Over the past three seasons, 210 teams have participated in bowl games.
47 of those teams had losing records in the years immediately preceding
their bowl game. This semi-regular piece will showcase the losers from
2013 who just might find themselves participating in Capital One Bowl
Week in 2014. Our third team we feature is South Florida.
South Florida
2013 Record: 2-10 (2-6 American)
Summary: Under new head coach Willie Taggart, the Bulls began the season rather inauspiciously, losing to IA McNeese State, by 32 points. They followed that up with an expected road loss at Michigan State before coming home and losing by 18 points to 'little brother' Florida Atlantic. In their final non-conference game, Miami beat them by four touchdowns. Just when it looked like the Bulls would struggle to win any games in the American Athletic Conference, the Bulls found less conventional ways to score. They returned a block field goal and a fumble against Cincinnati and held on for a six point win. They returned another fumble for a score the following week against Connecticut in a three point win. After their first two league games, the Bulls stood 2-0 with zero offensive touchdowns. They Bulls proceeded to lose their final six league contests with each coming by at least ten points save for an inexplicable close loss to eventual league champ and Fiesta Bowl winner UCF.
What Did the Bulls Do Well?
The Bulls were actually quite competent on defense in 2013. Though they allowed over 28 points per game (tied for 74th nationally), this was primarily due to the fact that the offense continually put the defense in unenviable positions with their general ineptitude. Opposing defenses also scored eight touchdowns on returns (five interception and three fumble) against the woeful offense. As a point of reference, the offense managed just eleven touchdowns of their own all season. In terms of yards allowed per game, the Bulls ranked 21st nationally, permitting an average of 351 per contest. I don't think they were quite that good, but they did rank a respectable fifth in the American in both yards allowed per play and touchdowns allowed.
What Didn't the Bulls Do Well?
It has been said many times, in many ways, but I'll say it again, the Bulls were terrible at all facets of offense. The Bulls scored just eleven offensive touchdowns in twelve games (with three coming in the first game against McNeese State). That means they managed just offensive eight touchdowns in their last eleven games. The eleven offensive touchdowns they managed is the lowest by any IA team since at least 2006. The Bulls accrued just 154 first downs in 2013, the lowest in the nation. If you ever want to see a clinic on how not to play offensive football, look no further than the 2013 Bulls.
The Bulls Over the Past Four Years:
The following table lists South Florida's performance (in conference play only)
in a few key categories and their respective conference rank in those
categories. To help you read the table here is a handy translator.
Conf: The Conference South Florida played in. With the ever-changing college football landscape, this is helpful.
Coach: Who was leading these yahoos into battle?
Rec: Conference Record
YPP: Yards per play. The number of yards per play the Bulls averaged in conference play.
YPA: Yards per play allowed. The number of yards per play the Bulls allowed in conference play.
Net: Yards per play net. The difference in YPP and YPA. Higher is better.
OTD: Offensive touchdowns. Touchdowns scored by the offense (no
kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference
play.
DTD: Defensive touchdowns. Touchdowns allowed by the defense (no
kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference
play.
Pythag: Adjusted Pythagorean Record. Take offensive touchdowns
and defensive touchdowns and plug them into a handy formula to estimate
the number of conference wins. For a full rundown of the APR, continue reading here.
In 2010, South Florida, reeling from the player abuse scandal under former coach Jim Leavitt, hired an established mid-major coach, Skip Holtz, to lead their program. After a 3-3 start, the Bulls won five of their final seven games, including a bowl upset over Clemson and appeared to be headed for if not great, at least good things under the younger Holtz. The Bulls did lose three players from that team in the 2011 NFL Draft, but opened the 2011 season 4-0. Included in the early season highlights, was a win at Notre Dame Stadium. However, after the 4-0 start, the fates conspired against the Bulls. They won just once the rest of the season, with five of the losses coming by six points or fewer, and four coming by exactly three points. Despite improved statistical numbers, the Bulls caught no breaks and finished with their first losing season since 2004 and just the second in the school's short history. All indicators pointed toward 2012 being a bounce-back year, but the Bulls regressed again losing nine of their final ten games after a 2-0 start. Skip Holtz was canned and Willie Taggart was brought in to lead the Bulls back to respectability. Unfortunately for Taggart, quarterback B.J. Daniels, who played for what seemed like three presidential cycles, exhausted his eligibility, and no competent quarterbacks emerged. The offense endured one of the worst seasons in recent memory, and well, here we stand with South Florida coming off three consecutive losing seasons and sporting a 6-26 mark since opening 2011 4-0.
The 2014 Schedule:
While we do not yet know the eight opponents South Florida will face from the American, we do know the identity of their four non-conference foes. South Florida opens the season at home against Western Carolina. While the Bulls did lose in grisly fashion to McNeese State last season, Western Carolina is a bad IAA team, finishing 2-10 last year and not winning more than three games in any season since 2005. A win here is all but assured. The Bulls also host Maryland and NC State in non-conference action. Maryland qualified for a bowl game last season, but is hardly an elite program. Meanwhile, NC State went winless in the ACC last year. The Bulls should be competitive in both contests and a sweep would not be out of the question. Their final non-conference game is a trip to Madison to face the Badgers of Wisconsin. This one will be infinitely more difficult to win. Realistically, South Florida fans should expect nothing worse than a split of their non-conference games, and a 3-1 mark should not raise many eyebrows. With at least two wins banked, the Bulls would just need to break even in the American to qualify for a bowl, a task that is not impossible considering the American is more like Conference USA's big brother.
Reasons for Optimism:
Willie Taggart and regression (progression) to the mean. There is no denying South Florida has a long way to go, particularly on offense, to return to the postseason. However, Taggart has already engineered one gigantic turnaround in his career.
In his first season at Western Kentucky, the Hilltoppers were IA neophytes with a very bad offense. The Hilltoppers ranked last in the Sun Belt in yards per play (though they were a more respectable sixth in touchdowns). In Taggart's second season, the Hilltoppers moved all the way up to third in the Sun Belt in yards per play and second in touchdowns. The team went 7-1 in the league and were bowl eligible for the first time (though they were snubbed in the postseason). Last season South Florida was historically bad on offense, at least in regards to scoring touchdowns. They struggled to move the ball, but realistically could have been expected to score three or four more touchdowns in 2013. Like historically great performances, historically poor performances are hard to repeat. Thankfully, for teams like South Florida, regression pulls both ways. Even with minimal offensive improvement, the Bulls can expect to score between twice and three times as many touchdowns in 2014.
Final Prognosis:
Believe it or not, the pieces are in place for a return to the postseason for South Florida. The Bulls experienced a lot of growing pains in Willie Taggart's fist season, but he has far more resources at his disposal than at his previous stop at Western Kentucky. The offense simply cannot be as bad as it was last season, opposing defenses cannot score as many times off of returns, and the conference itself gets a little bit weaker. I wouldn't place a large sum of money on South Florida winning the American in 2014, but a return to respectability seems likely.
I use many stats. I use many stats. Let me tell you, you have stats that are far worse than the ones that I use. I use many stats.
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Saturday, January 18, 2014
Even the Losers: Tulsa
Over the past three seasons, 210 teams have participated in bowl games. 47 of those teams had losing records in the years immediately preceding their bowl game. This semi-regular piece will showcase the losers from 2013 who just might find themselves participating in Capital One Bowl Week in 2014. Our second team we evaluate will be the Tulsa Golden Hurricane.
Tulsa
2013 Record: 3-9 (2-6 Conference USA)
Summary: Coming off a Conference USA title and a school record eleven wins, Tulsa was the preseason favorite in the western division of Conference USA. The Golden Hurricane opened with a blowout loss at eventual MAC-champ Bowling Green. They rebounded the following weekend and gave what was in hindsight, likely their best performance of the year in a 30-27 win over eventual bowl winner Colorado State. After an expected loss at Oklahoma, Tulsa lost at home by 17 points to an Iowa State team that finished just 3-9. Beginning conference play with all their goals still firmly in front of them, Tulsa lost a close home game to Rice before beating UTEP to move to 1-1 in league play. Tulsa would win just a single game the rest of the way, with only one of their defeats coming by fewer than eleven points. Their three wins marked the fewest for the program since they finished 1-11 in 2002.
What Did the Golden Hurricane Do Well?
Tulsa did not do a whole lot well in 2013, but we'll go with 'win on the road'. At least as compared to how they performed at home. Since joining Conference USA in 2005, through the 2012 season, Tulsa was a sterling 26-6 versus conference foes at home. Only three of their six losses came by double digits. In 2013, they finished 0-4 at home against conference foes, and three of their four losses came by double digits. Tulsa did win half of their road games however, beating both UTEP and Louisiana Tech away from the friendly confines. Still, compared to their 21-11 conference road record from 2005-2012, this was a far cry from their usual performance.
What Didn't the Golden Hurricane Do Well?
As mentioned earlier, the Golden Hurricane didn't do a lot well, but we'll give the nod to the defense, which imploded late in the season. The Golden Hurricane allowed 30 points or more eight times in 2013, including four times in their final five games. Teams particularly enjoyed gashing the Golden Hurricane on the ground where opponents averaged 200 yards per game (97th nationally) and 4.62 yards per rush (88th nationally). That marked the first time Tulsa allowed more than four yards per rush since 2007.
The Golden Hurricane Over the Past Four Years:
The following table lists Tulsa's performance (in conference play only) in a few key categories and their respective conference rank in those categories. To help you read the table here is a handy translator.
Conf: The Conference Tulsa played in. With the ever-changing college football landscape, this is helpful.
Coach: Who was leading these yahoos into battle?
Rec: Conference Record
YPP: Yards per play. The number of yards per play the Golden Hurricane averaged in conference play.
YPA: Yards per play allowed. The number of yards per play the Golden Hurricane allowed in conference play.
Net: Yards per play net. The difference in YPP and YPA. Higher is better.
OTD: Offensive touchdowns. Touchdowns scored by the offense (no kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference play.
DTD: Defensive touchdowns. Touchdowns allowed by the defense (no kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference play.
Pythag: Adjusted Pythagorean Record. Take offensive touchdowns and defensive touchdowns and plug them into a handy formula to estimate the number of conference wins. For a full rundown of the APR, continue reading here.
Among mid-major programs Tulsa has probably done the most with the least over the past four seasons. From 2010 through 2012, the Golden Hurricane went 20-4 in Conference USA, 29-11 overall, and won the league title in 2012. The Golden Hurricane accomplished all this with only one player from those three teams being drafted. For the curious, it was tight end Charles Clay who was picked in the sixth round of the 2011 draft. The nomad Todd Graham coached the Hurricanes in 2010 before giving way to former high school coach Bill Blankenship in 2011. Graham's 2010 team won games with a powerful offense led by quarterback G.J. Kinne. Kinne returned for his senior campaign in 2011, and with an improved defense, the Golden Hurricane entered the final week of the regular season unbeaten in league play. If not for an unusually strong Conference USA (Southern Miss and Houston finished the 2011 season in the top 20 of the AP Poll), Tulsa may well have won two league titles in a row. Sans Kinne in 2012, the offense shifted even more to a run-based attack behind Trey Watts (son of Oklahoma legend J.C. Watts), Ja'Terian Douglas, and Alex Singleton who combined to rush for 34 touchdowns in their championship year. Nebraska transfer Cody Green was limited as a passer, especially compared to Kinne, but he did account for 21 total touchdowns himself. With Watts, Douglas, and Green returning in 2013, the offense seemed destined to stay near the top of Conference USA. However, the loss of three starters on the line limited the running game and Green regressed as passer. When Green was injured midway through the season, redshirt freshman Dane Evans replaced him and proceeded to complete just 43% of his passes while throwing ten interceptions and averaging under five yards per pass attempt. As the offense struggled, the defense also faltered. While the Golden Hurricane did not lose any NFL caliber talent from the 2012 team, they did lose eight starters from the best defensive unit in Conference USA, including their four leading sack generators (30 and half combined from the four in question in 2012) from a defense that netted 51 total sacks. The net result was a lost season for Tulsa and a question as to whether 2013 was a one-year blip on the radar (like 2009 was for Graham) or a sign of things to come.
The 2014 Schedule:
Tulsa moves to the American Athletic Conference in 2014, which represents a slight step up in competition from Conference USA, but will never be confused with the SEC West. Their league schedule has not yet been formulated, but we do know the four teams they will face outside the conference. The Golden Hurricane travel to Colorado State and Florida Atlantic. The Rams from Colorado State appear to be on the upswing, and they nearly beat Tulsa last season, so a road win in Fort Collins seems unlikely. Florida Atlantic was a solid 6-6 last season despite losing their coach to a drug scandal. The Owls were much better than their record, losing three conference games by a touchdown or less, and will represent a real challenge for Tulsa particularly at home. In other non-conference action, Tulsa hosts in-state foe Oklahoma and IA neophyte Texas State. Facing Oklahoma, even at home is a longshot. Texas State went 6-6 last season, but was not as good as their record and Tulsa should be expected to win at home. Realistically, a split in non-conference play is probably the best Tulsa can hope for in 2014, with a 1-3 mark a distinct possibility.
Reasons for Optimism:
A recent track record and youth. Prior to their disappointing 2013 campaign, Tulsa went to bowl games in seven of eight seasons from 2005 through 2012. That's one of the best runs for any mid-major over that span. Secondly, while the Golden Hurricane were not particularly good on defense in 2013, they were pretty young. Of their top ten tacklers, only three were seniors and four were either freshmen or sophomores. Even incremental improvement could move the Golden Hurricane to the middle of the pack in their new conference.
Final Prognosis:
2014 will serve as a referendum for the Bill Blankenship era at Tulsa. If the Golden Hurricane endure another losing season, he will likely be coaching for his job in 2015. However, if he returns the Golden Hurricane to the postseason, 2013 will likely be seen as an aberration. Keep in mind that while Tulsa has been a strong mid-major for a decade, winning at one of the smallest IA schools is no easy task. The Golden Hurricane endured eleven consecutive losing seasons before Steve Kragthorpe revitalized the program in 2003. Here's another facet to consider. From 2005 through 2012, 20 mid-major teams saw their conference record drop by at least four games from one season to the next (remember Tulsa finished five games worse in league play in 2013 than they did in 2012). Of those 20 teams, 16 improved their league record by at least one game the following season. Ten saw their league record improve by at least two games, and no team saw their conference record get worse. On average, the teams improved by 1.95 games in the conference standings the next season with the biggest improvements coming from Memphis in 2007 and Middle Tennessee State in 2012 (five games). Improvement by Tulsa is a given in 2014, but will they improve enough to get to a bowl game? Based on their non-conference slate, the Golden Hurricane need to finish at least 4-4 or possibly 5-3 in the American to be bowl eligible. I think they will finish on the cusp of postseason play with either five, six, seven regular season wins.
Tulsa
2013 Record: 3-9 (2-6 Conference USA)
Summary: Coming off a Conference USA title and a school record eleven wins, Tulsa was the preseason favorite in the western division of Conference USA. The Golden Hurricane opened with a blowout loss at eventual MAC-champ Bowling Green. They rebounded the following weekend and gave what was in hindsight, likely their best performance of the year in a 30-27 win over eventual bowl winner Colorado State. After an expected loss at Oklahoma, Tulsa lost at home by 17 points to an Iowa State team that finished just 3-9. Beginning conference play with all their goals still firmly in front of them, Tulsa lost a close home game to Rice before beating UTEP to move to 1-1 in league play. Tulsa would win just a single game the rest of the way, with only one of their defeats coming by fewer than eleven points. Their three wins marked the fewest for the program since they finished 1-11 in 2002.
What Did the Golden Hurricane Do Well?
Tulsa did not do a whole lot well in 2013, but we'll go with 'win on the road'. At least as compared to how they performed at home. Since joining Conference USA in 2005, through the 2012 season, Tulsa was a sterling 26-6 versus conference foes at home. Only three of their six losses came by double digits. In 2013, they finished 0-4 at home against conference foes, and three of their four losses came by double digits. Tulsa did win half of their road games however, beating both UTEP and Louisiana Tech away from the friendly confines. Still, compared to their 21-11 conference road record from 2005-2012, this was a far cry from their usual performance.
What Didn't the Golden Hurricane Do Well?
As mentioned earlier, the Golden Hurricane didn't do a lot well, but we'll give the nod to the defense, which imploded late in the season. The Golden Hurricane allowed 30 points or more eight times in 2013, including four times in their final five games. Teams particularly enjoyed gashing the Golden Hurricane on the ground where opponents averaged 200 yards per game (97th nationally) and 4.62 yards per rush (88th nationally). That marked the first time Tulsa allowed more than four yards per rush since 2007.
The Golden Hurricane Over the Past Four Years:
The following table lists Tulsa's performance (in conference play only) in a few key categories and their respective conference rank in those categories. To help you read the table here is a handy translator.
Conf: The Conference Tulsa played in. With the ever-changing college football landscape, this is helpful.
Coach: Who was leading these yahoos into battle?
Rec: Conference Record
YPP: Yards per play. The number of yards per play the Golden Hurricane averaged in conference play.
YPA: Yards per play allowed. The number of yards per play the Golden Hurricane allowed in conference play.
Net: Yards per play net. The difference in YPP and YPA. Higher is better.
OTD: Offensive touchdowns. Touchdowns scored by the offense (no kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference play.
DTD: Defensive touchdowns. Touchdowns allowed by the defense (no kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference play.
Pythag: Adjusted Pythagorean Record. Take offensive touchdowns and defensive touchdowns and plug them into a handy formula to estimate the number of conference wins. For a full rundown of the APR, continue reading here.
Among mid-major programs Tulsa has probably done the most with the least over the past four seasons. From 2010 through 2012, the Golden Hurricane went 20-4 in Conference USA, 29-11 overall, and won the league title in 2012. The Golden Hurricane accomplished all this with only one player from those three teams being drafted. For the curious, it was tight end Charles Clay who was picked in the sixth round of the 2011 draft. The nomad Todd Graham coached the Hurricanes in 2010 before giving way to former high school coach Bill Blankenship in 2011. Graham's 2010 team won games with a powerful offense led by quarterback G.J. Kinne. Kinne returned for his senior campaign in 2011, and with an improved defense, the Golden Hurricane entered the final week of the regular season unbeaten in league play. If not for an unusually strong Conference USA (Southern Miss and Houston finished the 2011 season in the top 20 of the AP Poll), Tulsa may well have won two league titles in a row. Sans Kinne in 2012, the offense shifted even more to a run-based attack behind Trey Watts (son of Oklahoma legend J.C. Watts), Ja'Terian Douglas, and Alex Singleton who combined to rush for 34 touchdowns in their championship year. Nebraska transfer Cody Green was limited as a passer, especially compared to Kinne, but he did account for 21 total touchdowns himself. With Watts, Douglas, and Green returning in 2013, the offense seemed destined to stay near the top of Conference USA. However, the loss of three starters on the line limited the running game and Green regressed as passer. When Green was injured midway through the season, redshirt freshman Dane Evans replaced him and proceeded to complete just 43% of his passes while throwing ten interceptions and averaging under five yards per pass attempt. As the offense struggled, the defense also faltered. While the Golden Hurricane did not lose any NFL caliber talent from the 2012 team, they did lose eight starters from the best defensive unit in Conference USA, including their four leading sack generators (30 and half combined from the four in question in 2012) from a defense that netted 51 total sacks. The net result was a lost season for Tulsa and a question as to whether 2013 was a one-year blip on the radar (like 2009 was for Graham) or a sign of things to come.
