Mobile version. Acronyms are explained below. All times Eastern and PM, except where obvious. As of 03/05/2010 03:04:39 AM -0800 .

Bowls

When

Where

Time

TV

Teams

Predictions

New Mexico Bowl   Albuquerque, NM   ESPN WAC MWC #4/5    
St. Petersburg Bowl   St. Petersburg, FL   ESPN C-USA ???    
New Orleans Bowl   New Orleans, LA   ESPN C-USA #2/3/4/5/6 Sun Belt #1    
Las Vegas Bowl   Las Vegas, NV   ESPN Pac-10 #5 MWC #1    
Poinsettia Bowl   San Diego, CA   ESPN Navy/At-large MWC #2    
Little Caesars Pizza Bowl   Detroit, MI   ESPN Big Ten #8 MAC    
Car Care Bowl   Charlotte, NC   ESPN ACC #5 Big East #3    
Emerald Bowl   San Francisco, CA   ESPN Pac-10 #6 WAC    
Music City Bowl   Nashville, TN   ESPN SEC ACC #6    
Independence Bowl   Shreveport, LA   ESPN2 ACC #7 MWC #3    
EagleBank Bowl   Washington, D.C.   ESPN ACC #8 C-USA #2/3/4/5/6    
Champs Sports Bowl   Orlando, FL   ESPN Big East #2/ND ACC #3    
Humanitarian Bowl   Boise, ID   ESPN WAC MAC    
Holiday Bowl   San Diego, CA   ESPN Pac-10 #4 Big 12 #5    
Armed Forces Bowl   Fort Worth, TX   ESPN C-USA #2/3/4/5/6 MWC #4/5    
Sun Bowl   El Paso, TX   CBS ACC #4 Pac-10 #3    
Texas Bowl   Houston, TX   ESPN Big 12 #6 Big Ten #6    
Insight Bowl   Tempe, AZ   NFL Big 12 #4 Big Ten #4/5    
Peach^ Bowl   Atlanta, GA   ESPN ACC #2 SEC    
International Bowl   Toronto, ON, CA   ESPN2 MAC ???    
Papajohns.com Bowl   Birmingham, AL   ESPN ??? ???    
Dallas Football Classic   Dallas, TX   ESPN Big 12 #8 Big Ten #8    
Alamo Bowl   San Antonio, TX   ESPN Pac-10 #2 Big 12 #3    
Liberty Bowl   Memphis, TN   ESPN C-USA #1 ???    
GMAC Bowl   Mobile, AL   ESPN Sun Belt MAC    
Yankee Bowl   New York, NY   ESPN Big 12 #7 Big East #4    
Hawaii Bowl Dec. 24 Honolulu, HI 8:00 ESPN WAC C-USA #2/3/4/5/6    
Outback Bowl Jan. 1 Tampa, FL 1:00 ABC SEC #3 Big Ten #3    
Gator Bowl Jan. 1 Jacksonville, FL 1:30 ESPN2 SEC #5 Big Ten #4/5    
Capital One Bowl Jan. 1 Orlando, FL 1:00 ESPN SEC #2 Big Ten #2    
Rose Bowl Jan. 1 Pasadena, CA   ESPN BCS (Big Ten #1) BCS (Pac-10 #1)    
Sugar Bowl Jan. 4 New Orleans, LA   ESPN BCS (SEC #1) BCS (At-large)    
Fiesta Bowl Jan. 1 Glendale, AZ   ESPN BCS (Big 12 #1) BCS (At-large)    
Orange Bowl Jan. 3 Miami, FL   ESPN BCS (ACC #1) BCS (At-large)    
Cotton Bowl Jan. 7 Arlington, TX   FOX Big 12 #2 SEC    
BCS Championship Game Jan. 10 Glendale, AZ   ESPN BCS #1 BCS #2    

Teams 6-6 or better that need at-large bids:

Old predictions
Past years: 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999

BCS Selection Process for 2007-2010:
The order of selection is as follows:
1. The top 2 teams go to the national title game and conference champs of the Big Ten, Big 12, ACC, Pac-10, and SEC go to their games.
2. The bowls that lose their automatic qualifiers get to replace them first. (The bowl that would have the #1 team goes first.)
3. The remaining bowls pick automatic qualifiers and at-large teams in the reverse order when they will be played (so, this year, the order is Orange, Fiesta, and then Sugar).

What is an automatic qualifier? Well, here are the criteria (in order):
1. You finish in the top two of the standings.
2. You are the champion of the ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-10, or Southeastern Conference.
3. You are a the champion of C-USA, the MAC, the MWC, the Sun Belt, or the WAC and you:
    a) Are ranked in the top 12
    b) Or are in the top 16 and ranked above a team that qualifies under rule 2.
    No more than one team meeting these provisions may get an auto-berth and the highest ranked team gets it.
4. Notre Dame will qualify if they are ranked 8th or higher.
5. If the 3rd ranked team has not earned an automatic berth by this point and there are less than 10 qualifiers, then that team gets it as long as no team in its conference is in the national title game.
6. If the 4th ranked team has not earned a berth by this point and there are less than 10 qualifiers, then that team gets it as long as no team in its conference is in the national title game.

If there are fewer than 10 automatic qualifiers, then any team in the top 14 with at least 9 wins can be picked as an at-large team.

Source: http://www.bcsfootball.org/bcsfb/eligibility

The supposed ACC bowl selection criteria (warning, PDF; as of August 2008). I checked this year's media guide and it hasn't changed.

Overall eligibility: The NCAA Postseason Handbook (warning, PDF; as of October 2008) specifies that a school must be a 6-6 or better to qualify for a bowl. The handbook also specifies that any team with a winning record must be picked before a 6-6 team, both for conference contractual obligations and for at-large picks. Also, only one DI-AA (a.k.a. FCS) team counts towards a team's record. Therefore, schools that played two DI-AA teams this year (like Georgia Tech) must go at least 7-5 to be bowl eligible. Also, if a team schedules a game at Hawaii as a 13th game, this game does count towards the 6-win requirement, but it must have a winning record against DI-A teams. This year, this applies to Cincinnati, Washington State, and to Hawaii itself.
Also, there is what I call the "Sun Belt Rule", which states that 6-6 teams are eligible for bowls if they were conference champions and said champion is contractually obligated to go to a bowl.

1 = Sun Belt to the rescue! For 2008 and 2009, the Sun Belt will be the first source of back up teams for the following bowls: St. Petersburg, Papajohns.com, and the Independence Bowl. Effectively, the St. Petersburg and PJs.com bowl get Sun Belt #2/3 and the Independence gets Sun Belt #4. I have verified in this year's media guide this arrangement will continue for 2010.

?=at-large because some conference couldn't fill its bids
* = Accepted invitation
** = Predicted correctly
^ = now known as the Chick-fil-a Bowl
A team in bold indicates that I predicted the winner correctly
A team in italics means that team won the game, but was not who I picked
A bold score means that I actually managed to pick the score correctly|
A team that is underlined
is the predicted winner