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2007–08 NCAA football bowl games

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The 2007-08 NCAA College Football Bowl Games[1] post-season schedule followed the 2007 NCAA Division I FBS regular season in college football, which was one of the most topsy-turvy regular seasons in recent memory, where no school was immune from losing a game at the wrong time and falling from a top ranking.

The NCAA divided Division I into two divisions for football in 1978. The top level, originally known as "Division I-A" and officially changed to the "Football Bowl Subdivision" in 2006, includes teams that play in bowl games. The second level, originally known as "Division I-AA" and renamed the "Football Championship Subdivision" in 2006, consists of smaller schools and conferences, most of which play in a playoff system (although a few conferences, such as the Ivy League, choose not to participate in the playoff). The larger schools, who do not have a playoff system, concludes with a series of bowl games that have developed as a reward for teams that do well in the regular season.

The 2007-08 schedule will serve as large a lineup as the 2006-07 lineup — all as part of 36 post-season games (32 not counting the post-BCS all-star games) that started with the Poinsettia Bowl on December 20, 2007. Thus, 64 schools out of the 119 schools in the Bowl Subdivision will be playing in the post-season, thanks in part to the NCAA's decision to expand schedules to twelve regular season mainland games (not counting games either played in Hawaiʻi or conference championships in the ACC, Big 12, SEC, MAC or Conference USA) and allow teams with a 6-6 record to be bowl eligible if either the team or their conference has negotiated a bowl contract.

Selection of the teams

NCAA bylaws stipulate any team finishing 6-6 can only be selected to fill a conference tie-in bowl slot once all other available conference teams are chosen. For example, the Big Ten Conference had 10 bowl-eligible teams, but only six slots other than those in the BCS, to which Ohio State and Illinois qualified. Therefore, Northwestern and Iowa, both 6-6, are staying home. The Big East Conference also did not have enough slots to fit in Louisville, which also finished 6-6. Also, the Southeastern Conference, despite landing two BCS selection with LSU and Georgia, had more teams bowl-eligible than available slots leaving South Carolina out of the bowl picture at 6-6. Ohio, Troy, and Louisiana-Monroe also failed to receive invitations, with Troy (at 8-4) the most notable absentee. Miami (Ohio) went 6-7, losing the MAC Championship Game. Had they won, they would have been eligible.[2]

In contrast, TCU of the Mountain West Conference was invited to the Texas Bowl because the Big 12 Conference could not fill all of its slots. Not enough teams were left after Kansas was chosen as an at-large team to join champion Oklahoma.

Coaching changes

As always, the annual transition of head coaches at various institutions left some teams that have been invited to bowls with different coaches than they had in the regular season. The following is a table showing such teams.

Team Bowl Season coach Interim head coach Result 2008 head coach
Arkansas Cotton Houston Nutt Reggie Herring[3] Lost Bobby Petrino[4]
Georgia Tech Humanitarian Chan Gailey Jon Tenuta[5] Lost Paul Johnson
Houston Texas Art Briles Chris Thurmond[6] Lost Kevin Sumlin[7]
Navy Poinsettia Paul Johnson Ken Niumatalolo[8] Lost same
Texas A&M Alamo Dennis Franchione Gary Darnell[9] Lost Mike Sherman
UCLA Las Vegas Karl Dorrell DeWayne Walker[10] Lost Rick Neuheisel[11]
West Virginia Fiesta Rich Rodriguez Bill Stewart[12] Won Same

In addition, these coaches either resigned or retired from their teams, but continued for their bowl games. Again, the chart also lists the new coaches.

Team Bowl Current coach Result 2008 head coach
Michigan Capital One Lloyd Carr Won Rich Rodriguez[13]
Southern Mississippi Papajohns.com Jeff Bower Lost Larry Fedora[14]

Notes

  • Nutt left Arkansas to take the same job at Mississippi.
  • Briles left Houston to take the same job at Baylor.
  • Johnson left the Naval Academy to take the same job at Georgia Tech.
  • Rodriguez left West Virginia to take the same job at Michigan.

