It's the most wonderful time of the year, at least for College Football it is anyway. Yes, bowl season is upon us. Forty bowl games are on tap for College Football, starting with the Celebration Bowl on December 19th and culminating with the College Football National Championship game on January 11th. An Annual event going on since the very first bowl game in 1902, which was the Tournament of Roses Association (Rose Bowl) between Michigan and Stanford, a game which Michigan won 49-0. Now everybody seems to get a bowl game. There are forty games (41 if you include the National Title game), all of which are tie in games. Lets think about this. Bowls can’t be justified by tradition. Yes, there’s the Rose, the Sugar, the Cotton and the Orange. Now, explain the existence of the TicketCity, the New Orleans, the Armed Forces, the Little Caesars, the Military, the Kraft Fight Hunger, the GoDaddy.com, the New Mexico, the Humanitarian, the Beef O’Brady’s, the Hawaii, the Champs Sports, the BBVA Compass, the Insight, the Pinstripe, the Poinsettia, the Texas, the Las Vegas and the Music City bowls. It's all about money, which is why there are so many bowl games. That being said, here's the full list of every bowl game being played this year, so you can decide which games you wanna watch.
Here's the full list of the College Football Bowl Games:
Dec. 19
Air Force Reserve Celebration Bowl
Alcorn State vs. North Carolina A&T
Atlanta
Cure Bowl San Jose State vs. Georgia State
Gildan New Mexico Bowl
Arizona vs. New Mexico
Albuquerque
Royal Purple Las Vegas Bowl
BYU vs. Utah
Las Vegas
Raycom Media Camellia Bowl
Ohio vs. Appalachian State
R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl
Arkansas State vs. Louisiana Tech
Dec. 21
Miami Beach Bowl
Western Kentucky vs. South Florida
Dec. 22
Famous Idaho Potato Bowl
Akron vs. Utah State
Marmot Boca Raton Bowl
Toledo vs. Temple
Dec. 23
San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl
Boise State vs. Northern Illinois
GoDaddy Bowl
Georgia Southern vs. Bowling Green
Dec. 24
Popeyes Bahamas Bowl
Middle Tennessee vs. Western Michigan
Hawai'i Bowl
San Diego State vs. Cincinnati
Dec. 26
St. Petersburg Bowl
Connecticut vs. Marshall
Hyundai Sun Bowl
Miami vs. Washington State
Zaxby's Heart of Dallas Bowl
Washington vs. Southern Miss
New Era Pinstripe Bowl
Indiana vs. Duke
Independence Bowl
Tulsa vs. Virginia Tech
Foster Farms Bowl
UCLA vs. Nebraska
Dec. 28
Military Bowl presented By Northrop Grumman
Pittsburgh vs. Navy
Quick Lane Bowl
Central Michigan vs. Minnesota
Dec. 29
Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl
California vs. Air Force
Russell Athletic Bowl
North Carolina vs. Baylor
NOVA Home Loans Arizona Bowl
Nevada vs. Colorado State
AdvoCare V100 Texas Bowl
LSU vs. Texas Tech
Dec. 30
Birmingham Bowl
Auburn vs. Memphis
Belk Bowl
NC State vs. Mississippi State
Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl
Texas A&M
Holiday Bowl
USC vs. Wisconsin
Dec. 31
Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl
Houston vs. Florida State
College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Capital One Orange Bowl
No. 4 Oklahoma vs. No. 1 Clemson
College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic
No. 3 Michigan State vs. No. 2 Alabama
Jan. 1
Outback Bowl
Northwestern vs. Tennessee
Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl
Michigan vs. Florida
BattleFrog Fiesta Bowl
Notre Dame vs. Ohio State
Rose Bowl Game Presented by Northwestern Mutual:
Stanford vs. Iowa
Allstate Sugar Bowl
Oklahoma State vs. Ole Miss
Jan. 2
TaxSlayer Bowl
Penn State vs. Georgia
AutoZone Liberty Bowl
Kansas State vs. Arkansas
Memphis
Valero Alamo Bowl
Oregon vs. TCU
Motel 6 Cactus Bowl
West Virginia vs. Arizona State
Phoenix
Jan. 11
College Football Playoff National Championship Presented by AT&T
Glendale, Arizona
Phew! That's a lot of bowl games to take in. Now lets take a look at the three big games on the schedule, that being the College Football playoffs. The selection last year was a lot more dramatic than it was this year. The four teams getting in this year, Clemson (13-0), Alabama (12-1), Michigan State (12-1) and Oklahoma (11-1) were all but locked into their place, based on winning their respective conferences.
Clemson is the lone unbeaten team in the country, that coming thanks to Iowa falling to Michigan State in Saturday’s Big Ten championship game. Combine that with some of the big wins Clemson got during their unbeaten season, the Tigers earned the top spot without much debate. Think about it, they beat Notre Dame in October, Florida State in November and North Carolina this past Saturday. They will be matched up with Oklahoma in a rare rematch of a bowl game from a year ago. Clemson beat the tar out of the Sooners 40-6 in 2014’s Russell Athletic Bowl, but this Oklahoma team bears little resemblance to that one.
After a shocking loss to Texas on Oct. 10, Bob Stoops managed to flip the switch and turn this team into a national title contender. Here's a team in Oklahoma that averaged 52 points per game since then, including consecutive victories against Baylor, TCU and Oklahoma State to claim the Big 12 regular season championship.
A year ago, the Big 12 was left out of the playoff due to the lack of a conference championship. That wasn’t as much of a worry this season, especially with Pac-12 winner Stanford having two losses.
The semifinal games will be taking place on New Years Eve, with the winners meeting in the national championship game on January 11th. The National Title Game will take place in Glendale, Arizona. Ohio State took home last year's trophy as the four seed after beating Alabama in the Sugar Bowl and Oregon in the CFP championship game. We will have a full previwe of both College Football playoff games and the National Championship game as we get closer to game day!
Monday, December 7, 2015
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