2010–11 NCAA football bowl games

The 2010–11 NCAA football bowl games concluded the 2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season and included 35 team-competitive bowl games and four all-star games. The games began play with three bowls on December 18, 2010 and included the 2011 BCS National Championship Game in Glendale, Arizona played on January 10 at the University of Phoenix Stadium. The bowl season concluded with the East–West Shrine Game, the Eastham Energy All-Star Game, the Senior Bowl, the Dixie Gridiron Classic, and the NFLPA Game. One bowl, the Toronto-based International Bowl, has ceased operations.

2010–11 NCAA football bowl games
Bowl sites by state
Season2010
Regular seasonSeptember 2, 2010 – December 11, 2010
Number of bowls35
All-star games5
Bowl gamesDecember 18, 2010 – January 10, 2011 (team-competitive)
National Championship2011 BCS National Championship
Location of ChampionshipUniversity of Phoenix Stadium
Glendale, Arizona
ChampionsAuburn Tigers
Bowl Challenge Cup winnerMountain West Conference
Bowl record by conference
Conference Bowls Record Final AP Poll
SEC 10 5–5 (0.500) 6
ACC 9 4–5 (0.444) 4
Big 12 8 3–5 (0.375) 5
Big Ten 8 3–5 (0.375) 4
Big East 6 4–2 (0.667) 2
Conference USA 6 2–4 (0.333) 0
Mountain West 5 4–1 (0.800) 2
Pac-10 4 2–2 (0.500) 2
MAC 4 2–2 (0.500) 0
WAC 4 2–2 (0.500) 3
Sun Belt 3 2–1 (0.667) 0
Independents 3 2–1 (0.667) 0

A new record of 35 team-competitive bowls, plus five all-star games, were played, including the inaugural TicketCity Bowl and Pinstripe Bowl (the International Bowl was dropped from the schedule this season). While bowl games had been the purview of only the very best teams for nearly a century, this was the fifth consecutive year that teams with non-winning seasons participated in bowl games. To fill the 70 available team-competitive bowl slots, a new record total of 14 teams (20% of all participants) with non-winning seasons participated in bowl games—all 14 had a .500 (6-6) season.

Selection of the teams edit

 
Number of bowl teams per state.

In a significant change from the 2009–10 bowl cycle, the NCAA scrapped a bylaw which mandated that a school with a record of 6–6 in regular season play was eligible only if conferences could not fill out available positions for bowl games with teams possessing seven (or more) wins (excluding games played in Hawaii and conference championship games in the ACC, Big 12, Conference USA, Mid-American Conference and the SEC). An example was in 2008 when the Big Ten, the Big 12 and SEC each had two teams selected for the Bowl Championship Series games – Ohio State and Penn State from the Big Ten, Texas and Oklahoma from the Big 12 and Alabama and Florida from the SEC. With each conference sending two teams to the BCS, these three conferences forfeited several bowl game slots due to a lack of teams with a winning record.

This change in policy ultimately led to Temple—a team that went 8–4 in the regular season, including a win over Big East BCS representative UConn—going uninvited.

On June 10, Southern California was declared ineligible for two years as a result of the eligibility of Reggie Bush from 2003 through 2005. While the program is appealing their 2011–12 eligibility, they have decided to accept the penalty for this season, snapping a nine-season streak of bowl appearances.

Eligible teams edit

Note: Neither Temple nor Western Michigan, both from the MAC, was selected for a bowl game, despite being bowl-eligible.

New bowls, sponsors, and stadiums in 2010–11 edit

New games edit

Two new games were played this season. The Cotton Bowl in Fair Park, the former home of the Cotton Bowl Classic, became the site of the TicketCity Bowl, on New Years Day 2011, with the Big Ten, the Big 12, and Conference USA (in alternating seasons) providing opponents, while Yankee Stadium hosted the inaugural New Era Pinstripe Bowl on December 30, 2010, pitting teams from the Big East and Big 12. This contest became the first bowl game in the Metropolitan New York area since the Garden State Bowl, and the first in New York City proper since the Gotham Bowl was played in the original Yankee Stadium. Two bowl games that were proposed — the Cure Bowl, which would have pitted members of Conference USA and the Sun Belt Conference in a contest at Bright House Networks Stadium on the campus of the University of Central Florida in Orlando, Florida, and the Christmas Bowl, scheduled to be played in Los Angeles — were not certified by the NCAA on April 23, 2010. The International Bowl, played at the Rogers Centre in Toronto from 2007 to 2010, was discontinued after the Big East affiliated with the Pinstripe Bowl.