Non-BCS Bowls

NOTE: Rankings used are the final regular season BCS Rankings whenever noted, and all payouts are in United States Dollars.

Poinsettia Bowl

At the San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl on December 20 at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California, first bowl game of the season, the University of Utah from the Mountain West Conference, defeated the independent (no conference affiliation) United States Naval Academy Midshipmen, 35-32. Each team got $750,000 payouts, as the Utes' share was divided amongst the members of their conference, while Navy kept the entire amount.

New Orleans Bowl

At the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl held December 21 at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, the Florida Atlantic University Owls of the Sun Belt Conference, in their first FBS appearance as conference champions, defeated the University of Memphis Tigers from Conference USA, 44-27. Both conferences got $325,000 in payouts in the first of three post-season games to be played in the Cresent City.

PapaJohns.com Bowl

The Papajohns.com Bowl at Legion Field in Birmingham, Alabama on December 22 featured the University of Cincinnati Bearcats of the Big East Conference and the University of Southern Mississippi Golden Eagles of Conference USA. This was the last game for 17 year coach Jeff Bower of Southern Miss who ironically made his coaching debut at Southern Miss at Legion Field against Alabama. However, the Bearcats spoiled the farewell party, winning the game 31-21, earing their first ten-win season in over five decades. Both conferences got paid $300,000 in the contest.

New Mexico Bowl

The New Mexico Bowl on December 22 was contested by the University of New Mexico Lobos of the Mountain West and the University of Nevada, Reno Wolf Pack of the Western Athletic Conference. On their home field of University Stadium in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the Lobos shutout the Wolf Pack, 23-0, their first postseason win since 1961, and the first shutout suffered by the Wolf Pack since 1980. Both conferences got a stipend of $750,000 for each school's participation in the season's fourth bowl game.

Las Vegas Bowl

The Pioneer Las Vegas Bowl was played on December 22 at Sam Boyd Stadium on the campus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada. In the only regular season rematch of the season, the Cougars of Brigham Young University, the Mountain West Conference champions, escaped with an 17-16 victory over the University of California, Los Angeles Bruins of the Pacific Ten Conference. The conferences each divided up checks for $1 million as receipt for their teams playing. The game was not decided until Eathyn Manumaluena blocked Kai Forbath's game-winning 28-yard field goal attempt as time expired, avenging a 27-17 loss back on September 8th in Pasadena's Rose Bowl Stadium.

Hawaii Bowl

The Sheraton Haiaiʻi Bowl at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, saw the East Carolina University Pirates of Conference USA defeat the WAC's Boise State University Broncos, 41-38. Boise State came back from a 38-14 third-quarter deficit, tying the game when Marty Tadman returned a Pirates fumble for a touchdown with 1:25 left. The Pirates answered with a walk-off 34-yard field goal from Ben Hartman to win their first bowl game since 2000. The conferences of both schools received a check for $750,000 apiece.

The 2007 University of Hawaii Warriors, the traditional Hawaii Bowl team as per its "Hawaii guarantee" agreement, did not play in this season's contest since they qualified for a BCS bowl. Also, the game was held on December 23 instead of the traditional annual date of December 24 due to ESPN's commitments to broadcast a Monday Night Football game between the Denver Broncos and the San Diego Chargers.

Motor City Bowl

Tthe Motor City Bowl was played at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan on December 26. The Big Ten representatives, the Purdue University Boilermakers, withstood a furious comeback from the MAC champion Central Michigan University Chippewas to win on a walk-off field goal, 51-48. The Chips came back from a 34-13 halftime deficit to tie it with 1:09 to play in regulation. Purdue then drove to the CMU 23-yard line, where kicker Chris Summers kicked a 40-yard field goal to end the game. Purdue quarterback Curtis Painter threw 35-54 for three touchdowns, two interceptions, and a Motor City Bowl record 546 yards, which was also the fourth-highest passing yard total in post-season history. As for Butch Jones, the CMU coach, who made his head coaching debut in last year's contest against Middle Tennessee, reports had him looking into the vacant West Virginia job with a second interview scheduled after this game, but that never materialized. The conferences each received $750,000 for their teams' participation.

