Saturday, December 02, 2006

Updated Bowl Projections - through end of regular season

As an official hater of the BCS system, let me send out a big hardy thank you to Karl Dorrell and the UCLA Bruins! Not only has UCLA spared the nation of watching USC play for another national title, but most importantly, UCLA has sparked another huge BCS controversy. So the big question is - will it be Michigan or Florida playing Ohio State for the BCS national title? My bet is on Michigan, and I cannot wait to hear the crying from Urban Meyer. Besides the BCS drama, the final day of the regular season provided some interesting results that shook, rattled, and rolled the bowl pairings. Wake Forest, Oklahoma, and Louisville all punched their BCS bowl tickets, and Troy and Middle Tennessee State earned two bids for the Sun Belt Conference. It's going to be an exciting bowl season!

So here are this year's final, updated bowl projections...I guess we'll see just how accurate the Total System Failure bowl projections are tomorrow night!

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

Rose Bowl: Southern Cal vs. LSU
Fiesta Bowl: Oklahoma vs. Boise State
Orange Bowl: Wake Forest vs. Louisville
Sugar Bowl: Florida vs. Notre Dame
BCS Title Game: Michigan vs. Ohio State

Thursday, November 30, 2006

College Hoops Recap - November

Truly getting into college basketball in November is difficult even for the most staunch fan like myself, because the college football season is still in high gear and the bowl season is rapidly approaching. It really is hard to get excited about the Preseason NIT, the Maui Invitational, the Old Spice Classic, and the Great Alaska Shootout when this is still four months of non-stop action around the country. With college football, there are a smattering of week night games and one full day of action on Saturday. For college hoops, each team has 2 games per week typically, and ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, Fox Sports Net, and even local sports channels show two to three games per night. For most folks, it's hard to really get up games multiple days of the week when there's college football on Saturday and the NFL on Sunday. Hopefully, most people are like me, and by the time January rolls around, you're obsessed with college basketball.

Many of the readers of this blog know of my passion for college basketball (in spite of my wife's distaste for the sport of basketball) so over the next few months the Total System Failure blog is going to become your wall-to-wall source for interesting nuggets, tidbits, and analysis on the college hoops world. I look forward to everyone posting their comments and visiting the TSF blog throughout the season.

To start the season, here's a recap of some of musings on the first month of the college basketball season:

Team of the Month: Butler

Todd Lickliter has proven himself to be a good coach as indicated by his 2-1 record in the NCAA Tournament and his 100 plus wins in just five years as a head coach, but not even the most avid Butler fan would have expected a spot in the Top 25 and possibly even the NCAA Tournament this season. After last season's 20-13 record and appearance in the NIT, it looked like a rebuilding year for the Bulldogs as Horizon Conference player of the year Brandon Polk and both starting guards (Avery Sheets and Bruce Horan) graduated. Of course, any time you play great defense and control the tempo like Butler teams are known to do, you can play with any team in the country. However, what Butler has accomplished this season in moving to 8-0 on the season, winning the Preseason NIT, and defeated Notre Dame, Indiana, Tennessee, and Gonzaga is beyond impressive. Butler is now ranked #18 in the country and has a very good chance to spend much of the season ranked in the Top 25 as they appear to be the class of the always difficult Horizon League. The continued solid play of forwards Brandon Crone and Brian Ligon will be key, but with guards A.J. Graves and Mike Green, Butler could just be the "George Mason" of the 2006-2007 basketball season.

Player of the Month: Trey Jackson of Jackson State
Jackson State had quite the gauntlet to run to start the 2006-2007 basketball season. Games on the road against Alabama, Georgia Tech, Illinois, Memphis, and Rutgers would be enough for any major conference basketball team to navigate, so just imagine what it is like for a SWAC team. Fortunately, for head coach Tevester Anderson, he has Trey Jackson on his squad. In spite of only going 1-4 on the 5 game road trip (which ended with a 71-70 win against Rutgers), Trey Jackson put up 36 points versus Alabama, 33 points versus Georgia Tech, 27 points versus Illinois, 32 points versus Memphis, and 20 points versus Rutgers. For the season, the 6'5 senior guard is averaging 30.4 points per game in 37.9 minutes of playing time per game and is shooting 42% from the field and 37.7% from three point range. Behind the strong play of Jackson, Anderson's team is now 4-4 on the season and looks to be the class of the SWAC. Jackson is probably the best SWAC player to come along since Alabama State legend Steve Rogers, and Jackson just might have enough game to take Jackson State to its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2000.