The 2014 Schedule:
Tulsa moves to the American Athletic Conference in 2014, which represents a slight step up in competition from Conference USA, but will never be confused with the SEC West. Their league schedule has not yet been formulated, but we do know the four teams they will face outside the conference. The Golden Hurricane travel to Colorado State and Florida Atlantic. The Rams from Colorado State appear to be on the upswing, and they nearly beat Tulsa last season, so a road win in Fort Collins seems unlikely. Florida Atlantic was a solid 6-6 last season despite losing their coach to a drug scandal. The Owls were much better than their record, losing three conference games by a touchdown or less, and will represent a real challenge for Tulsa particularly at home. In other non-conference action, Tulsa hosts in-state foe Oklahoma and IA neophyte Texas State. Facing Oklahoma, even at home is a longshot. Texas State went 6-6 last season, but was not as good as their record and Tulsa should be expected to win at home. Realistically, a split in non-conference play is probably the best Tulsa can hope for in 2014, with a 1-3 mark a distinct possibility.
Reasons for Optimism:
A recent track record and youth. Prior to their disappointing 2013 campaign, Tulsa went to bowl games in seven of eight seasons from 2005 through 2012. That's one of the best runs for any mid-major over that span. Secondly, while the Golden Hurricane were not particularly good on defense in 2013, they were pretty young. Of their top ten tacklers, only three were seniors and four were either freshmen or sophomores. Even incremental improvement could move the Golden Hurricane to the middle of the pack in their new conference.
Final Prognosis:
2014 will serve as a referendum for the Bill Blankenship era at Tulsa. If the Golden Hurricane endure another losing season, he will likely be coaching for his job in 2015. However, if he returns the Golden Hurricane to the postseason, 2013 will likely be seen as an aberration. Keep in mind that while Tulsa has been a strong mid-major for a decade, winning at one of the smallest IA schools is no easy task. The Golden Hurricane endured eleven consecutive losing seasons before Steve Kragthorpe revitalized the program in 2003. Here's another facet to consider. From 2005 through 2012, 20 mid-major teams saw their conference record drop by at least four games from one season to the next (remember Tulsa finished five games worse in league play in 2013 than they did in 2012). Of those 20 teams, 16 improved their league record by at least one game the following season. Ten saw their league record improve by at least two games, and no team saw their conference record get worse. On average, the teams improved by 1.95 games in the conference standings the next season with the biggest improvements coming from Memphis in 2007 and Middle Tennessee State in 2012 (five games). Improvement by Tulsa is a given in 2014, but will they improve enough to get to a bowl game? Based on their non-conference slate, the Golden Hurricane need to finish at least 4-4 or possibly 5-3 in the American to be bowl eligible. I think they will finish on the cusp of postseason play with either five, six, seven regular season wins.
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Even the Losers: Temple
Over the past three seasons, 210 teams have participated in bowl games. 47 of those teams had losing records in the years immediately preceding their bowl game. This semi-regular piece will showcase the losers from 2013 who just might find themselves participating in Capital One Bowl Week in 2014. We'll begin our sojourn with Temple, a team from the American Athletic Conference.
Temple
2013 Record: 2-10 (1-7 American Athletic Conference)
Summary: The Owls won just two games in 2013, losing their first six games under new coach Matt Rhule. Three of their ten losses came to teams that finished the season ranked in the AP Poll (Notre Dame, Louisville, and UCF). However, they also lost to Idaho (the Vandals lone win on the season) and Fordham (IAA playoff team, but a IAA team nonetheless).
What Did the Owls Do Well?
Throw the football. Collectively, the Owls ranked just 60th in yards per pass attempt averaging 7.2 yards per throw. However, freshman quarterback P.J. Walker averaged 8.2 yards per throw on the year. Walker did not see much action in the first four games, netting just three pass attempts, but he became the full-time start over the final two thirds of the season and shined.
What Didn't the Owls Do Well?
Finish and play defense. Temple finished 0-5 in games decided by one score. In four of those games, the Owls held a lead at some point during the fourth quarter. Against Fordham, they led by six in the fourth, but the Rams scored a touchdown with four seconds left to even the games, and won on the ensuing extra point. Against Rutgers, the Owls led by four in the fourth, but allowed Rutgers to convert a fourth and ten play into a touchdown with 35 second left. Against eventual Fiesta Bowl winner UCF, the Owls led by seven in the fourth, but the Knights evened the game with just over a minute left and kicked a game-winning field goal as time expired. Against Connecticut, the Owls led 21-0 at the half, but did not score again for the rest of the game in a seven point defeat. While the final score was not close, the Owls also blew a 21-point first half and 14-point halftime lead in a double-digit defeat against SMU. The Owls lost these big leads primarily because their defense was horrendous. Opponents averaged nearly 30 points per game against the Owls and a robust 6.40 yards per play (101st nationally).
The Owls Over the Past Four Years:
The following table lists Temple's performance (in conference play only) in a few key categories and their respective conference rank in those categories. To help you read the table here is a handy translator.
Conf: The Conference Temple played in. With the ever-changing college football landscape, this is helpful.
Coach: Who was leading these yahoos into battle?
Rec: Conference Record
YPP: Yards per play. The number of yards per play the Owls averaged in conference play.
YPA: Yards per play allowed. The number of yards per play the Owls allowed in conference play.
Net: Yards per play net. The difference in YPP and YPA. Higher is better.
OTD: Offensive touchdowns. Touchdowns scored by the offense (no kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference play.
DTD: Defensive touchdowns. Touchdowns allowed by the defense (no kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference play.
Pythag: Adjusted Pythagorean Record. Take offensive touchdowns and defensive touchdowns and plug them into a handy formula to estimate the number of conference wins. For a full rundown of the APR, continue reading here.
In 2010 and 2011, the Temple Owls were a legitimately strong mid-major team, particularly on defense. In particular, the 2010 team featured four future NFL players on defense, including first round draft pick Muhammad Wilkerson. In the 2011 and 2012 NFL drafts, the Owls had five players selected. Losing all that talent caused a tremendous drop off in Steve Addazio's second season. Perhaps seeing the writing on the wall, Addazio left after 2012 to become coach of Boston College. Into that tough situation stepped Matt Rhule, a young coach who got in on the ground floor when Al Golden began rebuilding the Temple program in 2006. After overachieving in 2012 based on their peripheral numbers, the Owls underachieved last season, finishing more than two and a half games below where one would have expected based on their touchdowns scored and allowed.
The 2014 Schedule:
The ins and out of their conference schedule are not fully known yet, but we do know who the Owls will flap against in non-conference action. The Owls travel to Vanderbilt and Penn State in their James Franklin tour, and host Navy and Delaware State (IAA). Realistically, the Owls can expect to beat Delaware State and compete with Navy. Their road trips to Nashville and State College will more than likely result in losses. In conference play, the American will lose both Louisville and Rutgers while adding East Carolina, Tulane, and Tulsa. The American is a mid-major conference without an easily identifiable overlord, meaning their are no definitive losses on the schedule for the Owls. However, there is also no punching bag guaranteed to give the Owls a victory. All in all, the American will probably be a little weaker than last season with the exodus of Louisville and the attrition at reigning champ Central Florida.
Reasons for Optimism:
P.J. Walker and a little bit of luck. Walker's twenty passing touchdowns (in just eight plus games) marked the most by a Temple quarterback since Henry Burris threw 21 in 1994! In fact, as a team, the Owls threw just 21 touchdown passes in 2011 and 2012 combined. I've already harped on the Owls struggles in close games and their poor record in relation to their APR. Some regression in clutch situations could add a few wins to their ledger in 2014.
Final Prognosis:
Since teams began playing twelve games in 2006, 45 have finished the regular season with a 2-10 record. Fourteen of those teams have been bowl eligible the next season (every eligible team did not participate in a bowl). That's over 30%! For mid-majors, the results are a little more bearish, as seven of 31 (23%) have been bowl eligible the next season. No, the 2014 Temple team will not have a parade thrown in their honor, but I think their bowl odds are a little higher than one in three.
Temple
2013 Record: 2-10 (1-7 American Athletic Conference)
Summary: The Owls won just two games in 2013, losing their first six games under new coach Matt Rhule. Three of their ten losses came to teams that finished the season ranked in the AP Poll (Notre Dame, Louisville, and UCF). However, they also lost to Idaho (the Vandals lone win on the season) and Fordham (IAA playoff team, but a IAA team nonetheless).
What Did the Owls Do Well?
Throw the football. Collectively, the Owls ranked just 60th in yards per pass attempt averaging 7.2 yards per throw. However, freshman quarterback P.J. Walker averaged 8.2 yards per throw on the year. Walker did not see much action in the first four games, netting just three pass attempts, but he became the full-time start over the final two thirds of the season and shined.
What Didn't the Owls Do Well?
Finish and play defense. Temple finished 0-5 in games decided by one score. In four of those games, the Owls held a lead at some point during the fourth quarter. Against Fordham, they led by six in the fourth, but the Rams scored a touchdown with four seconds left to even the games, and won on the ensuing extra point. Against Rutgers, the Owls led by four in the fourth, but allowed Rutgers to convert a fourth and ten play into a touchdown with 35 second left. Against eventual Fiesta Bowl winner UCF, the Owls led by seven in the fourth, but the Knights evened the game with just over a minute left and kicked a game-winning field goal as time expired. Against Connecticut, the Owls led 21-0 at the half, but did not score again for the rest of the game in a seven point defeat. While the final score was not close, the Owls also blew a 21-point first half and 14-point halftime lead in a double-digit defeat against SMU. The Owls lost these big leads primarily because their defense was horrendous. Opponents averaged nearly 30 points per game against the Owls and a robust 6.40 yards per play (101st nationally).
The Owls Over the Past Four Years:
The following table lists Temple's performance (in conference play only) in a few key categories and their respective conference rank in those categories. To help you read the table here is a handy translator.
Conf: The Conference Temple played in. With the ever-changing college football landscape, this is helpful.
Coach: Who was leading these yahoos into battle?
Rec: Conference Record
YPP: Yards per play. The number of yards per play the Owls averaged in conference play.
YPA: Yards per play allowed. The number of yards per play the Owls allowed in conference play.
Net: Yards per play net. The difference in YPP and YPA. Higher is better.
OTD: Offensive touchdowns. Touchdowns scored by the offense (no kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference play.
DTD: Defensive touchdowns. Touchdowns allowed by the defense (no kick, punt, interception, or other returns are counted) in conference play.
Pythag: Adjusted Pythagorean Record. Take offensive touchdowns and defensive touchdowns and plug them into a handy formula to estimate the number of conference wins. For a full rundown of the APR, continue reading here.
In 2010 and 2011, the Temple Owls were a legitimately strong mid-major team, particularly on defense. In particular, the 2010 team featured four future NFL players on defense, including first round draft pick Muhammad Wilkerson. In the 2011 and 2012 NFL drafts, the Owls had five players selected. Losing all that talent caused a tremendous drop off in Steve Addazio's second season. Perhaps seeing the writing on the wall, Addazio left after 2012 to become coach of Boston College. Into that tough situation stepped Matt Rhule, a young coach who got in on the ground floor when Al Golden began rebuilding the Temple program in 2006. After overachieving in 2012 based on their peripheral numbers, the Owls underachieved last season, finishing more than two and a half games below where one would have expected based on their touchdowns scored and allowed.
The 2014 Schedule:
The ins and out of their conference schedule are not fully known yet, but we do know who the Owls will flap against in non-conference action. The Owls travel to Vanderbilt and Penn State in their James Franklin tour, and host Navy and Delaware State (IAA). Realistically, the Owls can expect to beat Delaware State and compete with Navy. Their road trips to Nashville and State College will more than likely result in losses. In conference play, the American will lose both Louisville and Rutgers while adding East Carolina, Tulane, and Tulsa. The American is a mid-major conference without an easily identifiable overlord, meaning their are no definitive losses on the schedule for the Owls. However, there is also no punching bag guaranteed to give the Owls a victory. All in all, the American will probably be a little weaker than last season with the exodus of Louisville and the attrition at reigning champ Central Florida.
Reasons for Optimism:
P.J. Walker and a little bit of luck. Walker's twenty passing touchdowns (in just eight plus games) marked the most by a Temple quarterback since Henry Burris threw 21 in 1994! In fact, as a team, the Owls threw just 21 touchdown passes in 2011 and 2012 combined. I've already harped on the Owls struggles in close games and their poor record in relation to their APR. Some regression in clutch situations could add a few wins to their ledger in 2014.
Final Prognosis:
Since teams began playing twelve games in 2006, 45 have finished the regular season with a 2-10 record. Fourteen of those teams have been bowl eligible the next season (every eligible team did not participate in a bowl). That's over 30%! For mid-majors, the results are a little more bearish, as seven of 31 (23%) have been bowl eligible the next season. No, the 2014 Temple team will not have a parade thrown in their honor, but I think their bowl odds are a little higher than one in three.
Friday, January 03, 2014
Bowl Preview: Part IV
The past two weeks have flown by. Unfortunately, there are only five more games left in this college football season. Enjoy them while you can, August is a long way away.
Discover Orange Bowl
Ohio State vs Clemson
Line: Ohio State -3
The Clemson Tigers return to the scene of one of their most infamous and grisly defeats on Friday night. This is an interesting time for Clemson football, as the Tigers have won at least ten games in each of the past three seasons, hoisted the ACC crown two years ago, and will finish in the top-25 for the fourth time in five full seasons under Dabo Swinney. However, they have also lost five consecutive games to in-state rival South Carolina and appear to have ceded control of the Atlantic Division to an old power. While they were clearly inferior to Florida State, Clemson was also clearly the second best team in the ACC in 2013. Behind senior quarterback Tajh Boyd, the receiving acumen of Sammy Watkins, and a fast paced offense, the Tigers ranked third in the ACC in yards per play. The defense also played well, ranking fourth in the conference in yards per play allowed. Outside of the Seminoles, Clemson won each of their conference games by ten points, and if not for a turnover implosion against South Carolina, may have beaten the Gamecocks in Columbia. The Tigers will face an Ohio State team also coming off a disappointing loss. With the national championship in their sights, the Buckeyes stumbled against an elite Michigan State team in the Big 10 Championship Game. The loss broke a 24-game winning streak for the Buckeyes and was their first under Urban Meyer. In the regular season, Ohio State was nigh unstoppable on offense, ranking first in the Big 10 by averaging a ridiculous 7.55 yards per play! Quarterback Braxton Miller and running back Carlos Hyde both rushed for over 1000 yards and collectively the team averaged over seven yards per carry. Defensively, the Buckeyes were not quite as strong, ranking fifth in the Big 10 in yards per play allowed. However, they were adept at making plays in the backfield, garnering 40 sacks and 89 tackles for loss. Those numbers ranked sixth and 26th respectively in the nation. Methinks this will be a pretty high-scoring affair, and if Ohio State is motivated, they should win rather easily here.
AT&T Cotton Bowl
Oklahoma State vs Missouri
Line: Oklahoma State -1
These former conference mates (first in the Big 8 and later in the Big 12) face each other for the first time since 2011, when Oklahoma State beat Missouri by three touchdowns on their homefield. Both schools enter this game off losses that cost them shots at BCS bowl. For Missouri, the loss was particularly galling, as it potentially cost them a shot at the national title. Until they were eviscerated by Auburn's running game, the Tigers held up reasonably well on the defensive side of the ball in SEC play, ranking second in yards allowed per play. Defensive end Michael Sam was a mainstay in opposing backfields, racking up ten and a half sacks and eighteen tackles for loss. The Tigers also ranked a respectable fourth in the conference in yards per play. Quarterback James Franklin and his backup Maty Mauk both averaged 8.1 yards per throw, though they went about accumulating those numbers very differently. Franklin completed nearly two thirds of his passes, while Mauk was a more boom or bust passer, registering a completion rate of just 51.2%. The Tigers will look to lasso the Cowboys for the first time since 2005, Mike Gundy's first year at the school. The Cowboys won at least ten games for the third time in the past four seasons, but their last second loss to archrival Oklahoma not only denied them a Big 12 title, but also dropped them out of the BCS bowl picture altogether. The Cowboys were not as explosive on offense as they have been in the past, although they still ranked third in the Big 12 in yards per play. The real story was their defense which finished first in the Big 12 in yards per play allowed. The Cowboys don't have a fearsome pass rush, generating just 22 sacks all season (tied for 79th nationally), but they limit the big plays and force turnovers (30 on the season which ranks seventh nationally). This should be a very competitive game, and there does not appear to be a great deal of value on either side of the line. Sit back and enjoy this one, but don't make any plays.
BBVA Compass Bowl
Vanderbilt vs Houston
Line: Vanderbilt -3
To say James Franklin has been a little bit successful at Vanderbilt is a massive understatement. The Commodores, a perennial cellar dweller have qualified for three consecutive bowl, and this season beat their former east bullies Georgia, Florida, and Tennessee with the last two coming on the homefields of the Gators and Vols respectively. The Tennessee win had to be extra special, as it kept the Volunteers out of a bowl game for the third straight season. Despite the presence of Jordan Matthews, an NFL ready wide receiver, Vandy ranked just twelfth in the SEC in yards per play. The real strength of this team was the defense which ranked an impressive fourth in the SEC in yards per play allowed. The defense also forced 27 turnovers, a number that ranked 21st in the nation. The Commodores will face a Houston team that was also quite adept at forcing turnovers. The Cougars rebounded from a losing season by forcing a national best 40 turnovers for an insane turnover margin of +25. Overall, the defense ranked second in the American Athletic Conference in yards per play allowed. Offensively, Houston turned the reigns to freshman quarterback John O'Korn. O'Korn threw 26 touchdown passes on the year and completed nearly 60% of his throws. However, the Cougars finished a rather pedestrian sixth in the American in yards per play. The team was not able to run the ball effectively, particularly late in the year when they managed just 3.16 yards per carry over their final five games. While Houston was powered by an unsustainable turnover margin, they were also a little unlucky in 2013, losing four games by seven points or less. Houston should be sufficiently motivated in this matchup against the SEC. Vanderbilt is a quality team, but this spread should be closer to a pick em. Place a small wager on Houston on the moneyline.
