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BCS Championship game at the Rose Bowl, Pasadena, California, January 7, 2010, Alabama vs. Texas. The Bowl Championship Series (BCS) was a college football post-season selection system that created four or five bowl game match-ups involving eight or ten of the top ranked teams in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of American college football, including an opportunity for the ...
The Bowl Championship Series used a mathematical system that combined polls (Coaches and AP/Harris) and multiple computer rankings (including some individual selectors listed above) to determine a season ending matchup between its top two ranked teams in the BCS Championship Game. The champion of that game was contractually awarded the Coaches ...
This article lists the all-time win/loss NCAA Division I FBS sanctioned bowl game records for all NCAA college football teams. Win–loss records are current as of the 2024–25 bowl season . The columns for "last bowl season" and "last bowl game" have been updated to reflect 2024–25 bowl appearances for all games played through January 1, 2025.
ECAC Bowl Series. Asa S. Bushnell Bowl; Clayton Chapman Bowl; Scotty Whitelaw Bowl; James Lynah Bowl; 2015 Varies (campus sites) ECAC: ECAC Bowl (1983–2003) Regional ECAC bowl games (1983-2014) [9] Centennial-MAC Bowl Series. 3 unnamed bowls; 2015 Centennial & MAC: None Isthmus Bowl: 2021 Bank of Sun Prairie Stadium Sun Prairie, Wisconsin ...
The Bowl Championship Series (BCS) was a selection system that created five bowl game match-ups involving ten of the top ranked teams in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of college football, including an opportunity for the top two teams to compete in the BCS National Championship Game.
[1] [2] Included in these games are 40 combined appearances in the traditional "big four" bowl games (the Rose, Sugar, Cotton, and Orange), 6 Bowl Championship Series (BCS) game appearances (including three victories in the BCS National Championship Game) and six appearances in the College Football Playoff, and three victories in the College ...
The below table lists top teams (per polls taken after the completion of the regular season and any conference championship games), their win–loss records (prior to bowl games), and the bowls they later played in. The AP column represents rankings per the AP Poll, [1] while the BCS column represents the Bowl Championship Series rankings. [2]
The 2013–14 bowl season served as the last for the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) format. Starting in 2014–15, a new system, the College Football Playoff, was used. The 2013–2014 bowl game schedule, with 70 teams to compete in 35 bowls, was announced in May 2013. [1] All bowl game participants were selected by December 8, 2013.