- 2008–09 NCAA football bowl games
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2008–09 NCAA football bowl games Season 2008 Regular season August 28–December 6 Number of Bowls 34 All-Star Games 3 Bowl games December 20, 2008 –
January 31, 2009National Championship 2009 BCS Championship Location of Championship Dolphin Stadium,
Miami Gardens, FloridaChampions Florida Gators Bowl Challenge Cup Winner Pac-10 Conference Bowl Records Conference Bowl
TeamsRecord % ACC 10 4–6 0.400 2 SEC 8 6–2 0.750 4 Big 12 7 4–3 0.571 5 Big Ten 7 1–6 0.143 4 Big East 6 4–2 0.667 2 Conference USA 6 4–2 0.667 0 Pac-10 5 5–0 1.000 3 Mountain West 5 3–2 0.600 3 WAC 5 1–4 0.200 1 MAC 5 0–5 0.000 1 Independents 2 1–1 0.500 0 Sun Belt 2 1–1 0.500 0 College Football Bowl Games «2007–08 2009–10» The 2008–09 NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision College Football Post-Season, which followed the 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season contained a record number of bowl games scheduled in history, as a total of 37 bowl games (34 team-competitive and 3 all-star) were played starting on December 20, 2008 with four contests, and concluded with the Texas vs. The Nation Game in El Paso, Texas, played on January 31, 2009 at Sun Bowl Stadium. For the first time in 62 years, however, the Hula Bowl was not a part of the post-season as it was cancelled indefinitely.
The NCAA divided Division I schools into two divisions starting in 1978: The Football Bowl Subdivision (known as Division I-A from 1978 through 2005) does not have a playoff system, and rewards schools which have football programs with outstanding records on the field during a season to play in bowl games as a reward. The Football Championship Subdivision (known through this same period as Division I-AA) plays in a sixteen-team, single elimination tournament for a recognized national championship, with the notable exceptions of the Ivy League, which abstains from football playoff participation, and the Southwestern Athletic Conference, who have their own playoff in this division.
Of the 34 team-competitive games scheduled, two were new for the 2008–09 season: The EagleBank Bowl, played in Washington, D.C. at RFK Stadium, which was the first Bowl Game to be played on December 20 with an 11 AM kickoff and The magicJack St. Petersburg Bowl, played in the Florida namesake city at Tropicana Field.[1] This meant that a total of 68 teams out of 119 in the FBS played in bowl games, provided they met certain criteria listed below.
Contents
Selection of the teams
NCAA bylaws say that a school with a record of 6–6 in regular season play and at least 5 wins over FBS teams are eligible only after conferences cannot fill out available positions for bowl games with teams having seven (or more) wins automatically eligible, excluding games played in Hawaiʻi and conference championship games in the ACC, Big 12, Conference USA, MAC and the SEC.
After the final regular-season games on December 7, 2008, four conferences — the Pac-10, the SEC, the Big 12, and the Big Ten — did not have enough teams to fill their bowl game allotments. The Pac-10 had seven contracted bowl slots with only five teams eligible. The last two bowls in the Pac-10 pecking order—the Hawaiʻi Bowl (sixth) and Poinsettia Bowl (seventh)—had contingency contracts with other conferences, respectively Conference USA and the WAC, to select one of the secondary conference's teams should the Pac-10 fail to supply enough eligible teams to supply that bowl. However, because C-USA had only six bowl-eligible teams to fill its six primary bowl slots, the Pac-10/C-USA slot in the Hawaiʻi Bowl became an at-large spot, and was awarded to Notre Dame. The SEC and Big 12 failed to produce enough teams to fill their requirements even before both conferences had two teams selected to BCS games, while the Big Ten was unable to fill its requirements once a second team from that conference (Ohio State) was selected to a BCS game. The Atlantic Coast Conference sent an NCAA-record ten teams to bowl games this season.[2] Since 72 teams were bowl-eligible, but only 68 bowl slots were available, four teams were left out of bowl games. Unlike in 2007, when an eight-win Troy team was left home for the postseason, no team with seven or more wins went without a bowl bid this year. All four uninvited teams — Arkansas State, Bowling Green, Louisiana-Lafayette, and San José State — had six wins.
Results
NOTE: Rankings from final BCS Standings of December 7, 2008.