GoDaddy Bowl
Ball State vs Arkansas State
Line: Ball State -7.5
The Cardinals from Ball State represent the MAC's last chance to nab a bowl win in 2013. Buffalo, Ohio, Bowling Green, and Northern Illinois all lost their respective bowl games. For Ball State, the period between their regular season finale against Miami of Ohio and their bowl clash with the Red Wolves had to have been filled with trepidation. Yet, the Cardinals did not lose their outstanding coach Pete Lembo to a higher profile gig. The Cardinals have improved their win total each season under Lembo, and now will look to win their first ever bowl game in school history. The Cardinals are led by their high-powered offense which ranked third in the MAC in yards per play. Senior quarterback Keith Wenning threw 34 touchdown passes against just six interceptions. Two of his receivers, Willie Snead and Jordan Williams, gained over 1000 yards through the air, and with a great performance in the bowl, senior wideout Jamill Smith could join them (currently has 855 yards). The offensive line did a great job protecting Wenning as well, allowing just fourteen sacks on the year despite averaging nearly 40 pass attempts per game. The Cardinals will take on an Arkansas State team playing in their third consecutive Go Daddy Bowl. Unfortunately for the Red Wolves, their success has cost them yet another head coach. In 2011, Arkansas State played in just their second ever bowl under head coach Hugh Freeze. He left for the Ole Miss job. Last season, Gus Malzahn took the Red Wolves back to the postseason and he parlayed that into the Auburn job. This season, Bryan Harsin returned the Red Wolves to the postseason, and he is now the head coach at Boise State. John Thompson, the team's defensive coordinator will serve as the interim head coach in this game. While the Red Wolves won at least a share of their third consecutive Sun Belt title, they were hardly the imposing force they were under Freeze and Malzahn. In 2011, the Red Wolves finished 8-0 in the league and won five of their league games by double-digits. Last season, they went 7-1 in the Sun Belt, and won five by double-digits. This season, in a weaker Sun Belt, they went 5-2, but only two of their wins came by double-digits. In fact, on the year, Arkansas State was actually outperformed on a per-play basis by their conference mates. They ranked just seventh in the eight team league in yards per play and fifth in yards per play allowed. With the coaching upheaval and the pedestrian per play numbers they put up, its hard to see the Red Wolves winning here. Ball State should get their first bowl win and cover this number.
Vizio BCS National Championship
Florida State vs Auburn
Line: Florida State -8.5
The final BCS National Championship game features the team that played in the first three (though they were still Fiesta, Sugar, and Orange bowls respectively at that time). In Jimbo Fisher's fourth season, Florida State ran roughshod over the ACC, winning every game by at least fourteen points, holding seven opponents to one offensive touchdown or less, and dominating the yards per play metric. The Seminoles ranked first in the ACC in yards per play behind the eventual Heisman winner Jameis Winston. Winston averaged an absurd 10.9 yards per pass (first in the nation) and also rushed for nearly 200 yards. Defensively, the Seminoles were also top notch, ranking first in the ACC in yards per play allowed. Only Boston College and Pittsburgh averaged more than five yards per play against the Seminoles, meaning no team reached that threshold since late September. The Seminoles will face a Cinderella opponent in the title game (as much as an SEC team can be called a Cinderella). Auburn has enjoyed a rather up and down past few seasons, winning the national title behind Cam Newton in 2010, regressing yet still winning a bowl in 2011, and crashing hard last season. They canned Gene Chizik and hired the mastermind behind their 2010 success, Gus Malzahn. The Tigers coalesced on offense as the season progressed, won all the close ones, and enjoyed a few sublime plays to qualify for the SEC Championship Game where they shredded a fine Missouri team. For the year, Auburn ranked just fifth in the SEC in yards per play, but they have improved as of late. In their first three SEC games, the Tigers averaged 5.78 yards per play. Over their final five conference games, the Tigers have averaged 6.87 yards per play. Then in the title game against Missouri, they averaged nearly eight yards per play. Auburn will need to score a great deal against the Seminoles because their defense ranked eleventh in the SEC in yards per play allowed, and it did not show substantial improvement as the year progressed (the Tigers allowed over seven yards per play to Georgia, Alabama, and Missouri in their final three games versus SEC foes). Stranger things have happened in title games (Florida's seismic of Ohio State in 2006 springs to mind), but nothing Auburn has done all year indicates they will be able to stop the Seminole offense. Florida State won't shut Auburn down either, but they should should get enough stops to cover this number.
Discover Orange Bowl
Ohio State vs Clemson
Line: Ohio State -3
The Clemson Tigers return to the scene of one of their most infamous and grisly defeats on Friday night. This is an interesting time for Clemson football, as the Tigers have won at least ten games in each of the past three seasons, hoisted the ACC crown two years ago, and will finish in the top-25 for the fourth time in five full seasons under Dabo Swinney. However, they have also lost five consecutive games to in-state rival South Carolina and appear to have ceded control of the Atlantic Division to an old power. While they were clearly inferior to Florida State, Clemson was also clearly the second best team in the ACC in 2013. Behind senior quarterback Tajh Boyd, the receiving acumen of Sammy Watkins, and a fast paced offense, the Tigers ranked third in the ACC in yards per play. The defense also played well, ranking fourth in the conference in yards per play allowed. Outside of the Seminoles, Clemson won each of their conference games by ten points, and if not for a turnover implosion against South Carolina, may have beaten the Gamecocks in Columbia. The Tigers will face an Ohio State team also coming off a disappointing loss. With the national championship in their sights, the Buckeyes stumbled against an elite Michigan State team in the Big 10 Championship Game. The loss broke a 24-game winning streak for the Buckeyes and was their first under Urban Meyer. In the regular season, Ohio State was nigh unstoppable on offense, ranking first in the Big 10 by averaging a ridiculous 7.55 yards per play! Quarterback Braxton Miller and running back Carlos Hyde both rushed for over 1000 yards and collectively the team averaged over seven yards per carry. Defensively, the Buckeyes were not quite as strong, ranking fifth in the Big 10 in yards per play allowed. However, they were adept at making plays in the backfield, garnering 40 sacks and 89 tackles for loss. Those numbers ranked sixth and 26th respectively in the nation. Methinks this will be a pretty high-scoring affair, and if Ohio State is motivated, they should win rather easily here.
AT&T Cotton Bowl
Oklahoma State vs Missouri
Line: Oklahoma State -1
These former conference mates (first in the Big 8 and later in the Big 12) face each other for the first time since 2011, when Oklahoma State beat Missouri by three touchdowns on their homefield. Both schools enter this game off losses that cost them shots at BCS bowl. For Missouri, the loss was particularly galling, as it potentially cost them a shot at the national title. Until they were eviscerated by Auburn's running game, the Tigers held up reasonably well on the defensive side of the ball in SEC play, ranking second in yards allowed per play. Defensive end Michael Sam was a mainstay in opposing backfields, racking up ten and a half sacks and eighteen tackles for loss. The Tigers also ranked a respectable fourth in the conference in yards per play. Quarterback James Franklin and his backup Maty Mauk both averaged 8.1 yards per throw, though they went about accumulating those numbers very differently. Franklin completed nearly two thirds of his passes, while Mauk was a more boom or bust passer, registering a completion rate of just 51.2%. The Tigers will look to lasso the Cowboys for the first time since 2005, Mike Gundy's first year at the school. The Cowboys won at least ten games for the third time in the past four seasons, but their last second loss to archrival Oklahoma not only denied them a Big 12 title, but also dropped them out of the BCS bowl picture altogether. The Cowboys were not as explosive on offense as they have been in the past, although they still ranked third in the Big 12 in yards per play. The real story was their defense which finished first in the Big 12 in yards per play allowed. The Cowboys don't have a fearsome pass rush, generating just 22 sacks all season (tied for 79th nationally), but they limit the big plays and force turnovers (30 on the season which ranks seventh nationally). This should be a very competitive game, and there does not appear to be a great deal of value on either side of the line. Sit back and enjoy this one, but don't make any plays.
BBVA Compass Bowl
Vanderbilt vs Houston
Line: Vanderbilt -3
To say James Franklin has been a little bit successful at Vanderbilt is a massive understatement. The Commodores, a perennial cellar dweller have qualified for three consecutive bowl, and this season beat their former east bullies Georgia, Florida, and Tennessee with the last two coming on the homefields of the Gators and Vols respectively. The Tennessee win had to be extra special, as it kept the Volunteers out of a bowl game for the third straight season. Despite the presence of Jordan Matthews, an NFL ready wide receiver, Vandy ranked just twelfth in the SEC in yards per play. The real strength of this team was the defense which ranked an impressive fourth in the SEC in yards per play allowed. The defense also forced 27 turnovers, a number that ranked 21st in the nation. The Commodores will face a Houston team that was also quite adept at forcing turnovers. The Cougars rebounded from a losing season by forcing a national best 40 turnovers for an insane turnover margin of +25. Overall, the defense ranked second in the American Athletic Conference in yards per play allowed. Offensively, Houston turned the reigns to freshman quarterback John O'Korn. O'Korn threw 26 touchdown passes on the year and completed nearly 60% of his throws. However, the Cougars finished a rather pedestrian sixth in the American in yards per play. The team was not able to run the ball effectively, particularly late in the year when they managed just 3.16 yards per carry over their final five games. While Houston was powered by an unsustainable turnover margin, they were also a little unlucky in 2013, losing four games by seven points or less. Houston should be sufficiently motivated in this matchup against the SEC. Vanderbilt is a quality team, but this spread should be closer to a pick em. Place a small wager on Houston on the moneyline.
GoDaddy Bowl
Ball State vs Arkansas State
Line: Ball State -7.5
The Cardinals from Ball State represent the MAC's last chance to nab a bowl win in 2013. Buffalo, Ohio, Bowling Green, and Northern Illinois all lost their respective bowl games. For Ball State, the period between their regular season finale against Miami of Ohio and their bowl clash with the Red Wolves had to have been filled with trepidation. Yet, the Cardinals did not lose their outstanding coach Pete Lembo to a higher profile gig. The Cardinals have improved their win total each season under Lembo, and now will look to win their first ever bowl game in school history. The Cardinals are led by their high-powered offense which ranked third in the MAC in yards per play. Senior quarterback Keith Wenning threw 34 touchdown passes against just six interceptions. Two of his receivers, Willie Snead and Jordan Williams, gained over 1000 yards through the air, and with a great performance in the bowl, senior wideout Jamill Smith could join them (currently has 855 yards). The offensive line did a great job protecting Wenning as well, allowing just fourteen sacks on the year despite averaging nearly 40 pass attempts per game. The Cardinals will take on an Arkansas State team playing in their third consecutive Go Daddy Bowl. Unfortunately for the Red Wolves, their success has cost them yet another head coach. In 2011, Arkansas State played in just their second ever bowl under head coach Hugh Freeze. He left for the Ole Miss job. Last season, Gus Malzahn took the Red Wolves back to the postseason and he parlayed that into the Auburn job. This season, Bryan Harsin returned the Red Wolves to the postseason, and he is now the head coach at Boise State. John Thompson, the team's defensive coordinator will serve as the interim head coach in this game. While the Red Wolves won at least a share of their third consecutive Sun Belt title, they were hardly the imposing force they were under Freeze and Malzahn. In 2011, the Red Wolves finished 8-0 in the league and won five of their league games by double-digits. Last season, they went 7-1 in the Sun Belt, and won five by double-digits. This season, in a weaker Sun Belt, they went 5-2, but only two of their wins came by double-digits. In fact, on the year, Arkansas State was actually outperformed on a per-play basis by their conference mates. They ranked just seventh in the eight team league in yards per play and fifth in yards per play allowed. With the coaching upheaval and the pedestrian per play numbers they put up, its hard to see the Red Wolves winning here. Ball State should get their first bowl win and cover this number.
Vizio BCS National Championship
Florida State vs Auburn
Line: Florida State -8.5
The final BCS National Championship game features the team that played in the first three (though they were still Fiesta, Sugar, and Orange bowls respectively at that time). In Jimbo Fisher's fourth season, Florida State ran roughshod over the ACC, winning every game by at least fourteen points, holding seven opponents to one offensive touchdown or less, and dominating the yards per play metric. The Seminoles ranked first in the ACC in yards per play behind the eventual Heisman winner Jameis Winston. Winston averaged an absurd 10.9 yards per pass (first in the nation) and also rushed for nearly 200 yards. Defensively, the Seminoles were also top notch, ranking first in the ACC in yards per play allowed. Only Boston College and Pittsburgh averaged more than five yards per play against the Seminoles, meaning no team reached that threshold since late September. The Seminoles will face a Cinderella opponent in the title game (as much as an SEC team can be called a Cinderella). Auburn has enjoyed a rather up and down past few seasons, winning the national title behind Cam Newton in 2010, regressing yet still winning a bowl in 2011, and crashing hard last season. They canned Gene Chizik and hired the mastermind behind their 2010 success, Gus Malzahn. The Tigers coalesced on offense as the season progressed, won all the close ones, and enjoyed a few sublime plays to qualify for the SEC Championship Game where they shredded a fine Missouri team. For the year, Auburn ranked just fifth in the SEC in yards per play, but they have improved as of late. In their first three SEC games, the Tigers averaged 5.78 yards per play. Over their final five conference games, the Tigers have averaged 6.87 yards per play. Then in the title game against Missouri, they averaged nearly eight yards per play. Auburn will need to score a great deal against the Seminoles because their defense ranked eleventh in the SEC in yards per play allowed, and it did not show substantial improvement as the year progressed (the Tigers allowed over seven yards per play to Georgia, Alabama, and Missouri in their final three games versus SEC foes). Stranger things have happened in title games (Florida's seismic of Ohio State in 2006 springs to mind), but nothing Auburn has done all year indicates they will be able to stop the Seminole offense. Florida State won't shut Auburn down either, but they should should get enough stops to cover this number.
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Bowl Preview: Part III
Part III of the illustrious bowl preview takes us through the New Year's Eve, New Year's Day, and Sugar Bowl games. Enjoy.
AdvoCare V100 Bowl
Arizona vs Boston College
Line: Arizona -7.5
Boston College returns to the postseason after a two-year hiatus. The Eagles were bowl mainstays since the late-90's, first under Tom O'Brien and then under Jeff Jagodzinski, but the program wilted under the guidance of Frank Spaziani. In keeping their arcane tradition of hiring coaches who last names end in vowels, the Eagles tabbed Steve Addazio to be their next head coach. The Eagles improved by five wins in Addazio's first season on the sidelines and will seek to end a three-game bowl losing streak dating back to 2007. The Eagles were a scrappy bunch in 2013, giving Florida State their toughest test to date in a fourteen point home loss. They also played Clemson tough in Death Valley, surrendering just two offensive touchdowns to the high-powered Tigers. For the season, Boston College was glaringly average in the ACC ranking sixth in yards per play and seventh in yards per play allowed. The focal point of their offense was running back Andre Williams, a Heisman finalist, who enters bowl season leading the nation in rushing yards with 2102. He is the first player to have at least 2000 yards rushing since Donald Brown in 2008. The Eagles will tangle with an Arizona team that also features a star running back. After leading the nation in rushing last season, Ka'Deem Carey enters the postseason ranked sixth in rushing yards. Despite Carey's heroics, the Wildcats ranked just eighth in the powerful Pac-12 in yards per play. The primary reason for this was the play of the passing game. Quarterback B.J. Denker took nearly every snap and averaged just 6.3 yards per pass, ranking 91st in the metric among qualifying quarterbacks. Defensively, the Wildcats improved from their horrendous showing last season, but were just seventh in the Pac-12 in yards per play allowed. The Pac-12 was a tremendous conference in 2013, but outside of their shocking upset of Oregon, the Wildcats only other league victories were against the dregs of the conference (Utah, Colorado, and Cal). Boston College is undervalued by the nation at-large despite the presence of a Heisman finalist. This line should be closer to a field goal rather than the touchdown spread it currently sits at. Look for Boston College to keep this one close and potentially pull off an outright upset.
Hyundai Sun Bowl
UCLA vs Virginia Tech
Line: UCLA -7
If the Arizona/Boston College game wasn't enough for you, the beautiful city of El Paso presents you with another ACC/Pac-12 clash. Very quietly, UCLA has won nine games for the second straight season under Jim Mora Jr. Currently ranked 17th in the AP Poll, the Bruins have a chance to finish the season ranked for the first time since 2005. Despite their impressive resume, when you peel back the onion, UCLA was not especially dominant in the Pac-12. Their offense, lead by quarterback Brett Hundley, ranked just seventh in the Pac-12 in yards per play. Hundley averaged a robust 8.3 yards per pass, but took 34 sacks to somewhat offset his big play ability. Hundley didn't get much help in the backfield from the usual starting running back, but linebacker turned offensive star Myles Jack was explosive in limited playing time. Jack only carried the ball 37 times, but he averaged over seven yards per rush and scored seven touchdowns. Jack also intercepted a pass and recorded a handful of tackles for loss. In addition to Jack, linebacker Anthony Barr proved to be a big playmaker on the defensive side of the ball. Barr recorded ten sacks and twenty tackles for loss in helping the Bruins rank fifth in the Pac-12 in yards per play allowed. Barr and Jack will attempt to stymie the gargantuan Logan Thomas who endured a very disappointing senior season at Virginia Tech. Over his junior and senior seasons, Thomas has thrown an incredible 29 interceptions and the Hokies have gone just 15-10 after losing more than four game just once since 1997. With Thomas struggling, the defense was its usual dominant self, ranking second in the ACC in yards per play allowed, behind only Florida State. Despite their struggles, Virginia Tech is no pushover. Outside of Alabama, all their losses came by a touchdown or fewer, and the Hokies did beat six bowl teams in 2013, including three on the road (East Carolina, Marshall, Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Pitt, and Miami). Like Boston College, Virginia Tech is a little undervalued. I expect this to be a typical Hokie game circa 2013; ugly and low-scoring. Take the Hokies to cover and don't be surprised with an outright upset.
