Bowl eligible
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The term bowl eligible refers to any NCAA football team that is able to play in one of the 32 bowl games. In order to be bowl eligible, a team must have at least six wins, including conference and out-of-conference games, and the team must not be on probation. The NCAA allows one victory per season over a Division I-AA team to count toward a Division I-A team's bowl eligibility. This prevents teams from scheduling multiple games against Division I-AA teams in an effort to pad their win total. The term 'bowl eligible' is usually only used when referring to those teams that are eligible to play in minor bowl games, and not to those team who are competing to play in one of the five BCS bowl games.
Teams that are bowl eligible will usually either play in one of the bowl games that its conference is affiliated with based on conference tie-ins or the team will be chosen from the pool of remaining bowl eligible teams to fill one of the at-large positions.
On April 26, 2006, the NCAA announced that they were relaxing the rules for eligibility starting with the 2006 season, particularly in light of the new 12 game college football season. Now, teams with .500 records can qualify for bowl games if their conference has a contract with a bowl game. Also, teams with .500 records (e.g. 6-6) could earn bowl bids if all other Division I-A teams with winning records have been taken and postseason spots still remain vacant.[1]
Occasionally there will be more bowl eligible teams than there are spots in the NCAA football bowl games in the season. In these cases, some bowl eligible teams will not be invited to play in any NCAA football bowl game. In 2005, eight bowl eligible teams did not receive bowl bids, namely Louisiana Tech (7-4), Miami (OH) (7-4), Western Michigan (7-4), Northern Illinois (7-5), Bowling Green (6-5), Central Michigan (6-5), Louisiana-Lafayette (6-5) and New Mexico (6-5). In 2006, nine bowl eligible teams did not receive bowl bids. They are Kansas (6-6), Pittsburgh (6-6), Arizona (6-6), Washington State (6-6), Kent State (6-6), Souther Methodist (6-6), Wyoming (6-6), Arkansas State (6-6), and Louisiana-Lafayette (6-6).
[edit] 2006 Bowl Eligible Teams
There are the 73 bowl eligible teams. Records as of 11/27 are in parentheses.
[edit] Atlantic Coast Conference
- Wake Forest (11-2)
- Boston College (9-3)
- Georgia Tech (9-4)
- Maryland (8-4)
- Virginia Tech (10-2)
- Clemson (8-4)
- Florida State (6-6)
- Miami (6-6)
[edit] Big XII Conference
- Oklahoma (11-2)
- Texas (9-3)
- Nebraska (9-4)
- Texas A&M (9-3)
- Kansas State (7-5)
- Missouri (8-4)
- Texas Tech (7-5)
- Oklahoma State (6-6)
- Kansas (6-6)
[edit] Big East Conference
- Louisville (11-1)
- West Virginia (10-2)
- Rutgers (10-2)
- South Florida (8-4)
- Cincinnati (7-5)
- Pittsburgh (6-6)
[edit] Big Ten Conference
- Ohio State (12-0)
- Michigan (11-1)
- Wisconsin (11-1)
- Penn State (8-4)
- Purdue (8-5)
- Iowa (6-6)
- Minnesota (6-6)
[edit] Conference USA
- Houston (10-3)
- Tulsa (8-4)
- East Carolina (7-5)
- Rice (7-5)
- Southern Miss (8-5)
- SMU (6-6)
[edit] Independents
- Notre Dame (10-2)
- Navy (9-3)
[edit] Mid-American Conference
- Ohio (9-4)
- Central Michigan (9-4)
- Western Michigan (8-4)
- Northern Illinois (7-5)
- Kent State (6-6)
[edit] Mountain West Conference
- Brigham Young (10-2)
- TCU (10-2)
- Utah (7-5)
- Wyoming (6-6)
- New Mexico (6-6)
[edit] Pacific 10 Conference
- Southern Cal (10-2)
- California (9-3)
- Oregon (7-5)
- Oregon State (9-4)
- Arizona State (7-5)
- UCLA (7-5)
- Washington State (6-6)
- Arizona (6-6)
[edit] Southeastern Conference
- Florida (12-1)
- Arkansas (10-3)
- Auburn (10-2)
- LSU (10-2)
- Tennessee (9-3)
- Georgia (8-4)
- Kentucky (7-5)
- South Carolina (7-5)
- Alabama (6-6)
[edit] Sun Belt Conference
- Troy (7-5)
- Middle Tennessee State (7-5)
- UL-Lafayette (6-6)
- Arkansas State (6-6)
[edit] Western Athletic Conference
- Boise State (12-0)
- Hawaii (10-3)
- Nevada (8-4)
- San Jose State (8-4)