Misc. Thoughts (aka "Free Throws")

Has a head coach ever been relieved of his coaching duties more quickly in a college basketball season than former Minnesota head coach Dan Monson? I've seen coaches fired after Christmas and during conference play, but never immediately after Thanksgiving. Monson came to Minnesota after getting the Gonzaga dynasty started. Unfortunately, he wasn't able to replicate that success with the Golden Gophers...at least, Clem Haskins got Minnesota to a Final Four, but of course, he did violate a few NCAA rules along the way. I think what hurt Monson the most was recruiting players that were 'too good' for college basketball. He'd have a good player for a year or two (Joel Pryzbilla, Kris Humphries, and Rick Rickert), and then they would bolt for the NBA. Interim head coach Jim Molinari (formerly of Bradley Brave fame) certainly isn't the long term answer, but after losing to Montana and Marist this past week, it definitely was time for a 'new voice' as Monson put it. Maybe Mark Few knows what he is doing by staying at Gonzaga...I'm sure that Monson is wishing he'd have stayed in Spokane these past six seasons.

Does Clemson have the quietest 8-0 record in college basketball? There are 26 undefeated teams currently in Division I, and there is not one team with more wins than the Clemson Tigers. Now, let's be honest - Clemson has only played two teams from major conferences (Mississippi State and the aforementioned Minnesota Golden Gophers), but they are dominating teams that they should (such as Monmouth, Charleston Southern, and Appalachian State) and winning on the road against solid teams. Clemson defeated an Old Dominion team that went on the road and beat Georgetown. With a solid senior point guard in Vernon Hamilton and a deep bench where 9 players are averaging more than 10 points per game, Oliver Purnell has got a team that could cause some problems in the always tough ACC. Clemson should easily clear the double digit mark in wins prior to the start of conference play and even finishing 0.500 in the ACC could put Clemson in the race for their first NCAA Tournament appearance in 8 years.

As a Georgetown basketball fan, I've got to give a shout out to the job that former Hoya Harold Broadnax is doing at Savannah State. Prior to this season, Savannah State had a record of 2-56 over the past two seasons. Playing less than stellar competition, the Tigers are 5-5 through the end of November. Wins over Jacksonville and Mercer and close losses to SWAC favorite Jackson State, Florida A&M, and Georgia State indicate that Savannah State is improving in its second year under the direction of Broadnax. Now, let's be honest for a second.....Savannah State is not a good basketball team and several bad losses are on the way with upcoming road games against North Carolina State, West Virginia, Marquette, Nebraska, and Louisville to name a few. Nevertheless, Broadnax is doing things the right way down in coastal Georgia, and better things are to come for the Tigers.

Speaking of the Hoya basketball....what a disappointing start to the season! Some pundits were talking about the Hoyas being a possible Final 4 contender, but those so-called experts didn't realize just how important Brandon Bowman and Ashanti Cook were to the team. In my opinion, Jeff Green is a complimentary player and not a star player. Green does a lot of things well, but carrying a team and scoring a ton of points are his strengths. Roy Hibbert is still too awkward and foul prone to dominate games like past Hoya centers, and Jonathan Wallace is the only consistent backcourt threat. John Thompson III has a lot to try and figure out with this team, because this supposedly great team has only looked good in its game against Vanderbilt (which has since lost to Wake Forest and Furman). Sure, Old Dominion played a near perfect half of basketball to beat the Hoyas at McDonough Gym, but Oregon exposed the Hoyas. Oregon's lineup did not nearly have the size of the Hoyas, but the Ducks out hustled and outplayed the Hoyas on the offensive glass. From what I saw in the Oregon game, the Hoyas look like a NIT team this season.

