Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Yesh Ginsburg

Week 14 College Football Bowl Projections

Welcome to the second set of bowl projections that I will be providing. Make sure not to miss Phil Harrison’s projections. Every week, Phil projects to the end of the season and gives you where he thinks the Big Ten teams will end up.

I, however, will not be predicting who will win games. Instead, these projections are based on where every team sits now. Meaning, if the season ended today, where would every team be heading to bowl games? That way, readers can know what their team needs to do to move up or down in bowl selection order.

Now, I do have to admit that a small bit of prognosticating is necessary. There are currently only 74 bowl-eligible teams, but there are 39 bowl games. So, only for the purposes of determining who will reach bowl eligibility, I am forced to predict some games. To avoid bias as much as possible in the process, I will assume that the favored team wins each remaining game, and I will use FPI, SP+, Sagarin, and a few others to determine who is “favored.” As of today, these projections say there will be 79 bowl-eligible teams. That number includes Missouri. The Tigers’ appeal has finally been denied by the NCAA, so they will not be appearing in a bowl game.

Also, remember that nowadays, bowl projections are more of an art than a science. Most conferences no longer allow the bowls to select teams in order, but instead provide “pools” of teams for certain tiers of bowls. The Group of 5 conferences often have no selection order preference. The conferences then work with the bowls to determine which team goes where. Anything can be the cause for this–geography, fan interests, matchup quality, whether the conference thinks its team is more likely to win, or any other reason. Therefore, at the end of this article, I will provide a list of which conference pools would be tied to which bowl. That way, you have as much information as possible when figuring out where each team could be headed.

Finally, keep in mind that these are based on what would happen if the season ends today. The season does not end today, though, so things will change between now and Selection Sunday. However, this is where each team stands right now. (As we approach Selection Sunday, we will be able to hear rumors and whispers as to which team is headed where. I do my best to keep track, and my projections the morning of Selection Sunday will be based mostly on those. For now, though, all we know is that BYU has accepted an invitation to the Hawaii Bowl.)

So, without further ado, here are this week’s bowl projections:

College Football Playoff

Peach Bowl Sat, Dec 28, 8:00 PM LSU vs Clemson
Fiesta Bowl Sat, Dec 28, 4:00 PM Ohio State vs Georgia

This is simple enough. No. 1 plays No. 4, and No. 2 plays No. 3. The committee will ensure that the No. 1 team is not given a geographic disadvantage, so Ohio State will not be forced to play Georgia in Atlanta.

The times for these matchups are flexible and not yet set, but given that Ohio State vs Georgia will likely be the bigger draw, I expect that to be the game given primetime billing.

Next… NY6 and other Big Ten bowls

New Years’ Six Bowl Games

Cotton Bowl Classic Sat, Dec 28, Noon Baylor vs Memphis
Orange Bowl Mon, Dec 30, 8:00 PM Virginia Tech vs Penn State
Rose Bowl Game Wed, Jan 1, 5:00 PM Minnesota vs Utah
Sugar Bowl Wed, Jan 1, 8:45 PM Alabama vs Oklahoma

The NY6 bowls are straightforward enough. The Rose Bowl gets the highest teams from the Big Ten and Pac 12, while the Sugar Bowl gets the same from the SEC and Big 12.

The ACC finally has a second ranked team, so we’ll put Virginia Tech into the Orange Bowl. The other Orange Bowl slot goes to the highest-ranked remaining Big Ten or SEC team, which is currently Penn State.

The highest remaining at-large is Baylor, and the Bears face the current highest-ranked Group of 5 team, Memphis.

Other Big Ten Bowl Games

Quick Lane Bowl Thu, Dec 26, 8:00 PM Michigan State vs Toledo
Pinstripe Bowl Fri, Dec 27, 3:20 PM Illinois vs Wake Forest
Holiday Bowl Fri, Dec 27, 8:00 PM Michigan vs USC
Redbox Bowl Mon, Dec 30, 12:30 PM Iowa vs Arizona State
Outback Bowl Wed, Jan 1, 1:00 PM Indiana vs Kentucky
Gator Bowl Thu, Jan 2, 7:00 PM Tennessee vs Wisconsin

As I explain in the final section and in this article, Indiana moves up to the Outback Bowl because there isn’t really much other choice. The ACC did not have enough bowl-eligible teams to fill its Quick Lane Bowl slot, and I’m putting Toledo in for now as a replacement team, as the MAC has a secondary tie-in.