AutoZone Liberty Bowl
Mississippi State vs Rice
Line: Mississippi State -7
With a season ending upset of rival Ole Miss, the Bulldogs from Mississippi State have qualified for their fourth consecutive bowl game, a new school record. Aside from that victory over the Rebels however, there isn't a great deal of heft on the Bulldogs resume. Their second best win is easily their one-point home escape over eventual MAC champ, Bowling Green. Their other conference wins came over Arkansas and Kentucky, a pair that managed a cumulative 0-16 mark in the SEC. In non-conference action, they also crushed Steve McNair's alma mater and Troy. In fact, their most impressive performance on the year is arguably their close loss to eventual SEC champion Auburn in the season's third week. In SEC play, Mississippi State was below average on both sides of the ball, ranking eighth in yards per play and ninth in yards per play allowed. The Bulldogs will be quarterbacked in the Liberty Bowl by sophomore Dak Prescott who actually led the team in rushing with 751 yards and eleven touchdowns. His passing was a little uneven as he threw as many interceptions (seven) as touchdowns. The Bulldogs will look to improve to 3-1 in bowl games under Dan Mullen against a Rice team that just won their first outright conference title since 1957. The Owls won ten games for just the third time in school history, and the second time under coach David Bailiff. Rice opened their season playing an SEC team, where they lost, but kept the game somewhat competitive. They then knocked off Kansas for the second consecutive season, and after a tight loss to former conference mate Houston, reeled off nine wins in their final ten games. The Owls made a habit of winning the close ones in 2013, rolling up a 5-1 record in games decided by a touchdown or less. Primarily thanks to their close game success, the Owls finished 7-1 in Conference USA despite middling yards per play numbers. They ranked just eighth in Conference USA in yards per play and sixth in yards per play allowed. In fact, in league play, their most impressive performance did not come until the Conference USA Championship Game against Marshall. The Owls averaged over seven yards per play and held the explosive Marshall offense to under five yards per play in a seventeen point win. Senior quarterback Taylor McHargue completed just over half his passes, but threw 17 touchdowns and also rushed for nearly 500 yards. The offensive line did not do a great job protecting McHargue, as the Owls allowed 33 sacks (104th in the nation). The good news for Rice fans is that Mississippi State only accumulated sixteen sacks themselves over the course of the year, so McHargue has a better shot at avoiding negative plays. During his tenure at Mississippi State, Dan Mullen has gone 12-1 versus IA teams from outside BCS conferences. However, against the better teams, those games have often been close (see Bowling Green this season and Louisiana Tech two years ago). Rice is a quality team and should be motivated to win their eleventh game of the season. Look for the Owls to keep this one close and cover here.
Chick-Fil-A Bowl
Texas A&M vs Duke
Line: Texas A&M -12
Coming off a season that saw them finish 11-2 and rank in the top-five of the final AP Poll for the first time since 1956 when a certain legendary gentleman was stalking the sidelines, the Aggies entered 2013 with great expectations. However, despite the exploits of the reigning Heisman winner, the Aggies defense went from bad to worse and the Aggies were just 4-4 in the SEC. To be fair, three of their losses came by a touchdown or less, but two of them also came in the comfy confines of College State where the Aggies played eight games this season. Ten of their twelve opponents scored at least 28 points against the Aggies lackluster defense. In the SEC, only Kentucky and Arkansas allowed more yards per play than the Aggies. The Aggies also did a poor job forcing turnovers, creating just nine in their eight SEC games. A defense that allows a lot of big plays and fails in creating turnovers will generally allow a great deal of points, and the Aggies were no exception, permitting 36.5 points per game in their league contests. And despite those defensive struggles, the Aggies head to Atlanta as huge favorites against a Duke team that, while not possessing the resume of a ten-win team, is clearly the best team Duke has fielded in ages. After losing their first two ACC games, the Blue Devils won their final eight regular season contests before falling to Florida State in the ACC Championship Game. Amazingly, the Blue Devils won all four of their ACC road games, equaling their number of conference road wins in David Cutcliffe's first five seasons. Duke was a functionally average team in the ACC, ranking seventh in yards per play and ninth in yards per play allowed. Duke's biggest playmaker on offense is wide receiver Jamison Crowder who has nearly 1200 yards receiving. Crowder also returned two punts for touchdowns and corner DeVon Edwards added two kickoff return touchdowns, one of which provided the winning margin in their division clinching game against rival North Carolina. Edwards also ran two interceptions back against NC State, accounting for three touchdown in Duke's eighteen point win. In a season of roughly 1900 plays, Edwards' four big ones provided the thin margin by which Duke enjoyed a sublime season. Texas A&M is better than Duke, but double-digit favorites, especially when they are not elite teams, do not fare well against the spread in bowl season. Even if this game is relatively non-competitive, the Aggie defense will leave the backdoor wide open in this game. Take the Devils to cover, and don't be surprised if this one is a lot closer than most thought possible.
TaxSlayer.com Gator Bowl
Georgia vs Nebraska
Line: Georgia -9
This year's Gator Bowl presents us with a rematch of last season's Capital One Bowl. An early back-and-forth affair turned into a relatively comfortable 45-31 win for Georgia. Despite the familiarity, this game will feature two different starting quarterbacks than the last matchup. Nebraska quarterback Taylor Martinez was injured in the season opener, and while he did play appear in four games, he missed the Cornhuskers last five contests and will not be playing in the bowl. Georgia's outstanding senior signal caller, Aaron Murray, was injured in their penultimate regular season game and missed the annual clash with Georgia Tech and is out for this game as well. In looking at Nebraska's Big 10 stats, we can get a pretty idea as to what kind of team they are without Martinez, as he played in only one conference game. The results, at least on offense, are not pretty. Nebraska ranked just ninth in the conference in yards per play. The quarterbacks behind Martinez, Tommy Armstrong Jr. and Ron Kelllogg III combined to throw just thirteen touchdowns and ten interceptions on the season. Plus, those two are far from the running threat Martinez was. Armstrong and Kellogg combined to rush for just 160 yards on 80 carries in 2013. In his illustrious Nebraska career, Martinez rushed for nearly 3000 yards and averaged over five yards per carry. The offense certainly missed him in his absence. However, the defense compensated for his loss. The Cornhuskers ranked second in the Big 10 in yards per play allowed. However, the vagaries of a short season manifested themselves in the inability of the defense to force turnovers. Nebraska forced just six in their eight conference games, easily the fewest in the league. A few more swing plays here or there and maybe Nebraska wins nine or ten games. On the other hand, evaluating Georgia is a little bit different since Aaron Murray played in all their SEC games. Murray and the Bulldogs own a pair of impressive wins, beating both South Carolina and LSU between the hedges. They also nearly beat eventual SEC champion Auburn (a common refrain in 2013) on the road before suffering a heartbreaking defeat. For the season, Georgia ranked sixth in the SEC in yards per play (remember a lot of powerful offenses resided in the SEC) and sixth in yards per play allowed. The Bulldogs allowed at least 30 points to six of their eight conference opponents, with low-wattage outfits Florida and Kentucky failing to get to that number. In their final regular season game against Georgia Tech, the Bulldogs fell behind early before quarterback Hutson Mason rallied them to an overtime win. Still, Georgia allowed over 30 points to the Yellow Jackets meaning eight of their eleven IA opponents went at least that high in 2013. I think the spread in this game is a little high considering the potential defensive issues at Georgia. Nebraska's defense is more than capable of holding Georgia in check and keeping this game close. I wouldn't bank on a Nebraska win, but a cover seems likely here.
Heart of Dallas Bowl
North Texas vs UNLV
Line: North Texas -6.5
This game is an unexpected treat for mid-major aficionados like myself. Getting the opportunity to play on New Year's Day, even if they are stuck on ESPNU, is something most in Denton and Las Vegas probably did not expect when the season began. For North Texas, this marks their first bowl appearance since 2004 when they finished their run of four consecutive New Orleans Bowl bids. After winning just thirteen games from 2005 through 2010, the Mean Green have won seventeen in just three seasons under Dan McCarney. After turning the Iowa State program around and guiding the Cyclones to five bowl appearances over a six season span, McCarney guided the Mean Green to the cusp of a conference title in his third season at the helm. North Texas lost just two Conference USA games all season, with the defeats coming by three and eight points. Meanwhile, each of their six league wins came by at least twelve points, including a win over eventual league champ Rice. On the year, North Texas ranked fifth in Conference USA in yards per play and outstanding second in yards per play allowed. In fact, their per-play margin ranked second in the league behind only Marshall. Offensively, the Mean Green were not explosive, but they also suffered few negative plays. They allowed only ten sacks on the season, an amount that ranked fifth in the nation. The Mean Green are a senior laden team, with their quarterback, running back, two leading receivers, and four leaders in tackles for loss all playing their final games on the January 1st. Seeking to win a bowl game for the first time since 2002, the Mean Green will face a UNLV team that has not been to the postseason since 2000, and has but three previous bowl appearances in its history. UNLV won a combined six games in Bobby Hauck's first three seasons in Sin City, but the Rebels shook off an ugly 0-2 start to win more than six games for just the second time in the last two decades. UNLV did what they had to do in 2013, namely beating six teams that did not finish with a winning record. To be fair, they did end the regular season with a beatdown of San Diego State, their lone win over a bowl team, to clinch this bowl appearance. UNLV was below average on both sides of the ball in Mountain West play, ranking ninth in yards per play and seventh in yards per play allowed. Despite the pedestrian showing, a few seniors did have good individual performances. Senior quarterback Caleb Herring three 22 touchdown passes after throwing just 14 in his first three years at the school. Senior running back Tim Cornett rushed for over 1200 yards for the second straight year, and set the school's career rushing mark, passing Mike Thomas. Both of these teams have been absent from the postseason for a while, so motivation should not be an issue. North Texas is probably the better team, but this spread is a little too high to feel comfortable taking them. Sit this one out and enjoy some mid-majors that get the New Year's spotlight.
Capital One Bowl
Wisconsin vs South Carolina
Line: Wisconsin -2
For the third straight year, South Carolina will take a New Year's trip to Florida, face a Big 10 team, and attempt to set/tie the school record for wins in a season with eleven. The Gamecocks have burst onto the national scene in recent years, and despite not playing in the SEC Championship Game during this run (they won a watered down SEC East in 2010), have enjoyed arguably the best seasons in school history back-to-back-to-back. South Carolina was not elite on either side of the ball in the SEC this year, ranking seventh in yards per play and fifth in yards per play allowed. However, since most SEC teams were very unbalanced with either a great offense and poor defense (see Texas A&M) or great defense and paleolithic offense (see Florida), the Gamecocks actually ranked fourth in yards per play differential. This will be the final game for the best quarterback in Gamecock history, Connor Shaw. Despite not getting nearly the attention he deserves nationally, Shaw quietly enjoyed one of the best touchdown to interception ratio seasons of all-time. Shaw threw 21 touchdown passes on the year (and also added five scores on the ground), but threw just a single interception. The four Heisman Trophy finalist quarterbacks combined to throw 36 interceptions! I'm not saying Shaw deserved an invite, but he should have at least been in the conversation. Joining Shaw in the backfield is sophomore running back Mike Davis. While potentially blasphemous to folks around Columbia, Davis posted better rushing numbers than Marcus Lattimore did in any season. And of course, on defense, the man with true SEC speed, defensive end Jadeveon Clowney, will be playing his final college game. The Gamecocks will face an imposing Wisconsin team that is not playing in the Rose Bowl for the first time since 2009. The Badgers were probably a bit underrated for much of the year until their head-scratching home loss to Penn State to close the year. Overall, Wisconsin ranked second in the Big 10 in yards per play and fourth in yards per play allowed. Although they were an old school Big 10 team in that they loved to run the ball, this was not three yards and a cloud of dust. The Badgers finished second nationally in yards per rush (behind another Big 10 team in Ohio State) by averaging a robust 6.61 yards per carry. For the second time in four seasons, the Badgers had two backs go over 1000 yards on the ground. Melvin Gordon got fewer touches than James White, but averaged over eight yards per attempt. For his career, Gordon is averaging an absurd 8.31 yards per carry on 263 attempts. The Badgers can also sling it a little bit with Jared Abbrederis becoming to first Badger to go over 1000 yards receiving since Brandon Williams in 2005. This game has the potential to be one of the better clashes of bowl season. There is no value on either side of this spread, so just sit back and enjoy while you nurse that hangover.
Outback Bowl
LSU vs Iowa
Line: LSU -7
This Outback Bowl is a rematch of the Capital One Bowl from nearly a decade ago that featured one of the best endings in college football history.
Iowa rebounded from a rare losing campaign in 2012 to qualify for their eleventh bowl game in the past thirteen seasons. Iowa lost four games in 2013, but each loss came to a quality opponent. Northern Illinois nearly finished unbeaten, Michigan State and Ohio State lost just two games between them, and Wisconsin is one of the more underrated teams in the country. The Hawkeyes also own solid wins over Minnesota, Michigan, and Nebraska. Iowa ranked just seventh in the Big 10 in yards per play, but they boasted a very solid defense, ranking third in yards per play allowed. On offense, the Hawkeyes prefer to run the ball, ranking 94th in the nation in pass attempts per game. The Hawkeyes did not have a 1000-yard rusher, but they did have three players who gained at least 400 yards on the ground. Iowa's biggest playmaker on offense is receiver Kevonte Martin-Manley. Though he only gained 384 yards through the air, he also returned two punts for touchdowns in the same game. The Hawkeyes will take on an LSU team that flipped the script on their usual method for winning games. Typically, the Tigers are led by an elite defense and an inconsistent offense. However, this season, their offense was among the best in the SEC, ranking third in yards per play, while their defense regressed and was just seventh in yards per play allowed. Senior quarterback Zach Mettenberger threw 22 touchdowns and averaged over ten yards per pass attempt. LSU offensive series seemed to follow this script: Short run on first down, short run or incomplete pass on second down, and a ridiculous throw and catch by Mettenberger to one of his stud wideouts (Jarvis Landry or Odell Beckham Jr) on third and long. Unfortunately for the Tigers, Mettenberger tore his ACL in the Tiger's regular season finale against Arkansas. In his absence, the Tigers will turn to freshman Anthony Jennings, who engineered the fourth quarter comeback against Arkansas. How will the freshman perform against one of the better defenses in the Big 10? That should go a long way in determining the winner here. LSU is notorious for not covering the spread under Les Miles. I would be hesitant to back them here, but at the same time, Iowa feels like the type of team LSU can dominate with their fantastic receivers. Sit this one out and save your money for better options.
Rose Bowl
Stanford vs Michigan State
Line: Stanford -6
Like the Republican Party, the football gods seem to be trying to take the Rose Bowl back to a simpler, more conservative time. After a 2012 game that saw Wisconsin and Oregon combine for 83 points and over 1100 yards, the 2013 game saw 34 points scored and just over 600 yards gained. Traditionalists, rejoice! The 2014 game is likely to be another low-scoring, albeit entertaining affair. Michigan State finally broke through to claim their first Rose Bowl berth since 1987. Amazingly, in three of the past four seasons, the Spartans have lost one or fewer Big 10 games! Michigan State featured by far the best defense in the Big 10, ranking first in yards per play allowed. And after a rough start, the offense coalesced, and actually ranked fourth in the Big 10 in yards per play. The elite Spartan defense will be missing a key component however, as linebacker Max Bullough was suspended for a violation of team rules. While Bullough will be missed, the Spartans have a host of other playmakers on that side of the ball, including linebacker Denicos Allen and defensive end Shilique Calhoun. The Spartans will face a Stanford team that is pretty formidable in its own right. While the Cardinal did rank second in the Pac-12 in yards per play allowed (behind Oregon), they also ranked (a perhaps surprising) second in yards per play. The offense, led by quarterback Kevin Hogan averaged nine yards per pass (ninth nationally) on the rare times they threw the ball (only eight teams threw the ball fewer times). Defensively, linebacker Trent Murphy finished the regular season with fourteen sacks, a number that currently ranks second in the nation. Stanford is probably the better team, but this game, even with the absence of Bullough, feels like it could go either way. Take the Spartans to cover here.
Tostitos Fiesta Bowl
Baylor vs Central Florida
Line: Baylor -16.5
Congrats are in order for both of these squads that are making their first ever BCS bowl appearances. Baylor won its first outright conference title since 1980 when a certain Samurai was patrolling the middle. The Bears got a great deal of publicity early in the season for their offensive prowess, and why not? They scored at least 70 points in three of their first four and four of their first six games. However, lest we forget, Baylor's offense has been pretty good for about four years now. It was the defensive improvement that caused the Bears to jump from top-twenty team to national player. After allowing 50 touchdowns in Big 12 play last season (that equals about five and a half per game), the Bears allowed just 28 in their Big 12 contests this season (a little more than three per game). The Bears also ranked second in the Big 12 in yards per play allowed (of course they ranked first in yards per play). After averaging just over nineteen sacks per season in Art Brile's first five years on the Waco sideline, the Bears sacked opposing quarterbacks 31 times in 2013. The Bears will attempt to win twelve games for the first time in school history against a Central Florida team that has been living on the edge all season. While the Knights won eleven games and the inaugural American Athletic Conference title, they also pulled several Houdini acts. The Knights were 7-1 in games decided by a touchdown or less, and needed clutch fourth quarter play to beat four teams (Memphis, Temple, South Florida, and SMU) that finished a combined 12-36! Behind the play of future NFL quarterback Blake Bortles, the Knights ranked second in the American in yards per play. The defense, long a strength of George O'Leary's teams, ranked a respectable fourth in yards per play allowed. However, the Knights are probably the worst team to qualify for a BCS bowl this season. Previous warnings against double-digit favorites in the bowl season apply here, but this has all the makings of a Baylor blowout.
Allstate Sugar Bowl
Alabama vs Oklahoma
Line: Alabama -15
If you only looked at the final records and the pedigree for this game, you might think this Sugar Bowl would be an instant classic. However, digging into how both teams achieved their respective records in 2013, you can see why the oddsmakers favor Alabama by such a large margin. We'll start with the Sooners who won at least ten games for the twelfth time in fifteen seasons under Bob Stoops. While the Sooners do own some impressive wins, including victories on the road at Notre Dame, at Kansas State, and at Oklahoma State, they were also crushed by Texas and Baylor, and narrowly escaped not ready for primetime outfits West Virginia, TCU, and Texas Tech at home. Overall, Oklahoma ranked fourth in the Big 12 in yards per play and sixth in yards per play allowed. After enjoying the services of Landry Jones for four seasons, the Sooners struggled throwing the football in 2013, averaging just 6.6 yards per pass (tied for 89th in the nation). The Sooners will likely need to score a lot of point to hang with Alabama. The Crimson Tide actually led the SEC in yards per play as they averaged at least six yards per play against every league opponent except one (Mississippi State). Senior quarterback A.J. McCarron completed more than two thirds of his passes and threw 26 touchdowns on the year. Running back T.J. Yeldon rushed for nearly 1200 yards and averaged over six yards per carry. This Alabama team was not quite as dominant as the two that immediately preceded it, but I think you can make a pretty credible argument that Alabama is the second best team in the country. Previous warnings about double-digit favorites apply here, but Alabama is truly an elite team and a blowout by the Tide would not shock me here.