Non BCS Contests[3] Date Game Site Score December 20 EagleBank Bowl RFK Stadium
Washington, DCWake Forest 29 (8–5)
Navy 19 (8–5)December 20 New Mexico Bowl University Stadium
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NMColorado State 40 (7–6)
Fresno State 35[4] (7–6)December 20 magicJack St. Petersburg Bowl Tropicana Field
St. Petersburg, FLSouth Florida 41 (8–5)
Memphis 14[5] (6–7)December 20 Pioneer Las Vegas Bowl Sam Boyd Stadium
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Las Vegas, NVArizona 31 (8–5)
(16) Brigham Young 21[6] (10–3)December 21 R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans, LASouthern Mississippi 30 (7–6)
Troy (Sun Belt Champion) 27[7](8–5) (OT)December 23 SDCCU Poinsettia Bowl Qualcomm Stadium
San Diego, CA(11) TCU 17 (11–2)
(9) Boise State (WAC Champion) 16 (12–1)December 24 Sheraton Hawaiʻi Bowl Aloha Stadium
Honolulu, HINotre Dame 49 (7–6)
Hawaiʻi 21 (7–7)December 26 Motor City Bowl Ford Field
Detroit, MIFlorida Atlantic 24 (7–6)
Central Michigan 21 (8-5)[8]December 27 Meineke Car Care Bowl Bank of America Stadium
Charlotte, NCWest Virginia 31 (9–4)
North Carolina 30 (8–5)December 27 Champs Sports Bowl Citrus Bowl
Orlando, FLFlorida State 42 (9–4)
Wisconsin 13 (7–6)December 27 Emerald Bowl AT&T Park
San Francisco, CACalifornia 24 (9–4)
Miami (FL) 17 (7–6)December 28 Independence Bowl Independence Stadium
Shreveport, LALouisiana Tech 17 (8–5)[9]
Northern Illinois 10 (6–7)December 29 Papajohns.com Bowl Legion Field
Birmingham, ALRutgers 29 (8–5)
North Carolina State 23 (6–7)December 29 Valero Energy Alamo Bowl Alamodome
San Antonio, TX(21) Missouri 30 (10–4)
(23) Northwestern 23 (9–4) (OT)December 30 Roady's Humanitarian Bowl Bronco Stadium
Boise State University
Boise, IDMaryland 42 (8–5)
Nevada 35 (7–6)December 30 Pacific Life Holiday Bowl Qualcomm Stadium
San Diego, CA(17) Oregon 42 (10–3)
(13) Oklahoma State 31 (9–4)December 30 Texas Bowl Reliant Stadium
Houston, TXRice 38 (10–3)
Western Michigan 14 (9–4)December 31 Bell Helicopters Armed Forces Bowl Amon G. Carter Stadium
Texas Christian University
Fort Worth, TXHouston 34 (8–5)
Air Force 28 (8–5)December 31 Brut Sun Bowl Sun Bowl Stadium
University of Texas at El Paso
El Paso, TXOregon State 3 (9–3)
(20) Pittsburgh 0 (9–4)December 31 Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl LP Field
Nashville, TNVanderbilt 16 (7–6)
(24) Boston College 14 (9–5)December 31 Insight Bowl Sun Devil Stadium
Arizona State University
Tempe, AZKansas 42 (8–5)
Minnesota 21 (7–6)December 31 Chick-fil-A Bowl Georgia Dome
Atlanta, GALSU 38 (8–5)
(14) Georgia Tech 3 (9–4)January 1 Outback Bowl Raymond James Stadium
Tampa, FLIowa 31 (9–4)
South Carolina 10 (7–4)January 1 Konica Minolta Gator Bowl Jacksonville Municipal Stadium
Jacksonville, FLNebraska 26 (8–4)[10]
Clemson 21 (7–5)January 1 Capital One Bowl Citrus Bowl
Orlando FL(15) Georgia 24 (10–3)
(18) Michigan State 12 (9–4)January 2 AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic Cotton Bowl, Fair Park
Dallas, TX(25) Ole Miss 47 (9–4)
(7) Texas Tech 34 (11–2)January 2 AutoZone Liberty Bowl Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium
Memphis, TNKentucky 25 (7–6)
East Carolina (C-USA Champion) 19 (9–5)January 3 International Bowl Rogers Centre
Toronto, ONUConn 38 (8–5)
Buffalo (MAC Champion) 20 (8–6)January 6 GMAC Bowl Ladd Peebles Stadium
Mobile, ALTulsa 45 (11–3)
(22) Ball State 13 (12–2)Bowl Championship Series Date Game Site Score January 1 Rose Bowl Game presented by citi Rose Bowl Stadium
