburn fans realize that being the best team in the state is not as important as it was in the 1970s and 1980s. Alabama has not been an upper echleon program since the early 1990s. It is time for Auburn fans to demand true excellence from its football program and not tolerate performances like the Arkansas and Georgia games of this 2006 season. What scares me, though, is that the 2004 season was just an anamoly, and we are witnessing the real Auburn progam under the direction of Tommy Tuberville...good, but not great. And for this Auburn fan, THAT DON'T SATISFY ME!
And now, one man's attempt to rank the Top 25 teams in the country....
1. Ohio State
2. Michigan
3. Arkansas
4. Southern Cal
5. Rutgers
6. Florida
7. Notre Dame
8. LSU
9. Texas
10. Louisville
11. West Virginia
12. Auburn
13. Wake Forest
14. Boise State
15. California
16. Wisconsin
17. Oklahoma
18. Georgia Tech
19. Virginia Tech
20. Tennessee
21. Maryland
22. Boston College
23. Clemson
24. Brigham Young
25. Houston

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Updated Bowl Projections - through Week 11

Does anyone want to play for the BCS national championship this season? Are all of us college football fans going to have to suffer through watching an Ohio State vs. Michigan rematch in the BCS Title Game? It is definitely starting to look that way after Louisville, Auburn, Texas, and California all laid eggs this past weekend. I still don't believe that Southern Cal, Notre Dame, and Florida are going to win out, so the Total System Failure bowl projections are going to shock some folks this week. Of course, last time my bowl projections shocked some folks (i.e, when Auburn was shown in the Peach Bowl), they turned out to be quite prophetic. So here are this week's updated bowl projections...and remember, these projections are not the kind of projections based 'if the season ended today'. Rather, the Total System Failure bowl projections are based on how I see the rest of the year playing out.

Notes:

Teams labeled with a '*' indicate teams being selected for a bowl game due to a conference not having enough bowl eligible teams.

Teams labeled with a '^' indicates a team that has already accepted a bowl bid.

Poinsetta Bowl (MWC #2/3 vs. At-Large): Utah vs. Arizona*
Las Vegas Bowl (Pac-10 #4 vs. MWC #1): Arizona State vs. Brigham Young
New Orleans Bowl (Sun Belt #1 vs. C-USA): Middle Tennessee State vs. Rice
New Mexico Bowl (MWC #4 vs. WAC): New Mexico vs. Nevada
Birmingham Bowl (MAC/Big East vs. C-USA): Cincinnati vs. Southern Miss
Armed Forces Bowl (MWC #2/3 vs. C-USA #4): Texas Christian vs. UTEP
Hawaii Bowl (Pac-10 #6 vs WAC): Washington State vs. Hawaii^
Motor City Bowl (MAC vs. Big 10 #7): Central Michigan vs. Texas Tech*
Emerald Bowl (ACC #4/5 vs. Pac-10 #4/5): Miami(FL) vs. Oregon State
Independence Bowl (Big 12 #7/8 vs. SEC #8): Oklahoma State vs. Alabama
Texas Bowl (Big 12 vs. Big East/C-USA): Kansas State vs. South Florida
Holiday Bowl (Pac-10 #2 vs. Big 12 #3): California vs. Nebraska
Champs Sports Bowl (Big 10 #4/5 vs. ACC #4): Iowa vs. Virginia Tech
Music City Bowl (SEC #6 vs. ACC #5/6): Kentucky vs. Boston College
Sun Bowl (Big 12/Big East vs. Pac-10 #3): Louisville vs. Oregon
Insight Bowl (Big 12 #4/5 vs. Big 10 #6): Missouri vs. Wyoming*
Alamo Bowl (Big 12 #4/5 vs. Big 10 #4/5): Texas A&M vs. Purdue
Liberty Bowl (C-USA #1 vs. SEC): Houston vs. South Carolina
Meineke Car Care Bowl (Big East/Navy vs. ACC #5/6): Navy^ vs. Wake Forest
Chik-Fil-A Bowl (ACC #2 vs. SEC #5): Maryland vs. Georgia
MPC Computers Bowl (WAC vs. ACC #8): San Jose State vs. Florida State
Gator Bowl (ACC #3 vs. Big 12/Big East): Clemson vs. West Virginia
Cotton Bowl (SEC vs. Big 12 #2): Auburn vs. Oklahoma
Outback Bowl (SEC vs. Big 10 #3): Tennessee vs. Penn State
Capital One Bowl (SEC vs. Big 10 #2): LSU vs. Wisconsin
International Bowl (MAC #3 vs. Big East #4/5): Western Michigan vs. Pittsburgh
GMAC Bowl (C-USA #2 vs. MAC): East Carolina vs. Ohio

Rose Bowl: Southern Cal vs. Michigan
Fiesta Bowl: Texas vs. Boise State
Orange Bowl: Georgia Tech vs. Rutgers
Sugar Bowl: Notre Dame vs. Florida
BCS Title Game: Arkansas vs. Ohio State