AdvoCare V100 Bowl
Arizona vs Boston College
Line: Arizona -7.5
Boston College returns to the postseason after a two-year hiatus. The Eagles were bowl mainstays since the late-90's, first under Tom O'Brien and then under Jeff Jagodzinski, but the program wilted under the guidance of Frank Spaziani. In keeping their arcane tradition of hiring coaches who last names end in vowels, the Eagles tabbed Steve Addazio to be their next head coach. The Eagles improved by five wins in Addazio's first season on the sidelines and will seek to end a three-game bowl losing streak dating back to 2007. The Eagles were a scrappy bunch in 2013, giving Florida State their toughest test to date in a fourteen point home loss. They also played Clemson tough in Death Valley, surrendering just two offensive touchdowns to the high-powered Tigers. For the season, Boston College was glaringly average in the ACC ranking sixth in yards per play and seventh in yards per play allowed. The focal point of their offense was running back Andre Williams, a Heisman finalist, who enters bowl season leading the nation in rushing yards with 2102. He is the first player to have at least 2000 yards rushing since Donald Brown in 2008. The Eagles will tangle with an Arizona team that also features a star running back. After leading the nation in rushing last season, Ka'Deem Carey enters the postseason ranked sixth in rushing yards. Despite Carey's heroics, the Wildcats ranked just eighth in the powerful Pac-12 in yards per play. The primary reason for this was the play of the passing game. Quarterback B.J. Denker took nearly every snap and averaged just 6.3 yards per pass, ranking 91st in the metric among qualifying quarterbacks. Defensively, the Wildcats improved from their horrendous showing last season, but were just seventh in the Pac-12 in yards per play allowed. The Pac-12 was a tremendous conference in 2013, but outside of their shocking upset of Oregon, the Wildcats only other league victories were against the dregs of the conference (Utah, Colorado, and Cal). Boston College is undervalued by the nation at-large despite the presence of a Heisman finalist. This line should be closer to a field goal rather than the touchdown spread it currently sits at. Look for Boston College to keep this one close and potentially pull off an outright upset.
Hyundai Sun Bowl
UCLA vs Virginia Tech
Line: UCLA -7
If the Arizona/Boston College game wasn't enough for you, the beautiful city of El Paso presents you with another ACC/Pac-12 clash. Very quietly, UCLA has won nine games for the second straight season under Jim Mora Jr. Currently ranked 17th in the AP Poll, the Bruins have a chance to finish the season ranked for the first time since 2005. Despite their impressive resume, when you peel back the onion, UCLA was not especially dominant in the Pac-12. Their offense, lead by quarterback Brett Hundley, ranked just seventh in the Pac-12 in yards per play. Hundley averaged a robust 8.3 yards per pass, but took 34 sacks to somewhat offset his big play ability. Hundley didn't get much help in the backfield from the usual starting running back, but linebacker turned offensive star Myles Jack was explosive in limited playing time. Jack only carried the ball 37 times, but he averaged over seven yards per rush and scored seven touchdowns. Jack also intercepted a pass and recorded a handful of tackles for loss. In addition to Jack, linebacker Anthony Barr proved to be a big playmaker on the defensive side of the ball. Barr recorded ten sacks and twenty tackles for loss in helping the Bruins rank fifth in the Pac-12 in yards per play allowed. Barr and Jack will attempt to stymie the gargantuan Logan Thomas who endured a very disappointing senior season at Virginia Tech. Over his junior and senior seasons, Thomas has thrown an incredible 29 interceptions and the Hokies have gone just 15-10 after losing more than four game just once since 1997. With Thomas struggling, the defense was its usual dominant self, ranking second in the ACC in yards per play allowed, behind only Florida State. Despite their struggles, Virginia Tech is no pushover. Outside of Alabama, all their losses came by a touchdown or fewer, and the Hokies did beat six bowl teams in 2013, including three on the road (East Carolina, Marshall, Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Pitt, and Miami). Like Boston College, Virginia Tech is a little undervalued. I expect this to be a typical Hokie game circa 2013; ugly and low-scoring. Take the Hokies to cover and don't be surprised with an outright upset.
AutoZone Liberty Bowl
Mississippi State vs Rice
Line: Mississippi State -7
With a season ending upset of rival Ole Miss, the Bulldogs from Mississippi State have qualified for their fourth consecutive bowl game, a new school record. Aside from that victory over the Rebels however, there isn't a great deal of heft on the Bulldogs resume. Their second best win is easily their one-point home escape over eventual MAC champ, Bowling Green. Their other conference wins came over Arkansas and Kentucky, a pair that managed a cumulative 0-16 mark in the SEC. In non-conference action, they also crushed Steve McNair's alma mater and Troy. In fact, their most impressive performance on the year is arguably their close loss to eventual SEC champion Auburn in the season's third week. In SEC play, Mississippi State was below average on both sides of the ball, ranking eighth in yards per play and ninth in yards per play allowed. The Bulldogs will be quarterbacked in the Liberty Bowl by sophomore Dak Prescott who actually led the team in rushing with 751 yards and eleven touchdowns. His passing was a little uneven as he threw as many interceptions (seven) as touchdowns. The Bulldogs will look to improve to 3-1 in bowl games under Dan Mullen against a Rice team that just won their first outright conference title since 1957. The Owls won ten games for just the third time in school history, and the second time under coach David Bailiff. Rice opened their season playing an SEC team, where they lost, but kept the game somewhat competitive. They then knocked off Kansas for the second consecutive season, and after a tight loss to former conference mate Houston, reeled off nine wins in their final ten games. The Owls made a habit of winning the close ones in 2013, rolling up a 5-1 record in games decided by a touchdown or less. Primarily thanks to their close game success, the Owls finished 7-1 in Conference USA despite middling yards per play numbers. They ranked just eighth in Conference USA in yards per play and sixth in yards per play allowed. In fact, in league play, their most impressive performance did not come until the Conference USA Championship Game against Marshall. The Owls averaged over seven yards per play and held the explosive Marshall offense to under five yards per play in a seventeen point win. Senior quarterback Taylor McHargue completed just over half his passes, but threw 17 touchdowns and also rushed for nearly 500 yards. The offensive line did not do a great job protecting McHargue, as the Owls allowed 33 sacks (104th in the nation). The good news for Rice fans is that Mississippi State only accumulated sixteen sacks themselves over the course of the year, so McHargue has a better shot at avoiding negative plays. During his tenure at Mississippi State, Dan Mullen has gone 12-1 versus IA teams from outside BCS conferences. However, against the better teams, those games have often been close (see Bowling Green this season and Louisiana Tech two years ago). Rice is a quality team and should be motivated to win their eleventh game of the season. Look for the Owls to keep this one close and cover here.
Chick-Fil-A Bowl
Texas A&M vs Duke
Line: Texas A&M -12
Coming off a season that saw them finish 11-2 and rank in the top-five of the final AP Poll for the first time since 1956 when a certain legendary gentleman was stalking the sidelines, the Aggies entered 2013 with great expectations. However, despite the exploits of the reigning Heisman winner, the Aggies defense went from bad to worse and the Aggies were just 4-4 in the SEC. To be fair, three of their losses came by a touchdown or less, but two of them also came in the comfy confines of College State where the Aggies played eight games this season. Ten of their twelve opponents scored at least 28 points against the Aggies lackluster defense. In the SEC, only Kentucky and Arkansas allowed more yards per play than the Aggies. The Aggies also did a poor job forcing turnovers, creating just nine in their eight SEC games. A defense that allows a lot of big plays and fails in creating turnovers will generally allow a great deal of points, and the Aggies were no exception, permitting 36.5 points per game in their league contests. And despite those defensive struggles, the Aggies head to Atlanta as huge favorites against a Duke team that, while not possessing the resume of a ten-win team, is clearly the best team Duke has fielded in ages. After losing their first two ACC games, the Blue Devils won their final eight regular season contests before falling to Florida State in the ACC Championship Game. Amazingly, the Blue Devils won all four of their ACC road games, equaling their number of conference road wins in David Cutcliffe's first five seasons. Duke was a functionally average team in the ACC, ranking seventh in yards per play and ninth in yards per play allowed. Duke's biggest playmaker on offense is wide receiver Jamison Crowder who has nearly 1200 yards receiving. Crowder also returned two punts for touchdowns and corner DeVon Edwards added two kickoff return touchdowns, one of which provided the winning margin in their division clinching game against rival North Carolina. Edwards also ran two interceptions back against NC State, accounting for three touchdown in Duke's eighteen point win. In a season of roughly 1900 plays, Edwards' four big ones provided the thin margin by which Duke enjoyed a sublime season. Texas A&M is better than Duke, but double-digit favorites, especially when they are not elite teams, do not fare well against the spread in bowl season. Even if this game is relatively non-competitive, the Aggie defense will leave the backdoor wide open in this game. Take the Devils to cover, and don't be surprised if this one is a lot closer than most thought possible.
TaxSlayer.com Gator Bowl
Georgia vs Nebraska
Line: Georgia -9
This year's Gator Bowl presents us with a rematch of last season's Capital One Bowl. An early back-and-forth affair turned into a relatively comfortable 45-31 win for Georgia. Despite the familiarity, this game will feature two different starting quarterbacks than the last matchup. Nebraska quarterback Taylor Martinez was injured in the season opener, and while he did play appear in four games, he missed the Cornhuskers last five contests and will not be playing in the bowl. Georgia's outstanding senior signal caller, Aaron Murray, was injured in their penultimate regular season game and missed the annual clash with Georgia Tech and is out for this game as well. In looking at Nebraska's Big 10 stats, we can get a pretty idea as to what kind of team they are without Martinez, as he played in only one conference game. The results, at least on offense, are not pretty. Nebraska ranked just ninth in the conference in yards per play. The quarterbacks behind Martinez, Tommy Armstrong Jr. and Ron Kelllogg III combined to throw just thirteen touchdowns and ten interceptions on the season. Plus, those two are far from the running threat Martinez was. Armstrong and Kellogg combined to rush for just 160 yards on 80 carries in 2013. In his illustrious Nebraska career, Martinez rushed for nearly 3000 yards and averaged over five yards per carry. The offense certainly missed him in his absence. However, the defense compensated for his loss. The Cornhuskers ranked second in the Big 10 in yards per play allowed. However, the vagaries of a short season manifested themselves in the inability of the defense to force turnovers. Nebraska forced just six in their eight conference games, easily the fewest in the league. A few more swing plays here or there and maybe Nebraska wins nine or ten games. On the other hand, evaluating Georgia is a little bit different since Aaron Murray played in all their SEC games. Murray and the Bulldogs own a pair of impressive wins, beating both South Carolina and LSU between the hedges. They also nearly beat eventual SEC champion Auburn (a common refrain in 2013) on the road before suffering a heartbreaking defeat. For the season, Georgia ranked sixth in the SEC in yards per play (remember a lot of powerful offenses resided in the SEC) and sixth in yards per play allowed. The Bulldogs allowed at least 30 points to six of their eight conference opponents, with low-wattage outfits Florida and Kentucky failing to get to that number. In their final regular season game against Georgia Tech, the Bulldogs fell behind early before quarterback Hutson Mason rallied them to an overtime win. Still, Georgia allowed over 30 points to the Yellow Jackets meaning eight of their eleven IA opponents went at least that high in 2013. I think the spread in this game is a little high considering the potential defensive issues at Georgia. Nebraska's defense is more than capable of holding Georgia in check and keeping this game close. I wouldn't bank on a Nebraska win, but a cover seems likely here.
Heart of Dallas Bowl
North Texas vs UNLV
Line: North Texas -6.5
This game is an unexpected treat for mid-major aficionados like myself. Getting the opportunity to play on New Year's Day, even if they are stuck on ESPNU, is something most in Denton and Las Vegas probably did not expect when the season began. For North Texas, this marks their first bowl appearance since 2004 when they finished their run of four consecutive New Orleans Bowl bids. After winning just thirteen games from 2005 through 2010, the Mean Green have won seventeen in just three seasons under Dan McCarney. After turning the Iowa State program around and guiding the Cyclones to five bowl appearances over a six season span, McCarney guided the Mean Green to the cusp of a conference title in his third season at the helm. North Texas lost just two Conference USA games all season, with the defeats coming by three and eight points. Meanwhile, each of their six league wins came by at least twelve points, including a win over eventual league champ Rice. On the year, North Texas ranked fifth in Conference USA in yards per play and outstanding second in yards per play allowed. In fact, their per-play margin ranked second in the league behind only Marshall. Offensively, the Mean Green were not explosive, but they also suffered few negative plays. They allowed only ten sacks on the season, an amount that ranked fifth in the nation. The Mean Green are a senior laden team, with their quarterback, running back, two leading receivers, and four leaders in tackles for loss all playing their final games on the January 1st. Seeking to win a bowl game for the first time since 2002, the Mean Green will face a UNLV team that has not been to the postseason since 2000, and has but three previous bowl appearances in its history. UNLV won a combined six games in Bobby Hauck's first three seasons in Sin City, but the Rebels shook off an ugly 0-2 start to win more than six games for just the second time in the last two decades. UNLV did what they had to do in 2013, namely beating six teams that did not finish with a winning record. To be fair, they did end the regular season with a beatdown of San Diego State, their lone win over a bowl team, to clinch this bowl appearance. UNLV was below average on both sides of the ball in Mountain West play, ranking ninth in yards per play and seventh in yards per play allowed. Despite the pedestrian showing, a few seniors did have good individual performances. Senior quarterback Caleb Herring three 22 touchdown passes after throwing just 14 in his first three years at the school. Senior running back Tim Cornett rushed for over 1200 yards for the second straight year, and set the school's career rushing mark, passing Mike Thomas. Both of these teams have been absent from the postseason for a while, so motivation should not be an issue. North Texas is probably the better team, but this spread is a little too high to feel comfortable taking them. Sit this one out and enjoy some mid-majors that get the New Year's spotlight.
Capital One Bowl
Wisconsin vs South Carolina
Line: Wisconsin -2
For the third straight year, South Carolina will take a New Year's trip to Florida, face a Big 10 team, and attempt to set/tie the school record for wins in a season with eleven. The Gamecocks have burst onto the national scene in recent years, and despite not playing in the SEC Championship Game during this run (they won a watered down SEC East in 2010), have enjoyed arguably the best seasons in school history back-to-back-to-back. South Carolina was not elite on either side of the ball in the SEC this year, ranking seventh in yards per play and fifth in yards per play allowed. However, since most SEC teams were very unbalanced with either a great offense and poor defense (see Texas A&M) or great defense and paleolithic offense (see Florida), the Gamecocks actually ranked fourth in yards per play differential. This will be the final game for the best quarterback in Gamecock history, Connor Shaw. Despite not getting nearly the attention he deserves nationally, Shaw quietly enjoyed one of the best touchdown to interception ratio seasons of all-time. Shaw threw 21 touchdown passes on the year (and also added five scores on the ground), but threw just a single interception. The four Heisman Trophy finalist quarterbacks combined to throw 36 interceptions! I'm not saying Shaw deserved an invite, but he should have at least been in the conversation. Joining Shaw in the backfield is sophomore running back Mike Davis. While potentially blasphemous to folks around Columbia, Davis posted better rushing numbers than Marcus Lattimore did in any season. And of course, on defense, the man with true SEC speed, defensive end Jadeveon Clowney, will be playing his final college game. The Gamecocks will face an imposing Wisconsin team that is not playing in the Rose Bowl for the first time since 2009. The Badgers were probably a bit underrated for much of the year until their head-scratching home loss to Penn State to close the year. Overall, Wisconsin ranked second in the Big 10 in yards per play and fourth in yards per play allowed. Although they were an old school Big 10 team in that they loved to run the ball, this was not three yards and a cloud of dust. The Badgers finished second nationally in yards per rush (behind another Big 10 team in Ohio State) by averaging a robust 6.61 yards per carry. For the second time in four seasons, the Badgers had two backs go over 1000 yards on the ground. Melvin Gordon got fewer touches than James White, but averaged over eight yards per attempt. For his career, Gordon is averaging an absurd 8.31 yards per carry on 263 attempts. The Badgers can also sling it a little bit with Jared Abbrederis becoming to first Badger to go over 1000 yards receiving since Brandon Williams in 2005. This game has the potential to be one of the better clashes of bowl season. There is no value on either side of this spread, so just sit back and enjoy while you nurse that hangover.
Outback Bowl
LSU vs Iowa
Line: LSU -7
This Outback Bowl is a rematch of the Capital One Bowl from nearly a decade ago that featured one of the best endings in college football history.
Iowa rebounded from a rare losing campaign in 2012 to qualify for their eleventh bowl game in the past thirteen seasons. Iowa lost four games in 2013, but each loss came to a quality opponent. Northern Illinois nearly finished unbeaten, Michigan State and Ohio State lost just two games between them, and Wisconsin is one of the more underrated teams in the country. The Hawkeyes also own solid wins over Minnesota, Michigan, and Nebraska. Iowa ranked just seventh in the Big 10 in yards per play, but they boasted a very solid defense, ranking third in yards per play allowed. On offense, the Hawkeyes prefer to run the ball, ranking 94th in the nation in pass attempts per game. The Hawkeyes did not have a 1000-yard rusher, but they did have three players who gained at least 400 yards on the ground. Iowa's biggest playmaker on offense is receiver Kevonte Martin-Manley. Though he only gained 384 yards through the air, he also returned two punts for touchdowns in the same game. The Hawkeyes will take on an LSU team that flipped the script on their usual method for winning games. Typically, the Tigers are led by an elite defense and an inconsistent offense. However, this season, their offense was among the best in the SEC, ranking third in yards per play, while their defense regressed and was just seventh in yards per play allowed. Senior quarterback Zach Mettenberger threw 22 touchdowns and averaged over ten yards per pass attempt. LSU offensive series seemed to follow this script: Short run on first down, short run or incomplete pass on second down, and a ridiculous throw and catch by Mettenberger to one of his stud wideouts (Jarvis Landry or Odell Beckham Jr) on third and long. Unfortunately for the Tigers, Mettenberger tore his ACL in the Tiger's regular season finale against Arkansas. In his absence, the Tigers will turn to freshman Anthony Jennings, who engineered the fourth quarter comeback against Arkansas. How will the freshman perform against one of the better defenses in the Big 10? That should go a long way in determining the winner here. LSU is notorious for not covering the spread under Les Miles. I would be hesitant to back them here, but at the same time, Iowa feels like the type of team LSU can dominate with their fantastic receivers. Sit this one out and save your money for better options.