With this year's expansion to 35 bowl games, the NCAA has placed a three-year moratorium, starting with the 2011–12 bowl season, on any new bowl games. The expansion to 70 teams required to fill these 35 bowl games has challenged the ability to actually find enough teams with winning (7-5 or higher) records to fill bowl slots. Teams with non-winning (6-6) and losing (6-7) records have participated in bowl games since the expansion to 35 games. By the 2012–13 bowl season, with multiple teams ineligible due to sanctions, the NCAA was forced to anticipate a need for teams with even worse (5-7) losing records to fill bowl selection slots in 2012–13.

New sponsors edit

A total of nine games had new sponsors. Two BCS games — the Orange Bowl and Rose Bowl — lost their sponsors. After more than two decades, FedEx dropped its sponsorship of the Orange Bowl, which now has Discover Financial as its title sponsor starting in 2011 for five games (including the 2013 BCS Championship) over four years. The Rose Bowl lost sponsor Citi, and became sponsored by Vizio through 2014, including the 2014 BCS Championship.[1]

In non-BCS games, Kraft Foods took over as sponsor of the former Emerald Bowl at AT&T Park and renamed it the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl, which will benefit food banks and Feeding America under a three-year contract. Bridgepoint Education replaced Pacific Life for the Holiday Bowl played at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. South Korean automobile maker Hyundai supplanted Helen of Troy's Brut cologne brand as sponsor of the Sun Bowl played in El Paso, Texas, and will continue to do for four years. Northrop Grumman became the sponsor of the former EagleBank Bowl in Washington, D.C., and renamed it the Military Bowl, while the BBVA Compass Bowl formerly called the PapaJohns.com Bowl got a new sponsor, and domain name registrar Go Daddy took over sponsorship of the GoDaddy.com Bowl. Insurance giant Progressive Corporation assumed sponsorship of the Gator Bowl on New Year's Day in Jacksonville after a four-year run as sponsor by Konica Minolta ended in 2010.[2]

One postseason all-star game changed both its location and name. The Texas vs The Nation game was renamed for its title sponsor, the National Football League Players Association, and moved from El Paso to the Alamodome in San Antonio. The game retained the old "Texas vs. the Nation" format used in all of the other previous games.

New site edit

One previous bowl had a different venue beginning in the 2010–2011 bowl game season. The Armed Forces Bowl, which was held at Amon G. Carter Stadium on the campus of Texas Christian University in Fort Worth since its inception in 2003, was displaced due to a renovation project that started immediately after TCU's last home game of the season. The project was not expected to be complete until 2012. As a result, the 2010 and 2011 editions of the game were moved to Gerald J. Ford Stadium on the campus of Southern Methodist University in the Dallas enclave of University Park.

Television edit

ESPN took over coverage of the entire Bowl Championship Series starting this year, and also began airing the Rose Bowl Game under a new four-year contract that is separate from the BCS. Additionally, a new BCS logo was unveiled during the contest between Alabama and Texas. This will mark the first time the games have not been available on broadcast television since the medium began broadcasting the games. ESPN networks will also take over coverage of the Gator Bowl (previously on CBS) and Capital One Bowl (previously on ABC).

As a result of the changes, only three bowl games aired on broadcast television: the Hyundai Sun Bowl on CBS New Year's Eve, the Outback Bowl on ABC New Year's Day, and the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic on Fox January 7. All other bowl games were broadcast on one of the ESPN networks, not counting all-star games.

Changing landscapes of conferences edit

The 2010–11 bowl season was the last of several schools in the current conferences configurations. In May and June 2010, reports surfaced that seven or eight schools would leave the Big 12 Conference (which was originally formed from the old Big Eight Conference and four of the schools from the defunct Southwest ConferenceTexas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Baylor) to go to new conferences.

On June 6, Colorado, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas, Texas A&M and Texas Tech (effectively the Big 12 South Division minus Baylor plus the North Division's Colorado) were rumored to have been invited to join the Pacific-10 Conference. On June 10, Colorado announced its intention to join the Pacific-10 Conference, effective 2012 (later changed to 2011). Nebraska announced their departure from the Big 12 on June 11, joining the eleven-school Big Ten Conference, effective July 1, 2011, thereby leaving the Big 12 with ten schools and the Big Ten with 12 schools.