Champs Sports Bowl

The Boston College Eagles of the ACC narrowly defeated the Michigan State University Spartans, 24-21, at the Champs Sports Bowl on December 28 at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida. The Eagles were coming off a disappointing last several weeks of the season, while the Spartans, who were not expected to even play in a bowl, barely qualified for a bowl game after upsetting Penn State in the Land Grant Trophy game. Each conference received a stipend of $2.2 million for their teams.

Texas Bowl

The Texas Bowl was plated on December 28, where the Texas Christian University Horned Frogs, representing the Mountain West Conference, played the Conference USA's University of Houston Cougars in a pseudo home game at Reliant Stadium in Houston, Texas, not far from the Astrodome where the Cougars played until moving back on campus to Robertson Stadium in 1999. The Horned Frogs managed to win the game, 20-13. Because the Big 12 failed to meet the minimum of eight schools for bowl eligibility (and a larger payout), the conferences received $612,500.

Emerald Bowl

The Pac-10's Oregon State University Beavers scored the game's final touchdown in the fourth quarter for a 21-14 victory against the ACC's University of Maryland, College Park Terrapins in the Emerald (Nuts) Bowl at AT&T Park in San Francisco, California. The conferences involved received a $750,000 payment from the organizers.

Meineke Car Care Bowl

The ACC's Wake Forest University Demon Deacons, defeated the University of Connecticut Huskies from the Big East, 24-10, on December 29 in the Meineke Car Care Bowl at Charlotte, North Carolina's Bank of America Stadium. Each conference got a $750,000 payment for the schools' involvement.

Liberty Bowl

The AutoZone Liberty Bowl was held on December 29 at the self-named Memorial Stadium in Memphis, Tennessee. The Conference USA champions, the University of Central Florida Golden Knights, lost in a defensive battle to the SEC representatives, the Mississippi State University Bulldogs, 10-3. The conferences received a $1.7 million check for the schools to divide amongst themselves.

Alamo Bowl

The December 29 Valero Alamo Bowl at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas pitted the Nittany Lions from the Pennsylvania State University of the Big Ten, whose legendary coach Joe Paterno coached his 500th game, against the Big 12 designates, the Texas A&M University Aggies. The Lions prevailed, 24-17. Both schools earned a $2.2 million check for their conferences. Valero Energy came abord as the new title sponsor of the game, which was sponsorless a season earlier thanks to the withdrawl of MasterCard International.

Independence Bowl

The PetroSun Independence Bowl in Shreveport, Louisiana in Independence Stadium on December 30 saw the SEC's University of Alabama Crimson Tide and the Big 12's University of Colorado at Boulder Buffaloes meet. The Tide scoring 27 first half points and surviving a late rally to cling to a 30-24 win. Each conference received a payout of $1.1 million.

Armed Forces Bowl

The Bell Helicopters Armed Forces Bowl was played on December 31 on the campus of Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas at Amon G. Carter Stadium. The Pac 10's University of California, Berkley Golden Bears defeated the United States Air Force Academy Falcons from the Mountain West, 42-36. The conferences received $750,000 as a receipt for the teams participating.

Sun Bowl

The Brut Sun Bowl was played at the campus of the University of Texas El Paso at Sun Bowl Stadium in El Paso, Texas on December 31. The University of South Florida Bulls from the Big East challenged the University of Oregon Ducks from the Pac-10. After a first half that saw the game tied at one point at 11-11, the Ducks went offensive and blasted the Bulls out with a 56-21 win. The conferences got $1.9 million payments for the schools meeting each other.

Humanitarian Bowl

The WAC's California State University, Fresno Bulldogs defeated the Georgia Institute of Technology Yellow Jackets from the ACC, 40-28, at the December 31 Roady's Humanitarian Bowl at Bronco Stadium on the campus of Boise State University in Boise, Idaho. Each conference received a $750,000 payout to be divided among fellow members. Roady's Truck Stops became title sponsor as the name reverted back after Micron Computers pulled out from its' old name, the MPC Bowl.