Next… All other bowl games

2019-2020 Bowl Games

Bahamas Bowl Fri, Dec 20, 2:00 PM FAU vs Ohio
Frisco Bowl Fri, Dec 20, 7:30 PM Eastern Michigan vs UAB
New Mexico Bowl Sat, Dec 21, 2:00 PM Western Kentucky vs Wyoming
Cure Bowl Sat, Dec 21, 2:30 PM Temple vs Arkansas State
Boca Raton Bowl Sat, Dec 21, 3:30 PM Tulane vs Central Michigan
Camellia Bowl Sat, Dec 21, 5:30 PM Western Michigan vs Georgia State
Las Vegas Bowl Sat, Dec 21, 7:30 PM Washington vs Boise State
New Orleans Bowl Sat, Dec 21, 9:00 PM Marshall vs Appalachian State
Gasparilla Bowl Mon, Dec 23, 2:30 PM Southern Miss vs SMU
Hawai’i Bowl Tue, Dec 24, 8:00 PM BYU vs UCF
Independence Bowl Thu, Dec 26, 4:00 PM Charlotte vs North Carolina
Military Bowl Fri, Dec 27, Noon Navy vs Florida State
Texas Bowl Fri, Dec 27, 6:45 PM Iowa State vs Nevada
Cheez-It Bowl Fri, Dec 27, 10:15 PM Texas vs Washington State
Camping World Bowl Sat, Dec 28, Noon Oklahoma State vs Notre Dame
First Responder Bowl Mon, Dec 30, 12:30 PM TCU vs Louisiana Tech
Music City Bowl Mon, Dec 30, 12:30 PM Texas A&M vs Louisville
Belk Bowl Tue, Dec 31, Noon Mississippi State vs Pittsburgh
Sun Bowl Tue, Dec 31, 2:00 PM California vs Miami (FL)
Liberty Bowl Tue, Dec 31, 3:45 PM Kansas State vs Liberty
Arizona Bowl Tue, Dec 31, 4:30 PM Utah State vs Georgia Southern
Alamo Bowl Tue, Dec 31, 7:30 PM Oregon vs Baylor
Citrus Bowl Wed, Jan 1, 1:00 PM Virginia vs Auburn
Birmingham Bowl Thu, Jan 2, 3:00 PM Hawaii vs Cincinnati
Idaho Potato Bowl Fri, Jan 3, 3:30 PM Buffalo vs San Diego State
Armed Forces Bowl Sat, Jan 4, 11;30 AM Air Force vs FIU
LendingTree Bowl Mon, Jan 6, 7:30 PM Miami (OH) vs Louisiana

One of the toughest things with this bowl lineup is that BYU took over the Mountain West’s Hawaii Bowl slot. That means that Hawaii will have to travel to the mainland to compete in its bowl game. That means that Hawaii will need to be given a decently high-profile opportunity. For now, the Birmingham Bowl against a ranked Cincinnati team seems the best option.

I do have to point out one final important item. ESPN has the right to shuffle around bowl teams between games that ESPN owns. The network has done this before, though it is relatively rare. It might make sense to do so in order to facilitate a better game for Hawaii, or maybe keep Hawaii on the Islands.

Next… What are the bowl pools?

ACC

The ACC has a “Tier I” bowl pool consisting of the Sun, Belk, Music City, and Pinstripe Bowls. After Notre Dame and Virginia are selected for the Camping World and Citrus Bowls, the next group of four teams, as of now, will be Pitt, Wake Forest, Louisville, and Miami (Fl). Miami played in the Pinstripe Bowl, Virginia played in the Belk Bowl, and Pitt played in the Sun Bowl last year, so it would be very surprising for those bowls to repeat those teams this year.

Big Ten

The Big Ten bowl situation is complicated. In essence, the league works with all of its bowls to secure the best possible destination. However, the contracts stipulate that, for the main Big Ten bowls, that each bowl needs at least five different teams in six years. This is the sixth and final year of these contracts. The Outback Bowl is the only bowl to not meet that stipulation yet. Therefore, the Outback Bowl cannot host Iowa, Wisconsin, or Michigan this year. While removing those three, as well as NY6 teams Ohio State, Penn State, and Minnesota from the equation, the only real Outback Bowl choice is Indiana.

SEC

The SEC has a pool of six bowls. Those will be Texas A&M, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Mississippi State for the Outback, Gator, Music City, Texas, Belk, and Liberty Bowls. Because of Missouri’s pending bowl ban, the weakness of the SEC’s bottom teams this year (and with four SEC teams currently in NY6 slots), there will only be four teams for this pool of six bowls. Therefore, the Liberty and Texas Bowls will not get an SEC team. If Missouri’s bowl ban is overturned before bowl season (or the appeal extends past the bowl game), then Missouri would likely enter the Texas Bowl, and a MAC school (likely Buffalo or Eastern Michigan) won’t get selected for a bowl.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.