It's time to give Mike Anderson some serious credit. The guy can flat out coach. Even with a cupcake schedule, Missouri has no business being 8-0. When Missouri was just 7-0 after beating the likes of Army, Stetson, Coppin State, and North Carolina A&T, I wasn't that impressed. But then, Anderson's team showed Arkansas what 40 minutes of hell is really like when they dominated the Razorbacks from start to finish and won 86-64 in Columbia. Now, it's time to stand up and notice what Mike Anderson is doing with the Tigers. Upcoming games with an improved Purdue team and Illinois will tell us even more about Missouri, but after the first month of the season, people in the Big 12 better be ready for Mike Anderson's style of ball.

This will sound like a cliche - but Gonzaga is becoming the Duke of the West Coast. The cast of characters constantly changes and the superstars come and go, but the wins just keep on piling up. Gonzaga will get another chance to prove itself in early December with a road game at Texas and two games against their in-state rivals (7-0 Washington State and #11 ranked 6-0 Washington), but after beating North Carolina on a neutral floor, I think the Zags have proved that there is life after Adam Morrison. Mark Few needs to just stay in Spokane and just enjoy the fruits of his labor. His program is not about to go anywhere, and sooner or later, the Zags are going to break through to the Final Four and permanently legitimize this program.

A 6-2 start to the season is something to be proud of if you're a basketball fan of Auburn University. Times have been tough under Jeff Lebo, and for some reason, he's under a little heat this year in spite of inheriting a program at rock bottom after the Cliff Ellis era. With a new arena on the way (Praise the Lord, Hallejuah!), I think people are going to see an upswing in the excitement around this program. Vot Barber and Rasheem Barrett are establishing themselves as dominant SEC-caliber players, and more help is on the way once Quan Prowell and Josh Dollard return to action. The real key for the Tigers is trying to find a way to cut down on the number of turnovers. These games of 19 and 20 plus turnovers have got to stop if Auburn is going to find a way to make it to the postseason. Also, the free throw shooting woes that have plagued Auburn basketball since the days of Cliff Ellis have to stop. With the talent that Lebo is starting to bring to the Plains, there are going to be some close SEC games on the road and in Beard-Eaves Colesium this season...and Auburn needs to steal some of those wins to reach the NIT or even the NCAA Tournament, but free throw shooting will be key. It'll be truly interesting to see just how far the Tigers have come since last year when they host Pitt on Sunday.

College basketball is truly a fun sport to follow....just take the Kansas Jayhawks. The second game of the season, Oral Roberts strolls into Phog Allen Fieldhouse and does a number of the Rock,Chalk, Jayhawks by winning 78-71. Kansas fans are beside themselves with Coach Bill Self and down on their beloved Jayhawks, especially after just getting by Ball State. Then, you've got a shot against the #1 team in the country on a neutral floor. All of the media experts and ESPN talking heads are hyping this game like the Ohio State-Michigan football game, and the Gators appear to ready to roll. But then, Kansas plays an almost flawless game - only 12 turnovers, 54% field goal shooting, outrebounds the Gators by 2 - and ends up knocking off the #1 ranked Gators. It truly was one of the great early season games that I've had the pleasure of watching in quite some time. I still think that the Gators will fail in their quest to repeat as national champs, and I don't think either the Jayhawks or Gators will even make the Final 4 this season, but both teams gave us a taste of March Madness caliber hoops in November.

And now, after one month of action, the Total System Failure Top 25:

1. Ohio State
2. UCLA
3. Florida
4. North Carolina
5. Pittsburgh
6. Kansas
7. Texas A&M
8. Alabama
9. Marquette
10. Washington
11. Duke
12. Syracuse
13. Wisconsin
14. Butler
15. LSU
16. Maryland
17. Georgia Tech
18. Connecticut
19. Arizona
20. Gonzaga
21. Memphis
22. Wichita State
23. Oregon
24. Air Force
25. Missouri

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Thoughts on the College Football Coaching Changes

While most of us are preparing for the holiday season and enjoying some well deserved time off with family, the coaching staffs at many major universities are getting some not so welcomed vacations as the crescendo of the annual marathon of head coach firings is upon us. So far, 11 head coaching positions have opened up across the country either through firings, resignations, or actually leaving for another job.