On June 11, Boise State announced their intentions to leave the WAC and join the Mountain West Conference. In August 2010, WAC members Nevada and Fresno State followed suit, leaving the WAC with six teams. Boise State will join the MWC in 2011, with Fresno State and Nevada following in 2012.

The Pac-10 added Utah from the MWC on June 17, effective 2011, expanding the Pacific-10 Conference to twelve teams, with the conference officially becoming the Pac-12 Conference in July 2011.

The Big 12 will remain intact (sans Nebraska and Colorado) as a ten-team league, discontinuing their championship game following the 2010 contest at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, in which Oklahoma defeated departing member Nebraska. Starting in 2011, championship games in both the Big Ten (at Lucas Oil Stadium) and the Pac-12 (at the home stadium of the school with the best conference record) will decide which team will represent their conferences in the Rose Bowl Game.

The next conference movements came on November 11, when the WAC added two new football members in Texas State and UTSA, both FCS schools from the Southland Conference. Texas State had an established football program, while UTSA was slated to begin full FCS play in 2011. Both schools will now upgrade their football programs to FBS level, join the WAC for all sports in 2012, and become full FBS members in 2013.

Later, on December 10, Hawaii announced they would leave the WAC and join the Mountain West as a football-only member and the Big West Conference for other sports.

Schedule edit

NOTE:. All times US EST (UTC -5).