Pasadena, CA(5) Southern California (Pac-10 Champion) 38 (12–1)
(8) Penn State (Big Ten co-Champion) 24 (11–2)[11]January 1 FedEx Orange Bowl Dolphin Stadium
Miami Gardens, FL(19) Virginia Tech (ACC Champion)[11] 20 (10–4)
(12) Cincinnati (Big East Champion) 7 (11–3)January 2 Allstate Sugar Bowl Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans, LA(6) Utah (MWC Champion)[11] 31 (13-0)
(4) Alabama (SEC runner-up) 17 (12-2)[12]January 5 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl University of Phoenix Stadium
Glendale, AZ(3) Texas (Big 12) 24 (12-1)
(10) Ohio State (Big Ten co-champion) 21 (10-3)[11]January 8 2009 FedEx BCS National Championship Dolphin Stadium
Miami Gardens, FL(2) Florida (SEC Champion) 24
(1) Oklahoma (Big 12 Champion) 14 [13]Conference bowl representation
Bowl Appearances Final Rankings Conference No. of Teams Record Pct. Winners Losers Ranked
TeamsTeam AP
(1/9/09)Coaches
(1/9/09)BCS
(12/7/08)Pac-10 5 5–0 1.000 Southern California
Oregon
Oregon State
California
Arizona4 Southern California #3(1) #2 #5 Oregon #10 #9 #17 Oregon State #18 #19 NR California NR #25 NR Winners of 2008-09 Bowl Challenge Cup with perfect record. SEC 8 6–2 0.750 Florida
Georgia
Ole Miss
Vanderbilt
LSU
KentuckyAlabama
South Carolina4 Florida #1(48) #1(60) #2 Alabama #6 #6 #4 Georgia #13 #10 #15 Ole Miss #14 #15 #25 Florida won the National Championship. Vanderbilt won in a bowl for the first time since 1955.
Kentucky won a bowl for the third straight season, a first in school history.Big East 6 4–2 0.667 West Virginia
South Florida
Rutgers
ConnecticutCincinnati
Pittsburgh3 Cincinnati #17 #17 #12 West Virginia #23 NR NR Pittsburgh NR NR #20 Both of the Big East's BCS-ranked teams lost their games. Big 12 7 4–3 0.571 Texas
Missouri
Kansas
NebraskaOklahoma
Texas Tech
Oklahoma State5 Texas #4 #3 #3 Oklahoma #5 #6 #1 Texas Tech #12 #12 #7 Oklahoma State #16 #18 #13 Missouri #19 #16 #21 Conference USA 6 4–2 0.667 Southern Mississippi
Rice
Houston
TulsaMemphis
East Carolina0 none Rice ended a 54-year winless streak in bowls, Houston ended theirs at 28. Mountain West 5 3–2 0.600 Utah
TCU
Colorado StateBrigham Young
Air Force3 Utah #2(16) #4(1) #6 TCU #7 #7 #11 Brigham Young #25 #21 #16 Utes became first BCS outsider to win two BCS games; their other was the 2005 Fiesta Bowl.
The Utes also won their eighth straight bowl game.Independents 2 1–1 0.500 Notre Dame Navy 0 none Notre Dame won first bowl game since 1994 Cotton Bowl Classic. Sun Belt 2 1–1 0.500 Florida Atlantic Troy 0 none Only conference ineligible for 2008-09 Bowl Challenge Cup. ACC 10 4–6 0.400 Virginia Tech
Florida State
Maryland
Wake ForestGeorgia Tech
Boston College
North Carolina
Miami (FL)
NC State
Clemson4 Virginia Tech #15 #14 #19 Georgia Tech #22 #22 #14 Florida State #21 #23 NR Boston College NR NR #24 The ACC's ten teams in postseason is a new NCAA record.
Boston College's streak of bowl wins in eight consecutive seasons ended.Western Athletic 5 1–4 0.200 Louisiana Tech Boise State
Fresno State
Hawaiʻi
Nevada1 Boise State #11 #13 #9 Big Ten 7 1–6 0.143 Iowa Penn State
Ohio State
Michigan State
Northwestern
Minnesota
Wisconsin5 Penn State #8 #8 #8 Ohio State #9 #11 #10 Iowa #20 #20 NR Michigan State #24 #24 #18 Northwestern NR #NR #23 Iowa's win in Outback Bowl avoided a total shutout. Mid-American 5 0–5 0.000 Ball State
Central Michigan
Northern Illinois
Western Michigan
Buffalo1 Ball State NR NR #22 Only winless conference in bowl season. NOTE: BCS teams are listed in italics.