Music City Bowl

The Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl at LP Field in Nashville, Tennessee was held on December 31. The University of Kentucky Wildcats made a second consecutive Music City Bowl appearance, having defeated Clemson, coached by Tommy Bowden during the 2006-07 season. This year, they played another ACC team coached by a Bowden, this time the Florida State University Seminoles of father Bobby. The Seminoles came into the game missing thirty-four players due to injuries, violations of team rules, and suspensions stemming from a large cheating scandal. The Wildcats won 35-28 to finish 8-5 for the second straight year, which gave them back-to-back bowl wins for the first time since 1952. Also for the second straight year, Wildcats quatrerback André Woodson was the game's MVP. Each conference got a payment of $1.5 million to be divided amongst their members.

Insight Bowl

At the Insight Bowl, the Oklahoma State University-Stillwater Cowboys from the Big 12 beat the Indiana University Hoosiers of the Big Ten, 49-23. In spite of the loss, IU fulfilled a dream for their late head coach Terry Hoeppner before his untimely passing earlier this year to play one more game for a total of "13", the team's motto for the 2007 season. The contest on December 31 was played at Sun Devil Stadium on the campus of Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona. As payment, the Big Ten and Big 12 got $1.2 million apiece.

International Bowl

The second International Bowl was contested at the Rogers Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on January 5, 2008 the Big East's Rutgers University Scarlet Knights defeated the MAC's Ball State University Cardinals, 52-30 ,as Ray Rice rushed for 280 yards and four touchdowns to earn MVP honors in college football's thirtieth bowl contest. The conferences involved each got $750,000 to split between their schools.

GMAC Bowl

The GMAC Bowl was played in Mobile, Alabama's Ladd Peebles Stadium on January 6, 2008. The Conference USA's Golden Hurricane of University of Tulsa dominated the Bowling Green University Falcons from the Mid-American Conference, 63-7. The 63 points posted by the Hurricane was the most since beating Drake University, 70-7 in 1970, while the 56-point margin of victory set an NCAA record for most lopsided win in any bowl, bettering Alabama's 55-point blowout of Syracuse, 61-6, in the 1953 Orange Bowl. The bowl paid their leagues $750,000 apiece for their teams.

New Year's Day and other Prestigious Non-BCS Bowl Games

The following six bowl games are either held traditionally on January 1 or have featured large payouts. In addition, a majority of these games are aired on broadcast television networks such as CBS, ABC or Fox instead of cable networks like ESPN, ESPN2 or NFL Network.

Holiday Bowl

The Pacific Life Holiday Bowl was played on December 27 at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California, which also hosted the Poinsettia Bowl a week earlier. The University of Texas at Austin Longhorns, the representatives of the Big 12, coached by Mack Brown, defeated the Pac-10's Arizona State University Sun Devils under the leadership of Dennis Erickson, 52-34. Each conference will get a $2.2 million payout as receipt of the schools playing.

Chick-fil-A Bowl

The Chick-fil-A Bowl on December 31, played in the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia, pitted the Tigers of the ACC's Clemson University against the SEC' Tigers of Auburn University. During the contest, Auburn unveiled a new spread offense implemented by new offensive coordinator Tony Franklin. Despite an early bowl-record 83-yard touchdown run by Clemson's C.J. Spiller, Auburn was able to record a 23-20 victory when freshman backup quarterback Kodi Burns ended the first overtime game in Chick-fil-A Bowl history with a seven yard touchdown. The payouts were $3.25 million for the higher priority selection from the ACC and $2.4 million for the SEC representative. The Chick-fil-A Bowl was the highest-rated ESPN-broadcast bowl game of the 2007-2008 season as well as the highest rated in the game's history.[15]

Outback Bowl

In the first of two Big Ten-SEC matchups, the University of Tennessee Volunteers defeated the Badgers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, 21-17, in the Outback Bowl at Tampa, Florida's Raymond James Stadium on January 1. Both conferences were guaranteed a $3 million paycheck.

