NCAA football bowl games, 2006-07

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The 2006-07 NCAA College Football Bowl Games schedule caps the 2006 NCAA Division I-A football season in college football. The NCAA Division I-A does not include a play-off system. Instead, the season concludes with a series of bowl games that have developed as a reward for teams that do well in the regular season.

The 2006-07 schedule is the largest post-season lineup ever, with the addition of the new stand-alone Bowl Championship Series National Championship Game as well as the International Bowl in Toronto, Ontario which is the first game to be played outside the USA since the last Bacardi Bowl was played in Havana, Cuba in 1937. The season also adds two additional games---the PapaJohns.com Bowl and the New Mexico Bowl---as part of a record 38 post-season games (32, not including the post-BCS all-star games) scheduled between the Poinsettia Bowl on December 19, 2006, and the post-season-ending Texas vs. The Nation Game on February 2, 2007. Thus, 64 teams out of the 119 in Division I-A (also known as of 2006 as the "Division I Bowl Subdivision") will be playing in the post-season, thanks in part to the NCAA's decision to expand schedules to 12 games and allow teams with a 6-6 record to be bowl-eligible if the team or their conference has negotiated a bowl contract.

Contents

[edit] Selection of the teams

NCAA bylaws stipulate any team finishing 6-6 can only be selected to fill a conference tie-in bowl slot once all other available conference teams are chosen. For example, the Big East had six bowl-eligible teams, but only five bowl tie-ins, so 6-6 Pittsburgh was automatically the odd team out. The same rule also applies to at-large bowl selections. With only a pair at-large bowl positions available and two remaining 7-5 teams, the MAC's Northern Illinois' selection to the Poinsettia Bowl and the Sun Belt's Middle Tennessee's selection to the Motor City Bowl meant any remaining 6-6 teams had no chance of playing in a bowl game.

Besides Pitt, those who didn't go bowling with a .500 record were Kansas from the Big 12, the Pac-10's Arizona and Washington State, SMU from Conference USA, the MAC's Kent State, Sun Belt members Arkansas State and Louisiana Lafayette. When organizers of the New Mexico Bowl chose the home team, New Mexico, they shut out fellow Mountain West rival Wyoming, despite the Cowboys' better conference record (5-3 vs. the Lobos' 4-4) and beating them at the game site in Albuquerque, 14-10 on October 7.

[edit] 2006-07 Changes

[edit] Non-BCS Bowls

Note: All times are US EST/UTC -5 and dates are as accurate as of December 3, 2006.