Post-BCS All-Star Games
All-Star Game Date Location Television Result East-West Shrine Game[14] January 17, 2009 Robertson Stadium
University of Houston
Houston, TexasESPN2 East 24, West 19 Senior Bowl[15][16] January 24, 2009 Ladd-Peebles Stadium,
Mobile, AlabamaNFL Network South 35, North 18 Texas vs. The Nation Game[17] January 31, 2009 Sun Bowl Stadium
University of Texas at El Paso
El Paso, TexasCBS College Sports Network The Nation 27, Texas 24 References
- ^ "St. Petersburg, Washington will host bowl games in 2008". ESPN. 2008-04-30. http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3375625&campaign=rss&source=NCFHeadlines. Retrieved 2008-05-02.
- ^ "Unbeaten Boise State heads Poinsettia; ACC slots 10". The Sporting News. The Sporting News. 2008-12-07. http://www.sportingnews.com/yourturn/viewtopic.php?t=494797. Retrieved 2008-12-08.
- ^ "2008–09 Bowl Schedule". CBSSports.com. 2008-06-19. http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/story/10823453. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
- ^ "Fresno State will represent WAC in New Mexico Bowl". AP. 2008-12-04. http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/sns-ap-fbc-fresno-st-new-mexico-bowl,0,5496316.story. Retrieved 2008-12-04.
- ^ Memphis Tigers to play South Florida in Dec. 20 bowl in St. Pete
- ^ BYU, Arizona will meet in Las Vegas Bowl on Dec. 20
- ^ Outright Champions!
- ^ MSU gets Capital One Bowl, CMU back to Motor City
- ^ "tech to play in Independence Bowl". Shreveport Times. 2008-12-03. http://www.shreveporttimes.com/article/20081203/SPORTS02/81202046/1026/SPORTS02. Retrieved 2008-12-04.[dead link]
- ^ Nebraska's Going Gator
- ^ a b c d 2008–09 Bowl Schedule. FOX Sports on MSN.
- ^ Lewis, Michael (2008-12-07). "Utes will face Alabama in Sugar Bowl". Salt Lake Tribune. http://www.sltrib.com/ci_11163492. Retrieved 2008-12-07.
- ^ Oklahoma, Florida to meet in BCS Championship Game. Fox Sports on MSN.
- ^ http://www.shrinegame.com/press_release/84_game/EWSG_Player_Alert_12-3-08.pdf
- ^ http://www.seniorbowl.com/images/fanguide09.pdf
- ^ http://www.seniorbowl.com/2009schedule.asp
- ^ http://texasvsthenation.cstv.com/
2008–09 NCAA football bowl game season EagleBank (Dec. 20) • New Mexico (Dec. 20) • St. Petersburg (Dec. 20) • Las Vegas (Dec. 20) • New Orleans (Dec. 21) • Poinsettia (Dec. 23) • Hawai'i (Dec. 24) • Motor City (Dec. 26) • Meineke Car Care (Dec. 27) • Champs Sports (Dec. 27) • Emerald (Dec. 27) • Independence (Dec. 28) • PapaJohns.com (Dec. 29) • Alamo (Dec. 29) • Humanitarian (Dec. 30) • Holiday (Dec. 30) • Texas (Dec. 30) • Armed Forces (Dec. 31) • Sun (Dec. 31) • Music City (Dec. 31) • Insight (Dec. 31) • Chick-fil-A (Dec. 31) • Outback (Jan. 1) • Gator (Jan. 1) • Capital One (Jan. 1) • Cotton (Jan. 2) • Liberty (Jan. 2) • International (Jan. 3) • GMAC (Jan. 6)
Bowl Championship Series games: Rose Bowl (Jan. 1) • Orange Bowl (Jan. 1) • Sugar Bowl (Jan. 2) • Fiesta Bowl (Jan. 5) • BCS National Championship (Jan. 8)All-Star Games: East-West Shrine Game (Jan. 17) • Senior Bowl (Jan. 24) • Texas vs. The Nation Game (Jan. 31) NCAA football bowl seasons 1934–35 • 1935–36 • 1936–37 • 1937–38 • 1938–39 • 1939–40
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