The firings to this point have included: Mike Shula at Alabama, John L. Smith at Michigan State, Dirk Koetter at Arizona State, Larry Coker at Miami(FL), John Bunting at North Carolina, Chuck Amato at North Carolina State, Chris Scelfo at Tulane, Darrell Dickey at North Texas. Iowa State head coach Dan McCarney resigned from his position in Ames after a disappointing season, and Florida International head coach Don Strock resigned in the aftermath of the brawl with Miami(FL). Only Cincinnati head coach Mark Dantonio left his position of his own accord, and that was to take the head coaching job at Michigan State.

In my opinion, some of the firings were justified. The administrations at North Carolina, Michigan State, North Carolina State, and Arizona State all made solid decisions to replace their head coaches. Here are some of my thoughts on each of those firings and what is in store for these coaches:

At Michigan State, John L. Smith only had one winning season in his four years in East Lasing, and the Spartans still have fond memories of their program under the direction of Nick Saban, so sending Smith packing makes sense...especially when you consider the collapse the Spartans had against Notre Dame and its homecoming loss to Illinois! John L. Smith will find another head coaching position in a couple of years. He has had too much previous success to not coach again.

For North Carolina State, the post-Phillip Rivers era proved too much for Amato, and only having 1 winning season in the last three years (not to mention losing the last seven games of this season) sealed his fate. If only Amato could have gotten his Wolfpack to be a team other than Florida State, he might have kept his job. I think the next place we'll see ole Chuckie (as my co-worker and NC State alum Angela calls him) is on "What Not to Wear" so that he can get some fashion assistance for his choice in eyewear.

And poor John Bunting...he was just a bad hire from day one for the Tar Heels. I remember when he was just a linebackers coach for the New Orleans Saints, and I thought he was atrocious. Maybe North Carolina should have fired Bunting earlier in the season because the Tar Heels looked strong in its two game win streak to end the year. I'm sure that Bunting will find his way back onto a NFL staff at some point in the next couple of years.

Dirk Koetter at Arizona State? Well, he pretty much wrote his own pink slip with his botching of the quarterback situation for the Sun Devils this season, but even more damning was his 2-19 record versus ranked opponents and lack of New Years Day (or BCS) bowl appearances. 40 wins in 6 years when you have an athletic director who just arrived from a winning program at USC doesn't equate to much job security. Koetter will be coaching somewhere again after the 2007 season.



The other firings...well, I'm not sure that I'm as sold on those decisions. Of all the coaches that were unjustly unemployed this holiday season, former Iowa State head coach Dan McCarney has the biggest gripe. He honestly got a raw deal from Athletic Director Jamie Pollard. Pollard is obviously trigger happy when it comes to head coaches as three Iowa State head coaches have been replaced since Pollard took over in late 2005. I wrote about McCarney and what he has accomplished in Ames, Iowa in a previous blog, so I won't go through all of his accomplishments again, but to fire a man that doubled the number of the school's bowl appearances in 12 years is beyond absured. I think Gene Chizik is going to make a great head coach for the Cyclones, but Chizik should be getting his first head coaching job somewhere over than Ames, Iowa.

Right beyond Dan McCarney in the ridiculous coaching firing rankings is Tulane's Chris Scelfo. Sure, Scelfo had not had a winning season since 2002 and only went 37-57 in his 8 years in New Orleans, but this is a program that is having to start from scratch after the effects of Hurricane Katrina. It's almost as if the Tulane program is coming off of the death penalty, and to fire the head coach after such a trying season in 2005 and a mediocre 2006 season is beyond rational thought. And again, this is Tulane football we're talking about...and other than the magical undefeated season under Tommy Bowden in 1998, Tulane has never been anything special. Mediocrity is what should be expected for the Green Wave football program.

