The Best 2009 Bowl Season Debate – Mountain West Nears the Top of the Peak

January 11, 2010

Read the arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan about which conference had the best bowl season in 2009.



Like it or hate it, the bowl season is excellent for fans trying to identify the best major college football conference. Fans get the chance to see favorite schools play against other favorites for conference supremacy. While the national championship game rightfully receives the majority of attention from the media, the constant drumbeat of interest surrounding which conference features the best teams is the perfect backdrop for the season’s conclusion. With the bowl system, college football fans are able to identify the sport’s best team and its best conference.

It was nice to sit back, relax, and watch the 2009-2010 bowl season go off script. The SEC was supposed to be the clear, runaway, best conference college football had to offer this season, followed closely by the Big XII. Instead, while the SEC laid claim to college football’s best team in Alabama this season, it proved top heavy and uneven with a final bowl record of 6-4. The Big XII finished 4-3. Therefore, neither of the best conferences followed through on expectations this bowl season. The Pac-10, the sleeper for many “experts,” finished just 2-5.

No conference had a better winning percentage – or more pressure – than the Mountain West Conference in 2009-2010. Despite enormous expectations, the Mountain West delivered like no other conference.

The Games

  • Wyoming 35 – Fresno State 28
  • BYU 44 – Oregon State 20
  • Utah 37 – California 27
  • Air Force 47 – Houston 20
  • Boise State 17 – Texas Christian 10

The Mountain West finished the bowl season, unsurprisingly, 4-1 – that’s an .800 winning percentage. That impressive list mixes bowl wins against some of the best programs from the Pac-10, which the conference handled with a perfect 2-0 record.

The one blemish on the conference’s record was a mistake-riddled performance in the league’s most highly anticipated game. Many believed that TCU deserved a shot at the national title game, and therefore needed to show a great deal against Boise State in the MWC’s lone BCS appearance. TCU did not win, but the game was still a good thing for the MWC because Boise State’s victory proved the value of putting the best from so-called mid major conferences into the conversation for the national championship game. Even in losing the conference won.

The MWC is in the process of vying for the all-important automatic BCS bid. Over the course of the next two seasons the conference will complete a four season long process of intense BCS scrutiny about the merits of adding the conference as a seventh automatic BCS team, probably with a Fiesta Bowl tie-in. Therefore, no conference has more demanded of it, or expected from it, than the MWC. The stakes are persistently high, but the conference does not crack or fold. Instead, it thrives and continues to prove it belongs. In the ultimate example of “the rich get richer” design to sports culture, the more the teams win, the easier it is to attract top coaching and athletic talent. I believe the conference will ultimately land that automatic bid, and all of college football will be better off for it. This postseason will be remembered as a crucial one for the entire conference.

It is time for the media to stop noting the impressive MWC, and start voting. Time after time the football programs in the conference are publically lauded beneath the media spotlight, but dismissed as mid-majors in the back-room votes. The more competition the sport has, the more popular it will become nationwide. Truly, what is good for the Mountain West is good for college football, the BCS, and the bowl system. Voters must demonstrate awareness of that fact.

The Mountain West Conference needed and earned the best outcome of the bowl season in 2009. Some conferences were seeking sustainability or respect or preservation. The Mountain West was seeking a measure of all three, giving it the best performance of the 2009 bowl season.

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The Best 2009 Bowl Season Debate – Big Ten Redemption

January 11, 2010

Read the arguments from Loyal Homer and Sports Geek about which conference had the best bowl season in 2009.



I am shocked that college football is over (I miss it already)!

With the end of the college football season, though, comes the final bit of analysis to close out 2009 where we must determine which teams and which conferences had the most success during the bowl season. There were several conferences which put forth outstanding results this year, including the WAC (proving with yet another BCS victory that they can hang with the big boys), the Mountain West (4-1 overall record) and the Big East (4-2 overall), and the SEC (winning two BCS games, including a fourth consecutive national championship).

However, only one conference defied all expectations, and won ALL of its biggest games, on the biggest stages, against the toughest opponents – The Big Ten!

During the 2009-2010 bowl season, the Big Ten was one of only two conferences (along with the ACC) in which every one of its opponents came from another BCS-Conference. The Pac-10, Big XII, SEC, and Big East, contrarily, each had at least one game scheduled against a non-BCS school from the Sun-Belt or MAC, for example. In addition, four of the Big Ten matchups came against higher ranked opponents, all of whom were ranked in the top-15, and two of which were BCS games.

With all due respect to the Mountain West’s impressive bowl record of 4-1, the conference accomplished that record by playing the WAC (two games), Conference-USA (one game), and Pac-10 (two games). Its teams did not face any teams from the Big East, SEC, Big XII, Big Ten, or the ACC. Likewise, the Big East had a record of 4-2, but those games were played against Conference-USA (one game), the MAC (one game), the ACC (two games against one of the WEAKEST BCS conferences), and the SEC (two games). In addition, only two each of the Mountain West and Big East opponents were ranked among the top-25 teams in the nation.