Rose Bowl
Stanford vs Michigan State
Line: Stanford -6
Like the Republican Party, the football gods seem to be trying to take the Rose Bowl back to a simpler, more conservative time. After a 2012 game that saw Wisconsin and Oregon combine for 83 points and over 1100 yards, the 2013 game saw 34 points scored and just over 600 yards gained. Traditionalists, rejoice! The 2014 game is likely to be another low-scoring, albeit entertaining affair. Michigan State finally broke through to claim their first Rose Bowl berth since 1987. Amazingly, in three of the past four seasons, the Spartans have lost one or fewer Big 10 games! Michigan State featured by far the best defense in the Big 10, ranking first in yards per play allowed. And after a rough start, the offense coalesced, and actually ranked fourth in the Big 10 in yards per play. The elite Spartan defense will be missing a key component however, as linebacker Max Bullough was suspended for a violation of team rules. While Bullough will be missed, the Spartans have a host of other playmakers on that side of the ball, including linebacker Denicos Allen and defensive end Shilique Calhoun. The Spartans will face a Stanford team that is pretty formidable in its own right. While the Cardinal did rank second in the Pac-12 in yards per play allowed (behind Oregon), they also ranked (a perhaps surprising) second in yards per play. The offense, led by quarterback Kevin Hogan averaged nine yards per pass (ninth nationally) on the rare times they threw the ball (only eight teams threw the ball fewer times). Defensively, linebacker Trent Murphy finished the regular season with fourteen sacks, a number that currently ranks second in the nation. Stanford is probably the better team, but this game, even with the absence of Bullough, feels like it could go either way. Take the Spartans to cover here.
Tostitos Fiesta Bowl
Baylor vs Central Florida
Line: Baylor -16.5
Congrats are in order for both of these squads that are making their first ever BCS bowl appearances. Baylor won its first outright conference title since 1980 when a certain Samurai was patrolling the middle. The Bears got a great deal of publicity early in the season for their offensive prowess, and why not? They scored at least 70 points in three of their first four and four of their first six games. However, lest we forget, Baylor's offense has been pretty good for about four years now. It was the defensive improvement that caused the Bears to jump from top-twenty team to national player. After allowing 50 touchdowns in Big 12 play last season (that equals about five and a half per game), the Bears allowed just 28 in their Big 12 contests this season (a little more than three per game). The Bears also ranked second in the Big 12 in yards per play allowed (of course they ranked first in yards per play). After averaging just over nineteen sacks per season in Art Brile's first five years on the Waco sideline, the Bears sacked opposing quarterbacks 31 times in 2013. The Bears will attempt to win twelve games for the first time in school history against a Central Florida team that has been living on the edge all season. While the Knights won eleven games and the inaugural American Athletic Conference title, they also pulled several Houdini acts. The Knights were 7-1 in games decided by a touchdown or less, and needed clutch fourth quarter play to beat four teams (Memphis, Temple, South Florida, and SMU) that finished a combined 12-36! Behind the play of future NFL quarterback Blake Bortles, the Knights ranked second in the American in yards per play. The defense, long a strength of George O'Leary's teams, ranked a respectable fourth in yards per play allowed. However, the Knights are probably the worst team to qualify for a BCS bowl this season. Previous warnings against double-digit favorites in the bowl season apply here, but this has all the makings of a Baylor blowout.
Allstate Sugar Bowl
Alabama vs Oklahoma
Line: Alabama -15
If you only looked at the final records and the pedigree for this game, you might think this Sugar Bowl would be an instant classic. However, digging into how both teams achieved their respective records in 2013, you can see why the oddsmakers favor Alabama by such a large margin. We'll start with the Sooners who won at least ten games for the twelfth time in fifteen seasons under Bob Stoops. While the Sooners do own some impressive wins, including victories on the road at Notre Dame, at Kansas State, and at Oklahoma State, they were also crushed by Texas and Baylor, and narrowly escaped not ready for primetime outfits West Virginia, TCU, and Texas Tech at home. Overall, Oklahoma ranked fourth in the Big 12 in yards per play and sixth in yards per play allowed. After enjoying the services of Landry Jones for four seasons, the Sooners struggled throwing the football in 2013, averaging just 6.6 yards per pass (tied for 89th in the nation). The Sooners will likely need to score a lot of point to hang with Alabama. The Crimson Tide actually led the SEC in yards per play as they averaged at least six yards per play against every league opponent except one (Mississippi State). Senior quarterback A.J. McCarron completed more than two thirds of his passes and threw 26 touchdowns on the year. Running back T.J. Yeldon rushed for nearly 1200 yards and averaged over six yards per carry. This Alabama team was not quite as dominant as the two that immediately preceded it, but I think you can make a pretty credible argument that Alabama is the second best team in the country. Previous warnings about double-digit favorites apply here, but Alabama is truly an elite team and a blowout by the Tide would not shock me here.
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Bowl Preview: Part II
Part II of our bowl preview will tackle the post-Christmas and pre-New Year's Eve bowl games. Enjoy.
Military Bowl
Marshall vs Maryland
Line: Marshall -2.5
Howdy neighbor! Despite residing in border states, Maryland and Marshall have yet to play a football game against each other. That will change on December 27th when the Terps and Herd clash in our nation's capital. Maryland is breaking a three year bowl drought and playing in their first bowl game under head coach Randy Edsall. The last time the Terrapins were in the postseason, they played in this very game against an opponent from Conference USA. And like the thunder, they rolled, dropping 51 points on a hapless East Carolina defense. The Terps have not seen a great deal of success since that exhibition, which was the final game coached by Ralph Friedgen. Since canning Friedgen, the Terps have managed just a 13-23 record, including a 6-18 mark in the ACC. Despite their struggles, the Terps actually began the year 4-0 and were ranked in the top-25 before Florida State eviscerated them in their first conference game. Outside of their win against Virginia Tech, the Terps did not beat a single IA team that finished with a winning record. Their other five IA scalps consisted of Florida International, Connecticut, West Virginia, Virginia, and NC State. If the Terps do manage to beat Marshall, it would arguably be their best win all season. So what about the Herd? What is their prospectus in this game? Marshall won nine games in the regular season for the first time since 2002, when legendary coach Bob Pruett was at the end of his spectacular run. The Thundering Herd played in the Conference USA Championship Game for the first time since joining the league and by the yards per play metric, were the top team in the regular season. Unfortunately, they had to go on the road in the title game, and the offense that poured in 50 touchdowns over eight regular season games managed just three in a loss to Rice. That game aside, the offense was a sight to behold with quarterback Rakeem Cato throwing 36 touchdown passes and adding six scores on the ground. Despite their showing in their most recent contest, Marshall is a quality mid-major. With a chance to prove their bonafides against a team from a major conference, I think they return to their winning ways and easily cover this small number.
Texas Bowl
Minnesota vs Syracuse
Line: Minnesota -4.5
Last year, Minnesota may have been the worst bowl team from a major conference, and this season they face what may be the worst bowl team from a major conference. First off, the Gophers deserve a huge round of applause. They won eight games in the regular season for the first time since 2003. Much like last season, a 4-0 start against a relatively soft non-conference slate got the Gophers two thirds of the way to bowl eligibility. However, unlike last season when they wheezed to the finish, winning just two of their final eight regular season games, this season the Gophers split their final eight, posting solid wins at Northwestern and Indiana and at home against Nebraska and Penn State. The Gophers were not extremely proficient on either side of the ball, ranking tenth in the Big 10 in yards per play and ninth in yards per play allowed. The Gophers ran the ball often, ranking 16th nationally in rushing attempts with 548. They passed on occasion, but were not very good at it, completing just a shade more than 52% of their throws. In fact, Minnesota receivers combined to catch just 124 passes on the year. The five teams that caught fewer passes all run some variation of the option (Air Force, New Mexico, Georgia Tech, Army, and Navy). The Gophers will attempt to win their first bowl game in a decade against a Syracuse squad that was outscored by 93 points over the course of their eleven games against IA opponents. When the Orange lost, they tended to lose big. Northwestern neat them by 21, Clemson beat them by 35, Georgia Tech beat them by 56, and Florida State also brained them by 56. The Orange did not do much to distinguish themselves in ACC play, ranking eleventh in yards per play and eighth in yards per play allowed. Orange quarterbacks averaged just 5.8 yards per throw, a number that ranked 112th in the nation. I can't come up with a very compelling reason to watch this game except that it is one of the few football games left until next fall. I also can't come up with a reason for you to make any plays here either. I could see the Orange losing in grisly fashion as they have many times this season. However, despite their embarrassing defeats, the Orange have beaten three bowl teams this season (Tulane, Maryland, and Boston College), so a Minnesota win, and more importantly perhaps, a Minnesota cover is far from assured. Sit this one out.
Fight Hunger Bowl
BYU vs Washington
Line: Washington -3
If Steve Sarkisian had not taken the Southern Cal job a few weeks ago, this game would be a homecoming of sorts. Sarkisian quarterbacked the Cougs in the mid-nineties, and enjoyed two solid campaigns as the starter. Before heading south, Sark guided the Huskies to their first eight-win regular season since 2001! A win over the Cougars could potentially get the Huskies into the nether regions of the final polls for the first time since that same season. Despite their four defeats, Washington was a formidable team in 2013. They just had the misfortune of playing Stanford, Oregon, and Arizona State in back-to-back-to back weeks. Those three were head and shoulders above the rest of the Pac-12, finishing a combined 28-4 in games against the rest of the country. Washington also dropped a road game at UCLA later in the year, but each of their eight wins came by at least ten points. In Pac-12 play, the Huskies ranked fifth in yards per play and fourth in yards per play allowed. Senior quarterback Keith Price threw 20 touchdown passes and just five interceptions as he moved into second place on the school's all-time passing yardage list behind Cody Pickett. Running back Bishop Sankey tallied nearly 1800 yards on the ground and if he returns for his senior season will almost certainly pass Napoleon Kaufman as the school's all-time leading rusher. The Huskies will attempt to win their ninth game with interim coach Marques Tuiasosopo, a former star quarterback, leading the team. To get win number nine, they must defeat a BYU team that has been somewhat of an enigma this season. The Cougars somehow lost to Virginia in the season opener, then started the Mack Brown death march with a shredding of the Texas run defense. The blew out bowl teams Middle Tennessee State, Utah State, Georgia Tech, and Boise State by a combined margin of 79 points, yet lost to the two best teams on their schedule, Wisconsin and Notre Dame by ten points apiece. The Cougars offense struggled in their four defeats, mustering an average of just fifteen points per game against Virginia, Utah, Wisconsin, and Notre Dame. In those four games, quarterback Taysom Hill completed an abysmal 43% of his passes. Washington appears to be the kind of team that can shut down the erratic Hill and hold the Cougars under twenty points. However, the Washington offensive line did allow 30 sacks on the season (93rd in the nation), and while Cougar linebacker Kyle Van Noy only tallied four sacks in 2013 after accumulating thirteen last season, he remains a threat to set up shop in the backfield. Last season, he almost single-handedly won the Poinsettia Bowl for the Cougars. The interim coach and the Huskies propensity to give up sacks would give me pause about backing them here.
New Era Pinstripe Bowl
Notre Dame vs Rutgers
Line: Notre Dame -14
I know I wrote a few paragraphs up that Syracuse could be the worst bowl team from a major conference in 2013. If that distinction does not belong to the Orange, it certainly belongs to their northeast neighbor in New Jersey. First off, lets congratulate Rutgers for their eighth bowl appearance in the last nine seasons and their impending move to the Big 10. Before Greg Schiano was chasing off quarterbacks and pissing off other coaches in the NFL, he engineered one of the better turnarounds in college football history at Rutgers. His successor, Kyle Flood, kept the program afloat in his first season, racing out to a 7-0 and 9-1 start in 2012 before losing the final three games. Still, the Knights got to nine wins for the third time in four seasons and looked poised to be contenders in the watered down newly christened American Athletic Conference. The Knights then began 2013 with a 4-1 mark, albeit with none of the wins coming against eventual bowl teams. However, the defense, long a team strength, was beginning to atrophy. In their first five games, the Knights allowed 52 points twice, once in a loss at Fresno and again in a win over SMU. After the 4-1 start, the Knights wheezed to the finish, beating only Temple (1-11 record) and South Florida (3-9) to gain the elusive sixth win. Along the way, they allowed 49 points to Houston, 52 to Cincinnati, and 41 to Central Florida in grisly defeats. The Cincinnati game marked the first time Rutgers had allowed more than 50 points at home since 2001 against Virginia Tech, in the dark days of Rutgers football. All told, excluding games against Eastern Michigan and Norfolk State, the Knights allowed an average of 34.8 points per game in 2013 despite playing in basically a glorified mid-major conference. Yikes. Against this permissible defense, can volatile Irish quarterback Tommy Rees end his Notre Dame career on a high note? Rees has thrown 61 touchdowns in his Irish career, but has also tossed 37 interceptions. As a point of comparison, Derek Carr of Fresno State has thrown just 23 interceptions despite over 50% more pass attempts in his collegiate career. A.J. McCarron has just 13 career interceptions in roughly the same number of attempts. I guess what I am trying to say is that despite this deservedly large spread, Rees could potentially serve up an upset for Rutgers. Notre Dame has been a hard team to figure in 2013, as they own two phenomenal wins over Michigan State and Arizona State. They also played Stanford tight in a road loss and beat both Southern Cal and BYU. Of course they also lost to what ended up not being a high-quality Michigan team, narrowly edged the dumpster fire that was Purdue, squeaked by Navy, and lost to an average at best Pitt team. Notre Dame is a much better football team than Rutgers, of that there is no question. However, this line is way too large to make a play on the Irish. Previous discussions about double-digit favorites, found in the first preview, apply here. Notre Dame is not an elite team, so if you are hankering for a wager, take the Knights and the points.
Belk Bowl
Cincinnati vs North Carolina
Line: North Carolina -2.5
Numbers wise, Cincinnati is one of the more interesting teams of 2013. Most advanced stats, be they the SRS, Sagarin Ratings, FEI, or S&P ratings do not hold the Bearcats in a very high regard. Most see them as a middle of the road team. This is due to their non-conference performance, where they lost by four touchdowns to Illinois (perhaps that should prevent a team from being bowl eligible in itself), and scored only fourteen points against a winless Miami of Ohio outfit. For good measure, once conference play began, the Bearcats also lost to South Florida, though to be fair, they did not allow an offensive touchdown. Couple that with the relative weakness of the American Athletic Conference and you can see why despite nine wins, Cincinnati is seen as a middling team. However, I am inclined to disagree here. The Bearcats absolutely dominated the (inferior) competition in their conference, ranking first in yards per play and third in yards per play allowed. Their per-play margin was second only to Louisville in the conference and the Bearcats won four of their six league games by double-digits. The Bearcats had a strong offensive line, allowing just twelve sacks on the year. This was not a function of them being a team dedicated to the ground game either, as the Bearcats were in the top quartile nationally in number of pass attempts. They also generated 35 sacks on the year with the well-named Silverberry Mouhon registering nine and a half by himself. The Bearcats will likely have to deal with a hostile crowd to win a second consecutive Belk Bowl as the Tar Heels from Chapel Hill make the short trek west. North Carolina began the year 1-5, but rallied to win five consecutive games before missing out on an opportunity to instigate a fifteen-way tie in the Coastal Division of the ACC. Despite their 6-6 record, North Carolina posted strong peripheral number. They were fifth in the ACC in yards per play and third in yards per play allowed. Their per-play differential actually ranked fourth in the conference behind the Atlantic Division heavyweights Florida State and Clemson and their own division-mate, Miami. The Tar Heels lost senior quarterback Bryn Renner to an injury still needing three wins to qualify for a bowl game. Sophomore Marquise Williams replaced him and averaged 8.3 yards per pass attempt (21st nationally) while also rushing for nearly 500 yards. The Tar Heels also benefited from the marvelous punt return styling of Ryan Switzer. The freshman wide receiver returned four punts for touchdowns over a three-game span, including two in a tight win over Pittsburgh. Switzer also caught three touchdown passes on the season and threw one against rival NC State. Might there be a rushing touchdown in his future? Despite the homefield advantage and the solid per-play number for the Tar Heels, I think Cincinnati is undervalued by the nation at large. Take the Bearcats to cover here, and if you are feeling lucky, make a play on the moneyline.
Russell Athletic Bowl
Louisville vs Miami
Line: Louisville -3
After missing out on the postseason thanks to a self-imposed bowl ban in the first two seasons of the Al Golden regime, the Miami Hurricanes will make their triumphant return to the bowl season. This may come as a shock to some casual college football fans, but Miami has not won a bowl game since they edged Nevada in Boise back in 2006. That marked Larry Coker's final game as head coach of The U. Since that New Year's eve, Miami has been thoroughly mediocre, going 50-37 and depending on the outcome of this game, never losing fewer than four games in any season, and finishing in the final AP Poll only once. Early, and perhaps even midway through 2013, the Hurricanes appeared to be close to being back. They upset Florida in a turnover-fueled triumph that ended up not being that impressive at the end of the season and won their first seven games. However, the Hurricanes were revealed as frauds, losing their next three to Florida State, Virginia Tech, and ...gasp... Duke, with each loss coming by at least 18 points. They did rebound to beat Virginia and Pitt to finish with nine wins and an outside shot at being ranked in the final polls. Miami in 2013 was a team with a great strength (its offense) and a glaring weakness (its defense). The Hurricane offense finished second only to Florida State in the ACC in yards per play. Senior quarterback Stephen Morris, though mistake-prone with twelve interceptions, averaged a whopping nine yards per pass attempt (tied for twelfth in the nation). As a whole, the offense averaged nearly seven yards per snap in conference play. Even without stud running back Duke Johnson over the second half of the conference season, the offense remained explosive. However, the defense was another story entirely. The Hurricanes ranked 13th in the fourteen team ACC in yards per play allowed. Quarterbacks and running back alike rejoiced when the Hurricanes came out of the tunnel. In their final five conference games, the Hurricanes allowed over eight yards per pass attempt and over five yards per rush. Warren Sapp and other legendary retired 'Canes could probably have performed better. So what are Miami's prospects going against a talent like Teddy Bridgewater and Louisville? While Louisville did not win the inaugural American Athletic Conference as most had predicted, they were clearly the most dominant team. And believe it or not, the offense wasn't really the story. Sure, the Cardinals rated third in the American in yards per play, with Bridgewater completing over 70% of his passes and throwing 28 touchdowns versus just four interceptions, but the defense was outstanding, limiting conference opponents to under four and a half yards per play. Defensive ends Marcus Smith (twelve and a half) and Lorenzo Mauldin (nine and a half) combined for 22 sacks and ranked second and seventeenth respectively in the metric nationally. The Cardinals held ten of their twelve opponents to fewer than twenty points and were very close to finishing unbeaten. Last season, Bridgewater carved up an elite Florida defense in the Sugar Bowl. He has to be licking his chops at the chance to face Miami. This spread seems very small, perhaps thanks to the Miami national brand. Back Louisville in this one, as they have the firepower and defensive acumen to turn this into a rout.
Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl
Kansas State vs Michigan
Line: Kansas State -4
What are you doing for an encore? After leading Kansas State to a surprising Big 12 championship and berth in the Fiesta Bowl, expectations were rather muted for Kansas State entering 2013. Despite the attrition and regression, the best coach in college football led Kansas State back to the postseason for the fourth consecutive year. Now, can the Wildcats manage to win their first bowl game in eleven years? Kansas State opened 2013 with a loss to IAA North Dakota State. However, the Bison have lost just two times over the past three seasons and are playing in their third consecutive IAA National Championship Game. In fact, the Bison have actually beaten a IA team each of the past four seasons. The Wildcats rebounded from that defeat to crush their other two non-conference foes, Louisiana-Lafayette and Massachusetts. When conference play began, the Wildcats struggled on the scoreboard, losing competitive road games to Texas and Oklahoma State, while holding Baylor's potent offense in check at home in another sporting defeat. Then the schedule lightened and the Wildcats heated up. They won five of their final six games with all of the wins except one coming by at least three touchdowns. For the season, Kansas State actually ranked a surprising second in yards per play in the Big 12, behind only Baylor. Jake Waters and Daniel Sams alternated under center in replacing Heisman finalist Colin Klein. As a team, the Wildcats did not throw the ball often (only nine teams passed fewer times), but they were very explosive, averaging 9.3 yards per attempt (tied for fourth nationally). Elsewhere in the backfield, John Hubert needs just 32 yards on the ground to become the first Wildcat running back to top 1000 yards since Daniel Thomas in 2010. Hubert has already passed Thomas as the school's second leading rusher, but its unlikely he can pass Darren Sproles for the top spot (just 2064 yards behind). Defensively, the Wildcats ranked fourth in the Big 12 in yards per play allowed. The Wildcats ball-hawking secondary snatched sixteen passes from opposing quarterbacks, continuing a recent trend after grabbing eighteen in both 2012 and 2011. The Wildcats will seek to end their bowl losing streak against a Michigan team that disappointed in Brady Hoke's third season. True, they also lost five games last year, but each of their five defeats came to teams than finished in the final top-25, with four coming to teams than finished in the top-ten. The Wolverines cannot boast of such schedule misfortune this year. While the Wolverines did lose to the two best teams in the conference (Michigan State and Ohio State), they also fell to Iowa, Nebraska, and Penn State, three solid, but hardly elite teams. The Wolverines lost four of their final five games, and before rebounding to torch Ohio State, the Wolverine offense looked like it was playing in the nineteenth century. In a four-game stretch against Michigan State, Nebraska, Northwestern, and Iowa, the Wolverines scored just five offensive touchdowns, with two coming in overtime against Northwestern. In those four games, Michigan averaged just 217 yards per contest and an anemic 3.3 yards per play. For the season Michigan ranked eighth in the Big 10 in yards per play (which I suppose is somewhat impressive considering the aforementioned stretch). The defense ranked sixth in yards per play allowed, meaning Michigan was a pretty average (or below) Big 10 team, as also evidenced by their 3-5 league record. I don't feel supremely confident taking Kansas State to cover here, especially with their somewhat spotty bowl record under the Snyder, but I think a small play on the Wildcats is a solid investment strategy.
Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl
Navy vs Middle Tennessee State
Line: Navy -6.5
After finishing 8-4 last season and missing out on a bowl game, the Blue Raiders from Middle Tennessee will make their first postseason trip since 2010. In their first season as a member of Conference USA, the Blue Raiders finished 6-2 in league play, and inflicted the only regular season conference loss on Marshall's resume. The Blue Raiders ranked second in Conference USA in yards per play and were eighth in yards per play allowed. The offense coalesced as the season progressed, and the schedule eased up, as the Blue Raiders scored more than 40 points four times in their last five games. The Blue Raiders featured a committee offense that did not have a single go-to playmaker. No receiver had more than 550 yards through the air, but five players had at least 200 yards receiving. Similarly, Jordan Parker led the team in rushing with just 727 yards, but four players had at least 200 yards on the ground. Senior quarterback Logan Kilgore did take the majority of snaps under center, and with a big game could pass Wes Counts as the school's all-time leading passer (370 yards behind Counts). The defense is similarly anonymous, with no player accumulating more than five sacks or ten and a half tackles for loss. The Blue Raiders will face a Navy team making their tenth bowl appearance in the past eleven seasons. The Midshipmen have lost five of their last six bowl games, including four of five under current head coach Ken Niumatalolo, but why focus on the negative?Navy won eight games in 2013, but none came against teams with winning records. Pitt, South Alabama, and San Jose State all finished 6-6. I suppose there is something to be said for beating the teams you should beat, as Navy's four defeats all came to teams with winning records (Western Kentucky, Duke, Toledo, and Notre Dame). Navy did what they have to do win games, run the ball (second nationally in rushing yards per game and thirteenth in yards per rush) and win the turnover battle (their margin of +12 tied for tenth). Navy appears to be a little overvalued here in giving nearly a touchdown to the Blue Raiders. I'm not overly confident laying money on either side here, but I would make a small play on the Blue Raiders plus the points. In addition, keep this little statistical minutia in mind: Under Rick Stockstill, the Blue Raiders are 8-2 in their last ten games decided by a touchdown or less. Not that this trend is in any way predictive, just something to keep in mind if the Blue Raiders do manage to squeak one out.
Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl
Ole Miss vs Georgia Tech
Line: Ole Miss -3
After imploding at the end of the Houston Nutt era, during which they managed a 1-15 SEC record over his final two seasons, Ole Miss is back in the postseason for the second straight year. Are the Rebels appreciably better than they were last season? Not really. In 2012, they managed a 3-5 SEC record and beat just one team that finished with a winning record. This season they were once again 3-5 in the SEC, and while their wins were more impressive (Vanderbilt and LSU in the conference and Texas outside of it), the Rebels are pretty much who they were last year, just with more disappointment. Ole Miss was below average on both sides of the ball in the SEC, ranking ninth in yards per play and eighth in yards per play allowed. The Rebels continued their streak of not having a player top 1000 yards on the ground or through the air since 2009. Though to be fair, receiver Donte Moncrief could get to that mark with a big game (currently 825 yards receiving). The defense struggled to get to the quarterback, registering just eighteen sacks on the year (tied for 96th nationally). The arrival of uber-hyped defensive end Robert Nkemdiche did not result in a series of quarterback takedowns that took the nation by storm. Nkemdiche was not a gamechanger, but most fans should be happy with two sacks and eight tackles for loss from a true freshman. He wasn't Clowney, but that is not where the bar should be placed. If I was a betting man, I would say Ole Miss won't get many sacks in this game either. Georgia Tech, as you may know, runs the triple option and only passes as a change of pace, or out of necessity. The Yellow Jackets will be playing in their 17th consecutive bowl game and sixth consecutive under head coach Paul Johnson. The Yellow Jackets continued their run of strong offensive performances under Johnson, ranking fourth in the ACC in yards per play. However, their achilles' heel, as it has been for sometime, was the defense. The Yellow Jackets ranked tenth in the ACC in yards per play allowed. Outside of their loss to Virginia Tech, when the defense allowed a scant seventeen points, the Jackets surrendered an average of nearly 45 points in their defeats at the hands of Miami, BYU, Clemson, and for a fifth consecutive year, Georgia. Barring an unforeseen turn of events, this should be a high-scoring, entertaining contest. These teams appear to be pretty evenly matched, so I'm surprised Ole Miss is laying a field goal. Paul Johnson has not exactly crushed it in bowl games at Georgia Tech, but I think the Jackets are a solid play on the moneyline here.
Valero Alamo Bowl
Oregon vs Texas
Line: Oregon -13.5
After all the rumor and innuendo, the news was made official a few days ago. Mack Brown will no longer be the coach of the Texas Longhorns following this Alamo Bowl appearance. The returns diminished towards the end of his tenure, but Mack won a national title and 158 games during his time at Texas. The Longhorns finished the season ranked thirteen times in his sixteen years on the sidelines (pending the final results this season), including six finishes in the top-ten. That's a pretty successful tenure. Unfortunately though, the prospects for sending Mack out a winner do not appear to be very strong. Despite a 7-2 mark in the Big 12, Texas was below average according to the yards per play metric. The Longhorns raked just seventh in yards play and fifth in yards per play allowed. Facing a team as dominant as Oregon, Texas could be in deep trouble in their home state. For the first time since 2008, Oregon will not end their season in a BCS bowl, though I think one could make the argument they are a more deserving participant than Oklahoma. Despite their two conference losses, the Ducks rated out as the best team in the Pac-12. The offense remained explosive despite the loss of head coach Chip Kelly, ranking first in the league in yards per play. Quarterback Marcus Mariota threw 30 touchdowns and averaged 9.5 yards per pass. Mariota also contributed nearly 600 yards and nine touchdowns on the ground. You, dear reader, may also be surprised to know that the Ducks were also dominant on defense. They held Pac-12 foes to under five yards per snap, ranking first in the league in yards per play allowed. The Ducks didn't make a lot of plays in the backfield, netting just 26 sacks (54th in the nation) and 63 tackles for loss (99th in the nation), but they consistently limited opponents' gains. The first bowl preview post discussed the trend about double-digit favorites in bowl season, so I wouldn't lay a mortgage payment on this game. Still, by almost any metric, Oregon is elite and Texas is middling. If you have to make a play on this, I think this is much more likely to be an Oregon blowout than a close game reminiscent of last year's Alamo Bowl.
National University Holiday Bowl
Arizona State vs Texas Tech
Line: Arizona State -14
This game kicks at 10:15 Eastern Standard Time on December 30th. You might be better served heading to bed and reading about this one. If both these teams play as they did during the regular season, this one could get ugly. Arizona State won ten games and played for the Pac-12 title in Todd Graham's second season. The Sun Devils have three losses, but two of those came courtesy of Stanford. The other came to Notre Dame, so the resume does not have a single bad loss on it. They do have their fair shard of quality wins, beating Wisconsin, Southern Cal, Washington, Washington State, Oregon State, UCLA, and Arizona. The majority of those games were not competitive, with the Sun Devils winning the five games against the Trojans, Huskies, Cougars, Beavers, and Wildcats by a combined margin of 134 points. Overall in Pac-12 play, the Sun Devils ranked sixth in yards per play, perhaps surprising because they averaged over 44 points per game in Pac-12 play. However, they were even stronger on defense where they finished third in yards per play allowed. The Sun Devils enter the postseason tied for the national lead with 40 sacks. Three players had at least seven and half sacks with bookends Carl Bradford and Davon Coleman tallying eight and half apiece. The Sun Devils should have ample opportunity to rack up some sacks against Texas Tech. In their first season of play under Kliff Kingsbury, the Red Raiders threw more passes than all but two teams in the nation. The Red Raiders actually began the year 7-0 before losing their final five, continuing a disturbing trend since Mike Leach left town. In the past four seasons, first under Tommy Tuberville, and now under Kingsbury, the Red Raiders have gone 22-6 from the beginning of the season to the penultimate weekend in October. Beginning with the last Saturday of October though, the Red Raiders have gone just 6-16. The must be scared of Samhain. Overall, the Red Raiders were an average Big 12 team and pretty deserving of their 4-5 league record. They ranked fifth in yards per play and seventh in yards per play allowed. Texas Tech has pulled off a huge bowl upset against a Pac-12 opponent in the somewhat recent past, but the odds they can do it again are very small. The warning against double-digit favorites in the bowl season applies here, but Arizona State appears to be one of the better heavy favorites to back this postseason.
Military Bowl
Marshall vs Maryland
Line: Marshall -2.5
Howdy neighbor! Despite residing in border states, Maryland and Marshall have yet to play a football game against each other. That will change on December 27th when the Terps and Herd clash in our nation's capital. Maryland is breaking a three year bowl drought and playing in their first bowl game under head coach Randy Edsall. The last time the Terrapins were in the postseason, they played in this very game against an opponent from Conference USA. And like the thunder, they rolled, dropping 51 points on a hapless East Carolina defense. The Terps have not seen a great deal of success since that exhibition, which was the final game coached by Ralph Friedgen. Since canning Friedgen, the Terps have managed just a 13-23 record, including a 6-18 mark in the ACC. Despite their struggles, the Terps actually began the year 4-0 and were ranked in the top-25 before Florida State eviscerated them in their first conference game. Outside of their win against Virginia Tech, the Terps did not beat a single IA team that finished with a winning record. Their other five IA scalps consisted of Florida International, Connecticut, West Virginia, Virginia, and NC State. If the Terps do manage to beat Marshall, it would arguably be their best win all season. So what about the Herd? What is their prospectus in this game? Marshall won nine games in the regular season for the first time since 2002, when legendary coach Bob Pruett was at the end of his spectacular run. The Thundering Herd played in the Conference USA Championship Game for the first time since joining the league and by the yards per play metric, were the top team in the regular season. Unfortunately, they had to go on the road in the title game, and the offense that poured in 50 touchdowns over eight regular season games managed just three in a loss to Rice. That game aside, the offense was a sight to behold with quarterback Rakeem Cato throwing 36 touchdown passes and adding six scores on the ground. Despite their showing in their most recent contest, Marshall is a quality mid-major. With a chance to prove their bonafides against a team from a major conference, I think they return to their winning ways and easily cover this small number.
Texas Bowl
Minnesota vs Syracuse
Line: Minnesota -4.5
Last year, Minnesota may have been the worst bowl team from a major conference, and this season they face what may be the worst bowl team from a major conference. First off, the Gophers deserve a huge round of applause. They won eight games in the regular season for the first time since 2003. Much like last season, a 4-0 start against a relatively soft non-conference slate got the Gophers two thirds of the way to bowl eligibility. However, unlike last season when they wheezed to the finish, winning just two of their final eight regular season games, this season the Gophers split their final eight, posting solid wins at Northwestern and Indiana and at home against Nebraska and Penn State. The Gophers were not extremely proficient on either side of the ball, ranking tenth in the Big 10 in yards per play and ninth in yards per play allowed. The Gophers ran the ball often, ranking 16th nationally in rushing attempts with 548. They passed on occasion, but were not very good at it, completing just a shade more than 52% of their throws. In fact, Minnesota receivers combined to catch just 124 passes on the year. The five teams that caught fewer passes all run some variation of the option (Air Force, New Mexico, Georgia Tech, Army, and Navy). The Gophers will attempt to win their first bowl game in a decade against a Syracuse squad that was outscored by 93 points over the course of their eleven games against IA opponents. When the Orange lost, they tended to lose big. Northwestern neat them by 21, Clemson beat them by 35, Georgia Tech beat them by 56, and Florida State also brained them by 56. The Orange did not do much to distinguish themselves in ACC play, ranking eleventh in yards per play and eighth in yards per play allowed. Orange quarterbacks averaged just 5.8 yards per throw, a number that ranked 112th in the nation. I can't come up with a very compelling reason to watch this game except that it is one of the few football games left until next fall. I also can't come up with a reason for you to make any plays here either. I could see the Orange losing in grisly fashion as they have many times this season. However, despite their embarrassing defeats, the Orange have beaten three bowl teams this season (Tulane, Maryland, and Boston College), so a Minnesota win, and more importantly perhaps, a Minnesota cover is far from assured. Sit this one out.
Fight Hunger Bowl
BYU vs Washington
Line: Washington -3
If Steve Sarkisian had not taken the Southern Cal job a few weeks ago, this game would be a homecoming of sorts. Sarkisian quarterbacked the Cougs in the mid-nineties, and enjoyed two solid campaigns as the starter. Before heading south, Sark guided the Huskies to their first eight-win regular season since 2001! A win over the Cougars could potentially get the Huskies into the nether regions of the final polls for the first time since that same season. Despite their four defeats, Washington was a formidable team in 2013. They just had the misfortune of playing Stanford, Oregon, and Arizona State in back-to-back-to back weeks. Those three were head and shoulders above the rest of the Pac-12, finishing a combined 28-4 in games against the rest of the country. Washington also dropped a road game at UCLA later in the year, but each of their eight wins came by at least ten points. In Pac-12 play, the Huskies ranked fifth in yards per play and fourth in yards per play allowed. Senior quarterback Keith Price threw 20 touchdown passes and just five interceptions as he moved into second place on the school's all-time passing yardage list behind Cody Pickett. Running back Bishop Sankey tallied nearly 1800 yards on the ground and if he returns for his senior season will almost certainly pass Napoleon Kaufman as the school's all-time leading rusher. The Huskies will attempt to win their ninth game with interim coach Marques Tuiasosopo, a former star quarterback, leading the team. To get win number nine, they must defeat a BYU team that has been somewhat of an enigma this season. The Cougars somehow lost to Virginia in the season opener, then started the Mack Brown death march with a shredding of the Texas run defense. The blew out bowl teams Middle Tennessee State, Utah State, Georgia Tech, and Boise State by a combined margin of 79 points, yet lost to the two best teams on their schedule, Wisconsin and Notre Dame by ten points apiece. The Cougars offense struggled in their four defeats, mustering an average of just fifteen points per game against Virginia, Utah, Wisconsin, and Notre Dame. In those four games, quarterback Taysom Hill completed an abysmal 43% of his passes. Washington appears to be the kind of team that can shut down the erratic Hill and hold the Cougars under twenty points. However, the Washington offensive line did allow 30 sacks on the season (93rd in the nation), and while Cougar linebacker Kyle Van Noy only tallied four sacks in 2013 after accumulating thirteen last season, he remains a threat to set up shop in the backfield. Last season, he almost single-handedly won the Poinsettia Bowl for the Cougars. The interim coach and the Huskies propensity to give up sacks would give me pause about backing them here.