Non-BCS Contests
Date Game Site Television Participants and Results
Dec. 18 New Mexico Bowl University Stadium
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, New Mexico
2:00 pm
ESPN BYU (6-6) 52
UTEP (6-6) 24
Humanitarian Bowl Bronco Stadium
Boise State University
Boise, Idaho
5:30 pm
Northern Illinois (10-3) 40
Fresno State (8-4) 17
New Orleans Bowl Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans
9:00 pm
Troy (7-5) 48
Ohio (8-4) 21
Dec. 21 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl Tropicana Field
St. Petersburg, Florida
8:00 pm
Southern Miss (8-4) 28
Louisville (6-6) 31
Dec. 22 Maaco Bowl Las Vegas Sam Boyd Stadium
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Whitney, Nevada
8:00 pm
#19 Utah (10-2) 3
#10 Boise State (11-1) 26
Dec. 23 Poinsettia Bowl Qualcomm Stadium
San Diego
8:00 pm
Navy (9-3) 14
San Diego State (8-4) 35
Dec. 24 Hawaii Bowl Aloha Stadium
Honolulu, HI
8:00 pm
#24 Hawaii (10-3) 35
Tulsa (9-3) 62
Dec. 26 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl Ford Field
Detroit
8:30 pm
FIU (6-6) 34
Toledo (8-4) 32
Dec. 27 Independence Bowl Independence Stadium
Shreveport, Louisiana
5:00 pm
ESPN2 Air Force (8-4) 14
Georgia Tech (6-6) 7
Dec. 28 Champs Sports Bowl Citrus Bowl
Orlando, Florida
6:30 pm
ESPN #22 West Virginia (9-3) 7
NC State (8-4) 23
Insight Bowl Sun Devil Stadium
Arizona State University
Tempe, Arizona
10:00 pm
#12 Missouri (10-2) 24
Iowa (7-5) 27
Dec. 29 Military Bowl RFK Stadium
Washington, D.C.
2:30 pm
East Carolina (6-6) 20
Maryland (8-4) 51
Texas Bowl Reliant Stadium
Houston
6:00 pm
Illinois (6-6) 38
Baylor (7-5) 14
Alamo Bowl Alamodome
San Antonio
9:15 pm
#14 Oklahoma State (10-2) 36
Arizona (7-5) 10
Dec. 30 Armed Forces Bowl Gerald J. Ford Stadium
Southern Methodist University
University Park, Texas
Noon
Army (6-6) 16
SMU (7-6) 14
Pinstripe Bowl Yankee Stadium
The Bronx, New York City
3:20 pm
Kansas State (7-5) 34
Syracuse (7-5) 36
Music City Bowl LP Field
Nashville, Tennessee
6:40 pm
North Carolina (7-5) 30
Tennessee (6-6) 27 (2OT)
Holiday Bowl Qualcomm Stadium
San Diego
10:00 pm
#18 Nebraska (10-3) 7
Washington (6-6) 19
Dec. 31 Meineke Car Care Bowl Bank of America Stadium
Charlotte, North Carolina
Noon
South Florida (7-5) 31
Clemson (6-6) 26
Sun Bowl Sun Bowl Stadium
University of Texas El Paso
El Paso, Texas
2:00 pm
CBS Notre Dame (7-5) 33
Miami (FL) (7-5) 17
Liberty Bowl Liberty Bowl
Memphis, Tennessee
3:30 pm
ESPN Georgia (6-6) 6
#25 UCF (10-3) 10
Chick-fil-A Bowl Georgia Dome
Atlanta
7:30 pm
#20 South Carolina (9-4) 17
#23 Florida State (9-4) 26
Jan. 1 TicketCity Bowl Cotton Bowl
Fair Park, Dallas
Noon
ESPNU Northwestern (7-5) 38
Texas Tech (7-5) 45
Outback Bowl Raymond James Stadium
Tampa, Florida
1:00 pm
ABC Florida (8-4) 37
Penn State (7-5) 24
Capital One Bowl Citrus Bowl
Orlando, Florida
1:00 pm
ESPN #16 Alabama (9-3) 49
#9 Michigan State (11-1) 7
Gator Bowl EverBank Field
Jacksonville, Florida
1:30 pm
ESPN2 #21 Mississippi State (8-4) 52
Michigan (7-5) 14
Jan. 6 GoDaddy.com Bowl Ladd–Peebles Stadium
Mobile, Alabama
8:00 pm
ESPN Middle Tennessee (6-6) 21
Miami (OH) (9-4) 35
Jan. 7 Cotton Bowl Cowboys Stadium
Arlington, Texas
8:00 pm
Fox #11 LSU (10-2) 41
#17 Texas A&M (9-3) 24
Jan. 8 BBVA Compass Bowl Legion Field
Birmingham, Alabama
Noon
ESPN Pittsburgh (7-5) 27
Kentucky (6-6) 10
Jan. 9 Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl AT&T Park
San Francisco
9:00 pm
#15 Nevada (12-1) 20
Boston College (7-5) 13
Bowl Championship Series 2011 Schedule
Date Game Site Television Participants and Results
Jan. 1 Rose Bowl Rose Bowl
Pasadena, California
4:30 pm
ESPN #5 Wisconsin (11-1) 19
#3 TCU (12-0) 21
Fiesta Bowl University of Phoenix Stadium
Glendale, Arizona
8:30 pm
Connecticut (8-4) 20
#7 Oklahoma (11-2) 48
Jan. 3 Orange Bowl Sun Life Stadium
Miami Gardens, Florida
8:30 pm
#4 Stanford (11-1) 40
#13 Virginia Tech (11-2) 12
Jan. 4 Sugar Bowl Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans
8:30 pm
#6 Ohio State (11-1) 31
#8 Arkansas (10-2) 26
Jan. 10 BCS National Championship Game University of Phoenix Stadium
Glendale, Arizona
8:30 pm
#2 Oregon (12-0) 19
#1 Auburn (13-0) 22

Post-BCS all-star games edit

Date All-Star Game Site Television Participants
Jan. 22 East–West Shrine Game Citrus Bowl
Orlando, Florida
3:00 pm
NFL Network East 25
West 8
Jan. 23 Eastham Energy All-Star Game Sun Devil Stadium
Tempe, Arizona
Fox College Sports Stripes 40
Stars 34
Jan. 29 Under Armour Senior Bowl Ladd–Peebles Stadium
Mobile, Alabama
4:00 pm
NFL Network South 24
North 10
Feb. 5 Texas vs The Nation Alamodome
San Antonio
CBS College Sports Texas 13
The Nation 7
Feb. 5 Dixie Gridiron Classic Hansen Stadium
St. George, Utah
None Mountain 17
Pacific 13

References edit

  1. ^ "Vizio signs four-year deal to be Rose Bowl sponsor – NCAA Football – SI.com". Sports Illustrated. Associated Press. October 19, 2010. Archived from the original on October 23, 2010. Retrieved October 24, 2010.
  2. ^ Gator Bowl (December 14, 2010). "Gator Bowl announces Progressive Insurance as new sponsor in time for 2011 game - Official Website - GatorBowl.com" (PDF). Official Gator Bowl Committee. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 11, 2011. Retrieved December 17, 2010.

Further reading edit

External links edit