2006–07 NCAA football bowl games
The 2006–07 NCAA football bowl games concluded the 2006 NCAA Division I FBS football season in college football.
A record of 32 team-competitive plus five all-star postseason games were played, with the addition of the new stand-alone Bowl Championship Series National Championship Game, the International Bowl in Toronto, Ontario, the Papajohns.com Bowl, the New Mexico Bowl, and the post-season-ending all-star Texas vs. The Nation Game. To fill the 64 available bowl slots from the 119 schools in the Bowl Subdivision, a record 7 teams with non-winning seasons participated in bowl games—all seven had a.500 season.
Along with the increase in bowl games, the NCAA ruled that teams could schedule twelve regular-season games beginning in the 2006 season. NCAA teams in Alaska and Hawaii, and their home opponents, are allowed to schedule an extra game over and above this limit. Two teams in any conferences with a championship final could play a 13th game in that conference championship . The increase in bowl games and season schedule resulted in the NCAA deciding to allow teams with a 6-6 record to be bowl eligible if either the team or their conference has negotiated a bowl contract.
Selection of the teams
NCAA regulations 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 of at-large bowl positions available and two remaining 7–5 teams, the MAC's Northern Illinois's 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. Thus, this season marked the first time in NCAA history that every team with a winning record in the regular season played in a bowl game.Besides Pitt, those who didn't go bowling with a.500 record were Kansas from the Big 12, Pac-10 members Arizona and Washington State, SMU from Conference USA, the MAC's Kent State, Sun Belt members Arkansas State and Louisiana–Lafayette and Mountain West member Wyoming, which drew controversy on the subject of the New Mexico Bowl, listed below.
NOTE: All payouts mentioned are in US$.
Schedule
Non-BCS bowls
Poinsettia Bowl
- TCU 37, Northern Illinois 7
Las Vegas Bowl
- Brigham Young 38, Oregon 8
New Orleans Bowl
One relative newcomer to the Division I Bowl Subdivision, and one team that last won a bowl game in 1954, squared off in the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl, which returned to the Louisiana Superdome in the titular city on December 22 after the 2005 game was held at Cajun Field on the campus of University of Louisiana at Lafayette due to damage caused by Hurricane Katrina. Conference USA's Rice University Owls, who made their first post-season appearance in 45 years, were trounced by the Sun Belt Conference co-champion Troy University Trojans 41–17. The Trojans, winning their first bowl game in school history, were playing in their second post-season game in three years, having appeared two years beforehand in the now-defunct Silicon Valley Football Classic. Each team earned $325,000 for their conference by participating in the game. Troy quarterback Omar Haugabook and cornerback Elbert Mack were named co-MVPs.Papajohns.com Bowl
- South Florida 24, East Carolina 7
New Mexico Bowl
- San Jose State 20, New Mexico 12
Armed Forces Bowl
The last of three games on December 23 was the Bell Helicopters Armed Forces Bowl, formerly known as the Fort Worth Bowl, played at Texas Christian University's Amon G. Carter Stadium in Fort Worth, Texas. The Mountain West's University of Utah Utes trailed at the half, but beat Conference USA's Golden Hurricane of the University of Tulsa, 25–13. Utah's versatile defensive back Eric Weddle helped lead the Utes by grabbing an interception and scoring a rushing touchdown. Each team earned $600,000 for their conference by participating in the game.Hawaii Bowl
- Hawaii 42, Arizona State 24
Motor City Bowl
- Central Michigan 31, Middle Tennessee 14
Emerald Bowl
- Florida State 44, UCLA 27
Independence Bowl
- Oklahoma State 34, Alabama 31
Texas Bowl
- Rutgers 37, Kansas State 10
Music City Bowl
The Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl presented by Bridgestone was the first of five games scheduled for December 29, the second-busiest schedule of games outside New Year's Day. In this game, played at LP Field in Nashville, the ACC's Clemson University Tigers lost to the SEC's University of Kentucky Wildcats, 28–20. Kentucky jumped to a big early lead; Clemson cut the margin late but not enough to win. Kentucky's Andre Woodson was the bowl game MVP. The two teams had last faced each other in the 1993 Peach Bowl; Kentucky has won 8 of the 12 meetings between the two teams. This was the first bowl win for the Wildcats since 1984. Each team earned $1.6 million for their conference by participating in the game.Sun Bowl
- Oregon State 39, Missouri 38
Liberty Bowl
- South Carolina 44, Houston 36
Insight Bowl
- Texas Tech 44, Minnesota 41
Champs Sports Bowl
The fifth and final game December 29 pitted the University of Maryland, College Park Terrapins from the ACC and the Purdue University Boilermakers from the Big Ten in the Champs Sports Bowl, the first of two bowl games in four days played at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida. Maryland played an efficient and mistake-free game in cruising to a 24–7 victory. The Terrapins were able to dominate the game with a balanced offense and stingy defense that shutdown Purdue's potent passing game. Each team earned $2.25 million for their conference by participating in the game.Meineke Car Care Bowl
- Boston College 25, Navy 24
Alamo Bowl
- Texas 26, Iowa 24
MPC Computers Bowl
- Miami 21, Nevada 20
International Bowl
- Cincinnati 27, Western Michigan 24
GMAC Bowl
- Southern Mississippi 28, Ohio 7
Non-BCS New Year's Day and other prestigious games
There are a half-dozen games that are not related to the BCS that are still notable for extra prestige, with very high payouts and many with New Year's Day games. Prestige includes the fact that some of the games are shown on over-the-air television networks like CBS, ABC or Fox rather than ESPN or NFL Network, which are cable/satellite channels.Holiday Bowl
- California 45, Texas A&M 10
Chick-fil-A Bowl
- Georgia 31, Virginia Tech 24
Outback Bowl
- Penn State 20, Tennessee 10
Cotton Bowl Classic
Game number two on January 1 was the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic, played at the self-named stadium on the site of the State Fair of Texas in Dallas. The Big 12's University of Nebraska at Lincoln's Cornhuskers played the Auburn University Tigers from the SEC in the annual game, with the Tigers prevailing 17–14. Each school's conference received $3 million.Gator Bowl
- West Virginia 38, Georgia Tech 35
Capital One Bowl
- Wisconsin 17, Arkansas 14
Bowl Championship Series
Rose Bowl
- Southern California 32, Michigan 18
Fiesta Bowl
- Boise State 43, Oklahoma 42
Orange Bowl
- Louisville 24, Wake Forest 13
Sugar Bowl
- LSU 41, Notre Dame 14
BCS National Championship Game
- Florida 41, Ohio State 14
Post-BCS All-Star Games
All-Star Game | Date | Location | Television | Result |
Inta Juice North–South All-Star Classic | January 13, 2007 | Galena Park ISD Stadium, Houston, Texas | ESPN2 | North 28, South 17 |
Cornerstone Bancard Hula Bowl | January 14, 2007 | Aloha Stadium, Honolulu | ESPN | Kai 10 |
Dell Computers East–West Shrine Game | January 20, 2007 | Reliant Stadium, Houston, Texas | ESPN2 | West 21, East 3 |
Under Armour Senior Bowl | January 27, 2007 | Ladd–Peebles Stadium, Mobile, Alabama | NFL Network | North 27, South 0 |
Texas vs The Nation | February 2, 2007 | Sun Bowl Stadium, University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso | CSTV | Texas 20 |
Note: The Las Vegas All-American Classic, which was scheduled to be played on January 15 in Las Vegas, was canceled one week prior to its playing due to a lack of sponsorship.
Conference standings
The list of conferences infra includes all conferences with at least one team having played in a bowl game, and is sorted first by winning percentage, then by total games won, and finally alphabetically, by conference name. The list also includes the teams from each conference that finished in the top 25 in the final AP Poll or the final Coaches poll for the 2006 season.;Final Standings
KEY
† – Winner of the Bowl Challenge Cup.
≠ – Ineligible for the Bowl Challenge Cup as they only had two schools instead of the minimum three teams mandated.
AP – Final AP Poll for 2006 season.
CP – Final Coaches Poll for 2006 season.
t-tied for that position.