Bowl Game Date and Time Location Television 2006 Opponents Payout (US$)[1]
Poinsettia Bowl December 19, 2006, 8 PM Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego ESPN2 Northern Illinois
vs. TCU
$750,000
Las Vegas Bowl December 21, 2006, 8 PM Sam Boyd Stadium, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Las Vegas ESPN BYU vs. Oregon $950,000
New Orleans Bowl December 22, 2006, 8 PM Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans ESPN2 Troy vs. Rice $325,000
PapaJohns.com Bowl December 23, 2006, 1 PM Legion Field, Birmingham, Alabama ESPN2 East Carolina
vs. South Florida
$300,000
New Mexico Bowl December 23, 2006, 4:30 PM University Stadium, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico ESPN San José State
vs. New Mexico
$750,000
Armed Forces Bowl December 23, 2006, 8 PM Amon G. Carter Stadium, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, Texas ESPN Utah vs. Tulsa $600,000
Hawaiʻi Bowl December 24, 2006, 8 PM Aloha Stadium, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi ESPN Hawaiʻi
vs. Arizona State
$398,000
Motor City Bowl December 26, 2006, 7:30 PM Ford Field, Detroit ESPN Central Michigan vs. Middle Tennessee $750,000
Emerald Bowl December 27, 2006, 8 PM AT&T Park, San Francisco ESPN UCLA vs. Florida State $850,000
Independence Bowl December 28, 2006, 4:30 PM Independence Stadium, Shreveport, Louisiana ESPN Alabama
vs. Oklahoma State
$1.1 million
Holiday Bowl December 28, 2006, 8 PM Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego ESPN California
vs. Texas A&M
$2.2 million
Texas Bowl December 28, 2006, 8 PM Reliant Stadium, Houston NFL Network Kansas State vs. Rutgers $750,000 for Big 12,
$500,000 for Big East
Music City Bowl December 29, 2006, 1 PM LP Field, Nashville ESPN Clemson vs. Kentucky $1.6 million
Sun Bowl December 29, 2006, 2 PM Sun Bowl Stadium, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso CBS Oregon State
vs. Missouri
$1.9 million
Liberty Bowl December 29, 2006, 4:30 PM Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, Memphis ESPN Houston vs.
South Carolina
$1.5 million
Insight Bowl December 29, 2006, 7:30 PM Sun Devil Stadium, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona NFL Network Texas Tech vs. Minnesota $1.2 million
Champs Sports Bowl December 29, 2006, 8 PM Citrus Bowl, Orlando ESPN Maryland vs. Purdue $2.25 million
Meineke Car Care Bowl December 30, 2006, 1 PM Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte ESPN Boston College vs. Navy $750,000
Alamo Bowl December 30, 2006, 4:30 PM Alamodome, San Antonio ESPN Texas vs. Iowa $2.2 million
Chick-fil-A Bowl December 30, 2006, 8 PM Georgia Dome, Atlanta ESPN Virginia Tech
vs. Georgia
$3.25 million for ACC,
$2.4 million for SEC
MPC Computers Bowl December 31, 2006, 7:30 PM Bronco Stadium, Boise State University, Boise, Idaho ESPN Nevada vs.
Miami (FL)
$250,000
Outback Bowl January 1, 2007, 11 AM Raymond James Stadium, Tampa ESPN Penn State
vs. Tennessee
$3 million
Cotton Bowl January 1, 2007, 11:30 AM Cotton Bowl Stadium, Dallas FOX Nebraska
vs. Auburn
$3 million
Gator Bowl January 1, 2007, 1 PM Alltel Stadium, Jacksonville CBS Georgia Tech
vs. West Virginia
$2.25 million
Capital One Bowl January 1, 2007, 1 PM Citrus Bowl, Orlando ABC Wisconsin vs. Arkansas $4.25 million
International Bowl January 6, 2007, 12 PM Rogers Centre, Toronto ESPN2 (USA)
TSN (Canada)
Western Michigan
vs. Cincinnati
$750,000
GMAC Bowl January 7, 2007, 8 PM Ladd Peebles Stadium, Mobile, Alabama ESPN Southern Mississippi
vs. Ohio
$750,000

[edit] Bowl Championship Series

Bowl Championship Series Game Date and Time Location Television 2006 Opponents Payout (US$)
Rose Bowl January 1, 2007, 5 PM Rose Bowl Stadium, Pasadena, California ABC Southern California
vs. Michigan
$17 million
Fiesta Bowl January 1, 2007, 8:30 PM University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, Arizona FOX Oklahoma
vs. Boise State
$17 million
Orange Bowl January 2, 2007, 8 PM Dolphin Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida FOX Wake Forest
vs. Louisville
$17 million
Sugar Bowl January 3, 2007, 8 PM Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans FOX Notre Dame† vs. LSU $17 million
BCS National Championship Game January 8, 2007, 8 PM University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, Arizona FOX Ohio State† vs. Florida $17 million

†—An additional $4.5 million will be given to Notre Dame, the Big Ten and the SEC per BCS rules.

[edit] Post-BCS All-Star Games

All-Star Game Date and Time Location Television Game Format
North-South All-Star Classic January 13, 2007, 11 AM Galena Park ISD Stadium, Houston, Texas TBD North vs. South
Hula Bowl January 14, 2007, 8:30 PM Aloha Stadium, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi ESPN East vs. West
All-American Classic January 15, 2007, 4 PM Sam Boyd Stadium, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Las Vegas NFL Network East vs. West
East-West Shrine Game January 20, 2007, 2 PM Reliant Stadium, Houston, Texas ESPN East vs. West
Senior Bowl January 27, 2007, 4 PM Ladd Peebles Stadium, Mobile, Alabama NFL Network North vs. South
Texas vs. The Nation Game February 2, 2007, 9 PM Sun Bowl Stadium, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso CSTV Texas college and former high school players
vs. USA

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/football/2006-12-06-bowl-payouts_x.htm USA TODAY article "$17 million BCS payouts sound great, but…", December 6, 2006
Preceded by
NCAA football bowl games, 2005-06
NCAA Bowl Games, by year
2006-2007
Succeeded by
NCAA football bowl games, 2007-08