BCS matchups also carry additional weight, because they feature the best that each conference has to offer. Winning games against unranked MAC opponents is not quite the same as winning games against ranked opponents from the SEC or Big Ten. Consequently, BCS victories carry more weight because they earn more credit for the conference.

Of the five BCS matchups, only one game was won by a conference OTHER than the SEC (Florida in the Sugar Bowl and Alabama in the National Championship) or the Big Ten (Ohio State in the Rose Bowl and Iowa in the Orange Bowl). With those results it is difficult to argue that the Mountain West or Big East had the best bowl performances, despite their impressive overall bowl records, because their premier teams lost on the biggest stage against the other premier teams in college football. In fact, the Big East lost its BCS game AGAINST the SEC. Likewise, the ACC, Pac-10, and Big XII also lost BCS games.

Because the SEC and Big Ten both won two BCS bowl games, is it logical to move down the hierarchy of remaining bowl games, beginning with how each conference performed against each other, before deciding the best performance as a conference overall.

There were two bowl games which pitted the SEC against the Big Ten, and each conference won one game. However, the Big Ten victory came in the Capital One Bowl (where #13 Penn State defeated #12 LSU) while the SEC victory came in the Outback Bowl (where unranked Auburn needed overtime to squeak past unranked Northwestern, which has not won a bowl game in 60 years). In the only game between a ranked SEC team and a ranked Big Ten team, it was the Big Ten that emerged victorious.

Last, the Big Ten went 4-0 against ranked opponents in the bowl season, while the SEC went 3-2 against ranked opponents, including that loss to the Big Ten. In each of those games against ranked opposition, the Big Ten was expected to lose. Yet, in each of those games the Big Ten defied the odds and came away victorious. With a win against #15 Miami (ACC), in addition to the aforementioned victories over #12 LSU (SEC), #9 Georgia Tech (ACC), and #7 Oregon (Pac-10), the Big Ten had a perfect record against four of the best teams in the country!

The Big Ten has been much maligned of late for struggling in bowl games. Although the criticism has been warranted in previous seasons, it was not the case in 2009-2010. Instead, the Big Ten faced arguably the toughest bowl schedule in the country, walking away with not just a winning record, but an UNDEFEATED record against ranked opponents, two BCS wins, and a whole lot more respect than it had entering the bowls season.

Congratulations to the Ohio State Buckeyes, Iowa Hawkeyes, Penn State Nittany Lions, and Wisconsin Badgers for bringing victory (and restoring pride) to the best conference in college football!

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The Best 2009 Bowl Season Debate – Four Straight Titles For the SEC… Need I Say More?

January 11, 2010

Read the arguments from Sports Geek and Bleacher Fan about which conference had the best bowl season in 2009.



It saddens me to write this argument today because it means that college football is over. My Saturdays will have a sense of emptiness, as it always takes me awhile to adjust. But, before we officially close the book on the season, The Sports Debates is taking a look back at the bowl season to decide which conference had the best bowl season. Sports Geek will fight for the little guy with the feel good story of the Mountain West Conference while Bleacher Fan will stick to his roots and arguing that the Big Ten had the best bowl season. I am also sticking to my roots and arguing that the MIGHTY SEC had the best bowl season, once again.

Now, on paper, the SEC’s bowl record of 6-4 pales in comparison to that of, say, the Mountain West (4-1). I will grant that the SEC could have had the ugliest loss that I saw all bowl season with South Carolina’s dreadful performance against UConn. But the conference also had some impressive.

To me, the most impressive win was from the Florida Gators. The Gators, with all of the controversy surrounding head coach Urban Meyer, were able to put all of that aside for one night. They absolutely destroyed the previously unbeaten Cincinnati Bearcats, though it is obvious that the Bearcats had distractions with the absence of Brian Kelly. The difference is the Gators were able to use their distraction as a rallying point. Many fans are Tim Tebow lovers and many are Tim Tebow haters. I fall somewhere in between. But his performance in the Sugar Bowl was nothing short of sensational. He was 31-35 for a Sugar Bowl record 482 yards. Time will tell how far Tebow advances at the next level, but there is one thing that cannot be argued: Tebow has left an everlasting mark on college football.

I would be remiss if I did not mention the national champion Alabama Crimson Tide. There has been much debate in the past few days regarding the national champions. Behind the scenes here at TSD headquarters we have loudly discussed whether or not Alabama would have won if Colt McCoy had not gotten hurt. But that’s water under the bridge now. The Tide joined the Gators in defeating a previously undefeated team. Their victory also makes it four consecutive years that the national champion has come out of the SEC, following Florida, LSU, and again Florida.

In addition to these two teams, Georgia and Ole Miss posted impressive wins over Big XII teams, while Auburn and Arkansas were able to win their games in overtime.

Year in and year out, the SEC sits at the top of the college football conference. The conference takes the best shot of its competitors and has not yet been supplanted as the nation’s best conference. Having successful bowl seasons like this one in 2009 – where it boasted two dominant teams at the top – makes
the SEC second to none!

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