Mobile version. Acronyms are explained below. All times Eastern and PM, except where obvious. As of 12/02/2012 02:07:35 AM -0800.
Bowls | When | Where | Time | TV | Teams | Predictions | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Mexico Bowl6 | Dec. 15 | Albuquerque, NM | 1:00 | ESPN | Pac-12 #7 | MWC #5 | Arizona | Nevada** |
Potato Bowl | Dec. 15 | Boise, ID | 4:30 | ESPN | WAC | MAC #3 | Utah State** | Toledo |
Poinsettia Bowl | Dec. 20 | San Diego, CA | 8:00 | ESPN | BYU | MWC #2 | BYU** | San Diego State** |
Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl1,6 | Dec. 21 | St. Petersburg, FL | 7:30 | ESPN | C-USA #2/3/4/5/6 | Big East #5/64 | Central Florida* | MTSU? |
New Orleans Bowl | Dec. 22 | New Orleans, LA | 12:00 | ESPN | C-USA #2/3/4/5/6 | Sun Belt #1 | East Carolina* | UL-Lafayette** |
Las Vegas Bowl | Dec. 22 | Las Vegas, NV | 3:30 | ESPN | Pac-12 #5 | MWC #1 | Washington | Fresno State |
Hawaii Bowl | Dec. 24 | Honolulu, HI | 8:00 | ESPN | C-USA #2/3/4/5/6 | MWC #4 | Southern Methodist* | Ball State? |
Little Caesars Pizza Bowl | Dec. 26 | Detroit, MI | 7:30 | ESPN | Big Ten #81 | MAC #1 | Western Kentucky? | Northern Illinois |
Military Bowl7 | Dec. 27 | Washington, D.C. | 3:00 | ESPN | ACC #8 | Army | Bowling Green? | San Jose State** |
Belk Bowl | Dec. 27 | Charlotte, NC | 6:30 | ESPN | ACC #5 | Big East #3 | Duke | Cincinnati |
Holiday Bowl | Dec. 27 | San Diego, CA | 9:45 | ESPN | Pac-12 #3 | Big 12 #5 | Oregon State | Texas Tech |
Independence Bowl | Dec. 28 | Shreveport, LA | 2:00 | ESPN | ACC #7 | SEC #9 | Ohio? | UL-Monroe* |
Russell Athletic Bowl | Dec. 28 | Orlando, FL | 5:30 | ESPN | Big East #2 | ACC #3 | Rutgers | NC State |
Car Care Bowl | Dec. 28 | Houston, TX | 9:00 | ESPN | Big 12 #6 | Big Ten #6 | Baylor | Minnesota |
Armed Forces Bowl | Dec. 29 | Fort Worth, TX | 11:45 | ESPN | C-USA #2/3/4/5/6 | MWC #3 | Rice* | Air Force* |
Pinstripe Bowl | Dec. 29 | New York, NY | 3:15 | ESPN | Big 12 #7 | Big East #4 | West Virginia | Syracuse |
Fight Hunger Bowl | Dec. 29 | San Francisco, CA | 4:00 | ESPN2 | Pac-12 #6/ACC | Navy/ACC | Arizona State | Navy** |
Alamo Bowl | Dec. 29 | San Antonio, TX | 6:45 | ESPN | Pac-12 #2 | Big 12 #3 | UCLA | Texas |
Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl | Dec. 29 | Tempe, AZ | 10:15 | ESPN | Big 12 #4 | Big Ten #5 | Oklahoma State | Michigan State |
Music City Bowl | Dec. 31 | Nashville, TN | 12:00 | ESPN | SEC #7 | ACC #6 | Vanderbilt | Virginia Tech |
Sun Bowl | Dec. 31 | El Paso, TX | 2:00 | CBS | ACC #4 | Pac-12 #4 | Georgia Tech | Southern California |
Liberty Bowl | Dec. 31 | Memphis, TN | 3:30 | ABC | C-USA #1 | SEC #8/9/Big East #5/64 | Tulsa* | Louisiana Tech? |
Chick-fil-a^ Bowl | Dec. 31 | Atlanta, GA | 7:30 | ESPN | ACC #2 | SEC #5 | Clemson | Louisiana State |
Gator Bowl | Jan. 1 | Jacksonville, FL | 12:00 | ESPN2 | Big Ten #4 | SEC #6 | Michigan | Mississippi State |
Heart of Dallas Bowl2,6 | Jan. 1 | Dallas, TX | 12:00 | ESPNU | C-USA #2/3/4/5/6 | Big Ten #7 | TCU? | Purdue |
Capital One Bowl | Jan. 1 | Orlando, FL | 1:00 | ESPN | SEC #2 | Big Ten #2 | Texas A&M | Northwestern |