New Era Pinstripe Bowl
Notre Dame vs Rutgers
Line: Notre Dame -14
I know I wrote a few paragraphs up that Syracuse could be the worst bowl team from a major conference in 2013. If that distinction does not belong to the Orange, it certainly belongs to their northeast neighbor in New Jersey. First off, lets congratulate Rutgers for their eighth bowl appearance in the last nine seasons and their impending move to the Big 10. Before Greg Schiano was chasing off quarterbacks and pissing off other coaches in the NFL, he engineered one of the better turnarounds in college football history at Rutgers. His successor, Kyle Flood, kept the program afloat in his first season, racing out to a 7-0 and 9-1 start in 2012 before losing the final three games. Still, the Knights got to nine wins for the third time in four seasons and looked poised to be contenders in the watered down newly christened American Athletic Conference. The Knights then began 2013 with a 4-1 mark, albeit with none of the wins coming against eventual bowl teams. However, the defense, long a team strength, was beginning to atrophy. In their first five games, the Knights allowed 52 points twice, once in a loss at Fresno and again in a win over SMU. After the 4-1 start, the Knights wheezed to the finish, beating only Temple (1-11 record) and South Florida (3-9) to gain the elusive sixth win. Along the way, they allowed 49 points to Houston, 52 to Cincinnati, and 41 to Central Florida in grisly defeats. The Cincinnati game marked the first time Rutgers had allowed more than 50 points at home since 2001 against Virginia Tech, in the dark days of Rutgers football. All told, excluding games against Eastern Michigan and Norfolk State, the Knights allowed an average of 34.8 points per game in 2013 despite playing in basically a glorified mid-major conference. Yikes. Against this permissible defense, can volatile Irish quarterback Tommy Rees end his Notre Dame career on a high note? Rees has thrown 61 touchdowns in his Irish career, but has also tossed 37 interceptions. As a point of comparison, Derek Carr of Fresno State has thrown just 23 interceptions despite over 50% more pass attempts in his collegiate career. A.J. McCarron has just 13 career interceptions in roughly the same number of attempts. I guess what I am trying to say is that despite this deservedly large spread, Rees could potentially serve up an upset for Rutgers. Notre Dame has been a hard team to figure in 2013, as they own two phenomenal wins over Michigan State and Arizona State. They also played Stanford tight in a road loss and beat both Southern Cal and BYU. Of course they also lost to what ended up not being a high-quality Michigan team, narrowly edged the dumpster fire that was Purdue, squeaked by Navy, and lost to an average at best Pitt team. Notre Dame is a much better football team than Rutgers, of that there is no question. However, this line is way too large to make a play on the Irish. Previous discussions about double-digit favorites, found in the first preview, apply here. Notre Dame is not an elite team, so if you are hankering for a wager, take the Knights and the points.
Belk Bowl
Cincinnati vs North Carolina
Line: North Carolina -2.5
Numbers wise, Cincinnati is one of the more interesting teams of 2013. Most advanced stats, be they the SRS, Sagarin Ratings, FEI, or S&P ratings do not hold the Bearcats in a very high regard. Most see them as a middle of the road team. This is due to their non-conference performance, where they lost by four touchdowns to Illinois (perhaps that should prevent a team from being bowl eligible in itself), and scored only fourteen points against a winless Miami of Ohio outfit. For good measure, once conference play began, the Bearcats also lost to South Florida, though to be fair, they did not allow an offensive touchdown. Couple that with the relative weakness of the American Athletic Conference and you can see why despite nine wins, Cincinnati is seen as a middling team. However, I am inclined to disagree here. The Bearcats absolutely dominated the (inferior) competition in their conference, ranking first in yards per play and third in yards per play allowed. Their per-play margin was second only to Louisville in the conference and the Bearcats won four of their six league games by double-digits. The Bearcats had a strong offensive line, allowing just twelve sacks on the year. This was not a function of them being a team dedicated to the ground game either, as the Bearcats were in the top quartile nationally in number of pass attempts. They also generated 35 sacks on the year with the well-named Silverberry Mouhon registering nine and a half by himself. The Bearcats will likely have to deal with a hostile crowd to win a second consecutive Belk Bowl as the Tar Heels from Chapel Hill make the short trek west. North Carolina began the year 1-5, but rallied to win five consecutive games before missing out on an opportunity to instigate a fifteen-way tie in the Coastal Division of the ACC. Despite their 6-6 record, North Carolina posted strong peripheral number. They were fifth in the ACC in yards per play and third in yards per play allowed. Their per-play differential actually ranked fourth in the conference behind the Atlantic Division heavyweights Florida State and Clemson and their own division-mate, Miami. The Tar Heels lost senior quarterback Bryn Renner to an injury still needing three wins to qualify for a bowl game. Sophomore Marquise Williams replaced him and averaged 8.3 yards per pass attempt (21st nationally) while also rushing for nearly 500 yards. The Tar Heels also benefited from the marvelous punt return styling of Ryan Switzer. The freshman wide receiver returned four punts for touchdowns over a three-game span, including two in a tight win over Pittsburgh. Switzer also caught three touchdown passes on the season and threw one against rival NC State. Might there be a rushing touchdown in his future? Despite the homefield advantage and the solid per-play number for the Tar Heels, I think Cincinnati is undervalued by the nation at large. Take the Bearcats to cover here, and if you are feeling lucky, make a play on the moneyline.
Russell Athletic Bowl
Louisville vs Miami
Line: Louisville -3
After missing out on the postseason thanks to a self-imposed bowl ban in the first two seasons of the Al Golden regime, the Miami Hurricanes will make their triumphant return to the bowl season. This may come as a shock to some casual college football fans, but Miami has not won a bowl game since they edged Nevada in Boise back in 2006. That marked Larry Coker's final game as head coach of The U. Since that New Year's eve, Miami has been thoroughly mediocre, going 50-37 and depending on the outcome of this game, never losing fewer than four games in any season, and finishing in the final AP Poll only once. Early, and perhaps even midway through 2013, the Hurricanes appeared to be close to being back. They upset Florida in a turnover-fueled triumph that ended up not being that impressive at the end of the season and won their first seven games. However, the Hurricanes were revealed as frauds, losing their next three to Florida State, Virginia Tech, and ...gasp... Duke, with each loss coming by at least 18 points. They did rebound to beat Virginia and Pitt to finish with nine wins and an outside shot at being ranked in the final polls. Miami in 2013 was a team with a great strength (its offense) and a glaring weakness (its defense). The Hurricane offense finished second only to Florida State in the ACC in yards per play. Senior quarterback Stephen Morris, though mistake-prone with twelve interceptions, averaged a whopping nine yards per pass attempt (tied for twelfth in the nation). As a whole, the offense averaged nearly seven yards per snap in conference play. Even without stud running back Duke Johnson over the second half of the conference season, the offense remained explosive. However, the defense was another story entirely. The Hurricanes ranked 13th in the fourteen team ACC in yards per play allowed. Quarterbacks and running back alike rejoiced when the Hurricanes came out of the tunnel. In their final five conference games, the Hurricanes allowed over eight yards per pass attempt and over five yards per rush. Warren Sapp and other legendary retired 'Canes could probably have performed better. So what are Miami's prospects going against a talent like Teddy Bridgewater and Louisville? While Louisville did not win the inaugural American Athletic Conference as most had predicted, they were clearly the most dominant team. And believe it or not, the offense wasn't really the story. Sure, the Cardinals rated third in the American in yards per play, with Bridgewater completing over 70% of his passes and throwing 28 touchdowns versus just four interceptions, but the defense was outstanding, limiting conference opponents to under four and a half yards per play. Defensive ends Marcus Smith (twelve and a half) and Lorenzo Mauldin (nine and a half) combined for 22 sacks and ranked second and seventeenth respectively in the metric nationally. The Cardinals held ten of their twelve opponents to fewer than twenty points and were very close to finishing unbeaten. Last season, Bridgewater carved up an elite Florida defense in the Sugar Bowl. He has to be licking his chops at the chance to face Miami. This spread seems very small, perhaps thanks to the Miami national brand. Back Louisville in this one, as they have the firepower and defensive acumen to turn this into a rout.
Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl
Kansas State vs Michigan
Line: Kansas State -4
What are you doing for an encore? After leading Kansas State to a surprising Big 12 championship and berth in the Fiesta Bowl, expectations were rather muted for Kansas State entering 2013. Despite the attrition and regression, the best coach in college football led Kansas State back to the postseason for the fourth consecutive year. Now, can the Wildcats manage to win their first bowl game in eleven years? Kansas State opened 2013 with a loss to IAA North Dakota State. However, the Bison have lost just two times over the past three seasons and are playing in their third consecutive IAA National Championship Game. In fact, the Bison have actually beaten a IA team each of the past four seasons. The Wildcats rebounded from that defeat to crush their other two non-conference foes, Louisiana-Lafayette and Massachusetts. When conference play began, the Wildcats struggled on the scoreboard, losing competitive road games to Texas and Oklahoma State, while holding Baylor's potent offense in check at home in another sporting defeat. Then the schedule lightened and the Wildcats heated up. They won five of their final six games with all of the wins except one coming by at least three touchdowns. For the season, Kansas State actually ranked a surprising second in yards per play in the Big 12, behind only Baylor. Jake Waters and Daniel Sams alternated under center in replacing Heisman finalist Colin Klein. As a team, the Wildcats did not throw the ball often (only nine teams passed fewer times), but they were very explosive, averaging 9.3 yards per attempt (tied for fourth nationally). Elsewhere in the backfield, John Hubert needs just 32 yards on the ground to become the first Wildcat running back to top 1000 yards since Daniel Thomas in 2010. Hubert has already passed Thomas as the school's second leading rusher, but its unlikely he can pass Darren Sproles for the top spot (just 2064 yards behind). Defensively, the Wildcats ranked fourth in the Big 12 in yards per play allowed. The Wildcats ball-hawking secondary snatched sixteen passes from opposing quarterbacks, continuing a recent trend after grabbing eighteen in both 2012 and 2011. The Wildcats will seek to end their bowl losing streak against a Michigan team that disappointed in Brady Hoke's third season. True, they also lost five games last year, but each of their five defeats came to teams than finished in the final top-25, with four coming to teams than finished in the top-ten. The Wolverines cannot boast of such schedule misfortune this year. While the Wolverines did lose to the two best teams in the conference (Michigan State and Ohio State), they also fell to Iowa, Nebraska, and Penn State, three solid, but hardly elite teams. The Wolverines lost four of their final five games, and before rebounding to torch Ohio State, the Wolverine offense looked like it was playing in the nineteenth century. In a four-game stretch against Michigan State, Nebraska, Northwestern, and Iowa, the Wolverines scored just five offensive touchdowns, with two coming in overtime against Northwestern. In those four games, Michigan averaged just 217 yards per contest and an anemic 3.3 yards per play. For the season Michigan ranked eighth in the Big 10 in yards per play (which I suppose is somewhat impressive considering the aforementioned stretch). The defense ranked sixth in yards per play allowed, meaning Michigan was a pretty average (or below) Big 10 team, as also evidenced by their 3-5 league record. I don't feel supremely confident taking Kansas State to cover here, especially with their somewhat spotty bowl record under the Snyder, but I think a small play on the Wildcats is a solid investment strategy.
Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl
Navy vs Middle Tennessee State
Line: Navy -6.5
After finishing 8-4 last season and missing out on a bowl game, the Blue Raiders from Middle Tennessee will make their first postseason trip since 2010. In their first season as a member of Conference USA, the Blue Raiders finished 6-2 in league play, and inflicted the only regular season conference loss on Marshall's resume. The Blue Raiders ranked second in Conference USA in yards per play and were eighth in yards per play allowed. The offense coalesced as the season progressed, and the schedule eased up, as the Blue Raiders scored more than 40 points four times in their last five games. The Blue Raiders featured a committee offense that did not have a single go-to playmaker. No receiver had more than 550 yards through the air, but five players had at least 200 yards receiving. Similarly, Jordan Parker led the team in rushing with just 727 yards, but four players had at least 200 yards on the ground. Senior quarterback Logan Kilgore did take the majority of snaps under center, and with a big game could pass Wes Counts as the school's all-time leading passer (370 yards behind Counts). The defense is similarly anonymous, with no player accumulating more than five sacks or ten and a half tackles for loss. The Blue Raiders will face a Navy team making their tenth bowl appearance in the past eleven seasons. The Midshipmen have lost five of their last six bowl games, including four of five under current head coach Ken Niumatalolo, but why focus on the negative?Navy won eight games in 2013, but none came against teams with winning records. Pitt, South Alabama, and San Jose State all finished 6-6. I suppose there is something to be said for beating the teams you should beat, as Navy's four defeats all came to teams with winning records (Western Kentucky, Duke, Toledo, and Notre Dame). Navy did what they have to do win games, run the ball (second nationally in rushing yards per game and thirteenth in yards per rush) and win the turnover battle (their margin of +12 tied for tenth). Navy appears to be a little overvalued here in giving nearly a touchdown to the Blue Raiders. I'm not overly confident laying money on either side here, but I would make a small play on the Blue Raiders plus the points. In addition, keep this little statistical minutia in mind: Under Rick Stockstill, the Blue Raiders are 8-2 in their last ten games decided by a touchdown or less. Not that this trend is in any way predictive, just something to keep in mind if the Blue Raiders do manage to squeak one out.
Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl
Ole Miss vs Georgia Tech
Line: Ole Miss -3
After imploding at the end of the Houston Nutt era, during which they managed a 1-15 SEC record over his final two seasons, Ole Miss is back in the postseason for the second straight year. Are the Rebels appreciably better than they were last season? Not really. In 2012, they managed a 3-5 SEC record and beat just one team that finished with a winning record. This season they were once again 3-5 in the SEC, and while their wins were more impressive (Vanderbilt and LSU in the conference and Texas outside of it), the Rebels are pretty much who they were last year, just with more disappointment. Ole Miss was below average on both sides of the ball in the SEC, ranking ninth in yards per play and eighth in yards per play allowed. The Rebels continued their streak of not having a player top 1000 yards on the ground or through the air since 2009. Though to be fair, receiver Donte Moncrief could get to that mark with a big game (currently 825 yards receiving). The defense struggled to get to the quarterback, registering just eighteen sacks on the year (tied for 96th nationally). The arrival of uber-hyped defensive end Robert Nkemdiche did not result in a series of quarterback takedowns that took the nation by storm. Nkemdiche was not a gamechanger, but most fans should be happy with two sacks and eight tackles for loss from a true freshman. He wasn't Clowney, but that is not where the bar should be placed. If I was a betting man, I would say Ole Miss won't get many sacks in this game either. Georgia Tech, as you may know, runs the triple option and only passes as a change of pace, or out of necessity. The Yellow Jackets will be playing in their 17th consecutive bowl game and sixth consecutive under head coach Paul Johnson. The Yellow Jackets continued their run of strong offensive performances under Johnson, ranking fourth in the ACC in yards per play. However, their achilles' heel, as it has been for sometime, was the defense. The Yellow Jackets ranked tenth in the ACC in yards per play allowed. Outside of their loss to Virginia Tech, when the defense allowed a scant seventeen points, the Jackets surrendered an average of nearly 45 points in their defeats at the hands of Miami, BYU, Clemson, and for a fifth consecutive year, Georgia. Barring an unforeseen turn of events, this should be a high-scoring, entertaining contest. These teams appear to be pretty evenly matched, so I'm surprised Ole Miss is laying a field goal. Paul Johnson has not exactly crushed it in bowl games at Georgia Tech, but I think the Jackets are a solid play on the moneyline here.
Valero Alamo Bowl
Oregon vs Texas
Line: Oregon -13.5
After all the rumor and innuendo, the news was made official a few days ago. Mack Brown will no longer be the coach of the Texas Longhorns following this Alamo Bowl appearance. The returns diminished towards the end of his tenure, but Mack won a national title and 158 games during his time at Texas. The Longhorns finished the season ranked thirteen times in his sixteen years on the sidelines (pending the final results this season), including six finishes in the top-ten. That's a pretty successful tenure. Unfortunately though, the prospects for sending Mack out a winner do not appear to be very strong. Despite a 7-2 mark in the Big 12, Texas was below average according to the yards per play metric. The Longhorns raked just seventh in yards play and fifth in yards per play allowed. Facing a team as dominant as Oregon, Texas could be in deep trouble in their home state. For the first time since 2008, Oregon will not end their season in a BCS bowl, though I think one could make the argument they are a more deserving participant than Oklahoma. Despite their two conference losses, the Ducks rated out as the best team in the Pac-12. The offense remained explosive despite the loss of head coach Chip Kelly, ranking first in the league in yards per play. Quarterback Marcus Mariota threw 30 touchdowns and averaged 9.5 yards per pass. Mariota also contributed nearly 600 yards and nine touchdowns on the ground. You, dear reader, may also be surprised to know that the Ducks were also dominant on defense. They held Pac-12 foes to under five yards per snap, ranking first in the league in yards per play allowed. The Ducks didn't make a lot of plays in the backfield, netting just 26 sacks (54th in the nation) and 63 tackles for loss (99th in the nation), but they consistently limited opponents' gains. The first bowl preview post discussed the trend about double-digit favorites in bowl season, so I wouldn't lay a mortgage payment on this game. Still, by almost any metric, Oregon is elite and Texas is middling. If you have to make a play on this, I think this is much more likely to be an Oregon blowout than a close game reminiscent of last year's Alamo Bowl.
National University Holiday Bowl
Arizona State vs Texas Tech
Line: Arizona State -14
This game kicks at 10:15 Eastern Standard Time on December 30th. You might be better served heading to bed and reading about this one. If both these teams play as they did during the regular season, this one could get ugly. Arizona State won ten games and played for the Pac-12 title in Todd Graham's second season. The Sun Devils have three losses, but two of those came courtesy of Stanford. The other came to Notre Dame, so the resume does not have a single bad loss on it. They do have their fair shard of quality wins, beating Wisconsin, Southern Cal, Washington, Washington State, Oregon State, UCLA, and Arizona. The majority of those games were not competitive, with the Sun Devils winning the five games against the Trojans, Huskies, Cougars, Beavers, and Wildcats by a combined margin of 134 points. Overall in Pac-12 play, the Sun Devils ranked sixth in yards per play, perhaps surprising because they averaged over 44 points per game in Pac-12 play. However, they were even stronger on defense where they finished third in yards per play allowed. The Sun Devils enter the postseason tied for the national lead with 40 sacks. Three players had at least seven and half sacks with bookends Carl Bradford and Davon Coleman tallying eight and half apiece. The Sun Devils should have ample opportunity to rack up some sacks against Texas Tech. In their first season of play under Kliff Kingsbury, the Red Raiders threw more passes than all but two teams in the nation. The Red Raiders actually began the year 7-0 before losing their final five, continuing a disturbing trend since Mike Leach left town. In the past four seasons, first under Tommy Tuberville, and now under Kingsbury, the Red Raiders have gone 22-6 from the beginning of the season to the penultimate weekend in October. Beginning with the last Saturday of October though, the Red Raiders have gone just 6-16. The must be scared of Samhain. Overall, the Red Raiders were an average Big 12 team and pretty deserving of their 4-5 league record. They ranked fifth in yards per play and seventh in yards per play allowed. Texas Tech has pulled off a huge bowl upset against a Pac-12 opponent in the somewhat recent past, but the odds they can do it again are very small. The warning against double-digit favorites in the bowl season applies here, but Arizona State appears to be one of the better heavy favorites to back this postseason.
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