FCSports
The Florida Citrus Sports Blog
18
If The Season Ended Today - BCS Analysis and Bowl Picks

Now that the first BCS standings have been released, it's time to start up one of our (ok, my) favorite games around the office: If The Season Ended Today. We're not PROJECTING the bowls; we're treating the current poll like the final one, so you can get a better idea of how the bowl process works.

The Standings

1. LSU Tigers
2. Alabama Crimson Tide
3. Oklahoma Sooners
4. Oklahoma State Cowboys
5. Boise State Broncos
6. Wisconsin Badgers
7. Clemson Tigers
8. Stanford Cardinal
9. Arkansas Razorbacks
10. Oregon Ducks
11. Kansas State Wildcats
12. Virginia Tech Hokies
13. Nebraska Cornhuskers
14. South Carolina Gamecocks
15. West Virginia Mountaineers
16. Michigan State Spartans
17. Texas A&M Aggies
18. Michigan Wolverines
19. Houston Cougars
20. Auburn Tigers
21. Penn State Nittany Lions
22. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
23. Illinois Fighting Illini
24. Texas Longhorns
25. Washington Huskies

The Automatic Bids

Assume the highest-ranked team from each conference is its champion. Champions get automatic bids:

SEC: #1 LSU
Big Ten: #6 Wisconsin
ACC: #7 Clemson
Big 12: #3 Oklahoma
Pac-12: #8 Stanford
Big East: #15 West Virginia

Any non-champion team from an automatic qualifier conference (one of the six above) that finishes in the Top 4 gets an automatic bid: #4 Oklahoma State

Any champion from a non-automatic qualifier conference (Conference USA, Mountain West, Sun Belt, MAC, WAC) that finishes in the Top 12 gets an automatic bid: #5 Boise State

Total automatic bids: nine (out of ten total spots)

The At-Large Berth(s)

- Teams in the eligibility window (Top 14) include Arkansas, Oregon, Kansas State, Virginia Tech, Nebraska and South Carolina. However, the SEC and Big 12 would have already qualified two teams each, so that leaves Arkansas, South Carolina and Kansas State on the outside looking in. The remaining eligible teams are Oregon, Virginia Tech and Nebraska. Only one can make it in, and which one depends on the bowl making the selection.

The Selection Process

- #1 LSU and #2 Alabama play for the national championship. This is where the fantasy comes in, since there's a slim chance that they would be ranked #1 and #2 at the end of the season at the expense of the Oklahoma/Oklahoma State winner (see the Ohio State/Michigan/Florida situation from 2006).

- Each conference champion with a BCS bowl tie-in slots to that game (Big Ten and Pac-12 to Rose, SEC to Sugar, Big 12 to Fiesta and ACC to Orange). The Big East champion floats as an at-large selection for any game. The at-large selection order of BCS bowls for this season goes Fiesta, Sugar, Orange. However, any bowl who loses their champion to the National Championship Game gets a replacement pick BEFORE the at-large selection order is followed.

Tentative BCS Games

Allstate BCS National Championship Game: LSU vs. Alabama
Rose Bowl Game presented by Vizio: Wisconsin vs. Stanford
Allstate Sugar Bowl: At-Large #1 (Replacement Pick) vs. At-Large #3
Tostitos Fiesta Bowl: Oklahoma vs. At-Large #2
Discover Orange Bowl: Clemson vs. At-Large #4

The Sugar Bowl would choose first from a pool that includes three automatic berths (Oklahoma State, Boise State and West Virginia) and three possible at-large choices (Oregon, Nebraska, Virginia Tech). If the Sugar Bowl chooses one of the latter three, the other two are no longer eligible for consideration; the remaining three spots would go to the automatic teams. Since the current five-game format began in 2006-07, the Big Ten has sent two teams to the BCS every year, so let's guess that the Sugar Bowl chooses Nebraska with the first at-large pick.

In the second slot, the Fiesta Bowl must choose between Oklahoma State, West Virginia and Boise State to meet Oklahoma. They probably would not want to put on a rematch of Oklahoma and Oklahoma State (unless the first was an instant classic), and the other two matchups offer rematches of recent Fiesta Bowls (upsets of the Sooners by Boise State in 2007 and West Virginia in 2008). The Fiesta Bowl has also selected Boise State once more since then (in 2010), so let's assume they choose Boise State again to put on a rematch of one of their most famous games.

Now with their second at-large pick, the Sugar Bowl must choose between Oklahoma State and West Virginia to meet Nebraska. With the Cornhuskers only one year removed from the Big 12, a matchup with OSU might not be as appealing as one with West Virginia, so the Sugar Bowl chooses the Mountaineers with their second pick.

That sends Oklahoma State to the Orange Bowl to meet Clemson.

The Orlando Bowl Picture

The Capital One Bowl will have a full slate of options as the first post-BCS selections in the SEC and Big Ten. The best available SEC team would be #8 Arkansas, with other options including #14 South Carolina and #20 Auburn. In the Big Ten, the best available team is #16 Michigan State, followed by #18 Michigan, #21 Penn State and #23 Illinois.

If our Team Selection Committee chooses the best available teams by rank (something that they have done historically), the Capital One Bowl matchup would be Arkansas vs. Michigan State. However, several other factors (including head-to-head wins, conference records and history in Orlando) could affect that decision.

The Champs Sports Bowl picture is a little cloudier based on these standings. With Virginia Tech just narrowly missing out on the BCS, they would be a likely selection for the Chick-fil-A Bowl in Atlanta. After the Hokies, the only other ranked team is Georgia Tech, making them the best available to Orlando. Without another ranked team, the Big East is wide open. Rutgers and Cincinnati, currently both at 5-1, would be the best available team. In addition, Notre Dame at 4-2 would be in the mix. The Champs Sports Bowl would then likely be Georgia Tech vs. Rutgers, Cincinnati or Notre Dame.

About The Author

Matt
Matt Repchak, Director of Digital Media

I joined FCSports in 2005 after graduating from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. I started in the communications department and gradually became the point person for all digital projects within the organization, including web, video and social.

I like The Black Keys, Joss Whedon, Paul F. Tompkins and the Tampa Bay Rays.

More posts by Matt

Post Rating

Comments

Florida Hospital Healthy 100