Outback Bowl | Jan. 1 | Tampa, FL | 1:00 | ABC | Big Ten #3 | SEC #3/4 | Nebraska | South Carolina |
Rose Bowl | Jan. 1 | Pasadena, CA | 5:00 | ESPN | BCS (Big Ten #1) | BCS (Pac-12 #1) | Wisconsin | Stanford |
Orange Bowl | Jan. 1 | Miami Gardens, FL | 8:30 | ESPN | BCS (ACC #1) | BCS (At-large) | Florida State | Boise State |
Sugar Bowl | Jan. 2 | New Orleans, LA | 8:30 | ESPN | BCS (SEC #1) | BCS (At-large) | Florida | Louisville |
Fiesta Bowl | Jan. 3 | Glendale, AZ | 8:30 | ESPN | BCS (Big 12 #1) | BCS (At-large) | Kansas State | Oregon |
Cotton Bowl | Jan. 4 | Arlington, TX | 8:00 | FOX | Big 12 #2 | SEC #3/4 | Oklahoma | Georgia |
BBVA Compass Bowl1,6 | Jan. 5 | Birmingham, AL | 1:00 | ESPN | SEC #8/9 | Big East #5/64 | Mississippi | Pittsburgh |
GoDaddy.com Bowl | Jan. 6 | Mobile, AL | 9:00 | ESPN | Sun Belt #2 | MAC #2 | Arkansas State | Kent State |
BCS Championship Game | Jan. 7 | New Orleans, LA | 9:00 | ESPN | BCS #1 | BCS #2 | Notre Dame | Alabama |
Teams 6-6 or better that need at-large bids: Iowa State (6-6), Central Michigan (6-6),
Old predictions
Past years: 2011 | 2010 |
2009 | 2008 |
2007 | 2006 |
2005 | 2004 |
2003 | 2002 | 2001
| 2000 | 1999 |
Index
BCS Selection Process for 2010-2014:
The order of selection for at-large bids is as follows: Fiesta, Sugar, Orange.
1. The top 2 teams go to the national title game and conference champs of the ACC,
Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12, 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 if both teams lost their bowls. The
first bowl may not take a team from the same conference as the #2 team without permission.
In addition, the first year the Rose Bowl loses a team to the championship game
and a non-BCS conference team qualifies, that team must go to the Rose.
3. The remaining bowls pick automatic qualifiers in this order: Fiesta, Sugar,
and then Orange.
4. After the selections are made, the conferences (and Notre Dame) can adjust the
pairings to take the following factors into account:
a) Whether the same team will be playing in the same bowl for two straight years
b) Whether the two teams played against each other in the regular season
c) Whether the two teams played each other in a bowl game last year
d) "Whether alternative pairings may have greater or lesser appeal to college football
fans as measured by expected ticket sales for the bowls and by expected television
interest, and the consequent financial impact on ESPN and the bowls."
The pairings cannot result in a situation that removes the Big Ten or Pac-12 champion
from the Rose Bowl.
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-12, or Southeastern
Conference.
3. You are a the champion of C-USA, the MAC, the Mountain West, 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. This team must be from an auto-qualifier conference.
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. This team must be from an auto-qualifier conference.
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. No more than two teams from
any conference can be selected. If no team in the top 14 qualifies, then the pool
expands to the top 18 teams, and so on in blocks of 4 teams.