Another coaching dismissal that truly baffles me is North Texas firing Darrell Dickey. Just two years ago, the North Texas football program was the powerhouse of the Sun Belt Conference. Under Darrell Dickey, the Mean Green won four...yes, FOUR...straight conference titles and earned the automatic bid to the New Orleans Bowl. In 2002, Dickey won 9 games at North Texas...something the school had not accomplished since 1978 when it was only a Division 1-AA program. Yes, Dickey's team went 2-9 last season and went 3-9 this season, but to fire Dickey after only two bad seasons and after he just had a heart attack last month was uncalled for.

And then, there are the firings of Mike Shula and Larry Coker. To be honest, I think both of them should have kept their jobs. Okay, one of the reasons that I believe Mike Shula should have kept his job is that he makes it easier for Auburn to continue to dominate the Crimson Tide. But seriously, Alabama is a program that needs to show some stability to its players, its potential recruits, its fanbase, and the college football world. Alabama is not going to find another "Bear" Bryant. Those glory days are over, and Alabama fans need to face that reality. Shula took a job in Tuscaloosa that no one else wanted the job in May 2003 after the Mike Price debacle. And now, Alabama is searching for its 4th head coach in six years....and their 8th head coach since Bryant left in 1982. The average tenure of Alabama head coaches in the post-Bryant era is 3 years. Shula had a 10 win season last year, but of course, his inability to beat Auburn or LSU cost him his job. I'm just in awe of what the Alabama administration and boosters really thought that a guy with no previous head coaching experience at any level was going to accomplish in 4 years by taking over a program coming off major NCAA recruiting violations. Shula, at the very least, deserved one more year to turn things around.

I truly feel bad for Larry Coker. I think the guy is a good coach and has had a tremendous amount of success. Coker took the Hurricanes to two BCS title games (winning one of them) and won at least 9 games in his other 3 seasons prior to this year's 6-6 finish. And I love this stat...Coker has won more games since 2001 than all but five Division 1 head coaches. I'm not sure if I can remember a coach with a 0.800 winning percentage having just one bad season, and Coker's 'bad' season is still going to result in a bowl appearance! He's just probably too understated for a flashy program like the University of Miami(FL). Let's be honest...this program has had big personalities like Jimmy Johnson, Howard Schellenberger, Butch Davis, and Dennis Erickson at the helm. Larry Coker just doesn't fit in with those guys. Add in the embarrassment of the brawl with Florida International that also claimed the coaching job of Don Strock, and it was easy for Donna Shalala to fire Coker after only one bad season. Of course, Don Strock may have just wanted out of the Florida International job after the stress of building the program from the ground up only to see his team go through a 0-12 season. But back to Coker...this was a mistake by the Miami administration. Much like Alabama, Miami(FL) is going to realize that the days of dominating the college football world are over. The ACC is a strong conference and is a significant upgrade over the Big East. Plus, it's not like the Hurricanes have amazing facilities with which to lure prize recruits. I just hope that another program gives Larry Coker another shot.

So what coaches are next on the chopping block this holiday season? If I was UAB's Watson Brown, Baylor's Guy Morriss, Stanford's Walt Harris, and New Mexico State's Hal Mumme, I might not be sleeping very well these days.

Monday, November 27, 2006

Updated Bowl Projections - through Week 13

Unless the unimaginable happens and UCLA knocks off its crosstown rival USC, then the BCS Title Game match-up has been finalized, and the world will be spared of a Ohio State-Michigan rematch. Of course, this will leave some very unhappy Gators in Florida if they manage to knock off Arkansas in the SEC Championship Game, but I don't see the Gators stopping McFadden and Company. In the non-BCS bowl scene, this weekend proved to be quite interesting as Miami(FL) wrapped up a bowl berth by shocking Boston College and Troy moved closer to its second bowl berth in school history by grabbing a share of the Sun Belt Conference lead with its victory over Middle Tennessee State. There's still a lot left to play as the last weekend of the college football regular season approaches.

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

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