Source: http://www.bcsfootball.org/news/story?id=4819597
Overall eligibility: The 2012-2013 NCAA Division I Manual (warning, PDF) bylaw 18.7.2 governs Division I-A football eligibility. The NCAA defines a "deserving team" as a team with an equal number of wins and losses, i.e, a record of 6-6 and better against DI-A opponents. For the purposes of this record, a team is also allowed to count one DI-AA win as well. Note that it is no longer a requirement that all above .500 teams are selected before 6-6 teams.
The NCAA has
spelled out the criteria for exceptions to bowl qualification rules. They
are:
1. Teams that finished 6-6 with one win versus a FCS opponent.
2. Teams that finished 6-6 with two FCS wins.
3. Teams that finished 6-7, where the 7th loss was in a conference championship
game (a.k.a the "UCLA rule").
4. Teams that played 13 regular season games but finished 6-7.
5. Teams that are reclassifying to FBS and have a 6-6 record (so this year,
South Alabama, Texas-San Antonio, Texas State, and Massachusetts).
6. Teams in the top 5 of the APR and with a 5-7 record. This year, those teams
are Northwestern, Duke, Boise State, Ohio State, and Northern Illinois.
These provisions are in effect for the 2012 through 2015 seasons. During that
span, a particular bowl may only dip into this pool of teams only once.
It really does appear that Notre Dame
does not have any non-BCS bowl tie-ins this year. They're still eligible as
an at-large, obviously.
The ACC bowl selection criteria are buried in the
massive media guide (warning: huge PDF) on page 16. Bowls select in the order
given, and can take the team with the best available record or a team with one less
conference win, with the exception of the Chick-fil-a Bowl, which can take a different
team if it is ranked at least 5 spots higher in the final BCS standings.
The Big Ten bowl selection order is buried in their
massive media guide
on page 41.
The Pac-12 bowl selection
order, on page 131.
The SEC bowl
selection order, on page 34.
The Big East bowl
selection order, on page 10.
The Mountain West media guide has their
selection order on page 33/15.
The WAC
media guide
lists its only bowl this year: the Potato Bowl, on page 20.
The MAC media
guide lists its selection procedures on page 8.
The Big 12
selection order.
The Sun Belt
media
guide actually has all of the bowl selection positions on page 17. Most of
them seem to be right?
The C-USA
media guide lists their bowls and criteria, such as they are, on page 150.
1: Sun Belt to the rescue! For 2010-2013, the Sun Belt will be the first source
of back up teams for the following bowls: St. Petersburg, BBVA Compass, and the
Little Casear's Bowl.
2: Primary backup for either conference is the 7th pick from Conference USA.
4: The Big East has some
wacky agreement
with the Liberty, Compass, and Beef 'O' Brady's Bowls. It seems like this year
they will only send teams to the last two (at least that's what the other conferences
involved seem to assume). Most other sites are interpreting this as something the
Liberty will do if there aren't enough SEC teams, so I will roll with that for this
year. (In fact, I can't find any mention of the Big East on the Liberty Bowl's
site at all.) Update
12/4/2011: It looks like this will happen. This is the
best reference I can find for it.
5: The Russell Athletic (formerly Champs Sports) Bowl can only take Notre Dame
once during the current 4-year agreement (2010-2013). They used this option in
2011 so they cannot select them again in 2012 or 2013.
6: In 2012, the MAC acts as a backup for the New Mexico Bowl, Compass Bowl, Beef
'O' Brady's Bowl, and the Heart of Dallas Bowl. The first three likely have a
priority over the Heart of Dallas Bowl.
7: Conference USA will act as the primary source of backup teams for the
Military Bowl.
?=at-large because some conference couldn't fill its bids
* = Accepted invitation
** = Predicted correctly
^ = It's still the Peach Bowl to me, but I finally felt I should change it
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
Schedule sources:
CollegeFootballPoll,
Matt Sarz, conference media
guides (see above), and individual bowl websites.