Cotton Bowl

After having one of their most successful seasons in school history, their only two losses coming to Oklahoma (the latter in the Big 12 Championship Game), the University of Missouri-Columbia Tigers were forced to settle for a non-BCS AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic in Dallas, Texas' Fair Park. The Tigers blew out an overmatched University of Arkansas Razorbacks team from the SEC, 38-7. The conferences received $3 million apiece. Tigers running back Tony Temple set game records with 281 yards on the ground and four touchdowns while Razorback runner Darren McFadden was limited to 102 yards. The 2009 game will be the last in that facility as the game will move to nearby Arlington and the new Dallas Cowboys Stadium in 2010.

Gator Bowl

The Big 12's Texas Tech University Red Raiders defeated ACC's University of Virginia Cavaliers, 31-28, in the Konica Minolta Gator Bowl at Jacksonville, Florida's Municipal Stadium on January 1. Alex Trlica kicked the game-winning 41-yard field goal with :07 left in the game. Red Raiders quarterback Graham Harrell threw the ball 69 times in the game, comnpleteing 44 of them for 407 yards and three touchdowns. Cavs running back Mikell Simpson scored on the longest run in NCAA bowl history - a 96-yard run - in the losing effort. A $2.5 million payout awaited both participating clubs. Konica Minolta replaced Toyota as title sponsor as of this game.

Capital One Bowl

In his final game, head coach Lloyd Carr's University of Michigan Wolverines of the Big Ten upset the University of Florida Gators led by Heisman Trophy winning sophomore quarterback Tim Tebow, 41-35 at the Capital One Bowl on January 1. The game was held at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida in what turned out to be a pseudo home game for the Gators. The participating conferences received the largest non-BCS payout of any game at $4.25 million per conference.

Bowl Championship Series

Each Bowl Championship Series (BCS) game had a payout of between $14 million and $17 million to each conference. Three conferences — the Big Ten, the Big 12 and the SEC — earned a second berth as at-large selections. In that case, an additional $6 million was given to be divided between all schools in those conferences. Because the University of Hawaii earned an at-large berth in the Sugar Bowl, the MAC, WAC, Mountain West, Conference USA and Sun Belt conferences divided $18 million for their schools.

Rose Bowl Game

On January 1 2008, the University of Southern California Trojans defeated the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Fighting Illini, 49-13. at the Rose Bowl in the self-named stadia in Pasadena, California. The Trojans defeated the Fighting Illini in one of the most lopsided wins in Rose Bowl history, 49-17. Quarterback John David Booty was named offensive MVP of the game.

As expected, the Trojans were Pac-10 champions for the third straight year, overcoming an upset loss by Stanford in October at home as an overwhelming 40-point favorite. Meanwhile, the Fighting Illini finished as the only other team from the Big Ten in the regular season Top 14 BCS rankings. They beat The Ohio State University Buckeyes in one of the biggest upsets of the regular season, finished in second place in the Big Ten, and qualified for the Rose Bowl after the conference champion Buckeyes earned a berth in the BCS National Championship Game.

Sugar Bowl

The Sugar Bowl on January 1 at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans pitted the University of Hawai Warriors against the University of Georgia Bulldogs. The Warriors completed an unbeaten regular season with the "run and shoot" offense of head coach June Jones, clinching the WAC championship. The Bulldogs finished with a 10-2 overall record, tied for first place in the SEC Eastern Division (UGA did not play for the SEC championship however because they lost a tie-breaker rule by losing head-to-head against the Tennessee Volunteers). UGA took advantage of errors by Hawaii, winning 41-10 victory. Almost a week later, Jones resigned to take the job at Southern Methodist University.

Fiesta Bowl

The Fiesta Bowl was played at Glendale, Arizona's University of Phoenix Stadium on January 2, 2008. The West Virginia University Mountaineers upset the University of Oklahoma Sooners, 48-28.

The Mountaineers entered the game as the Big East champions, but were spoiled on the last day of the regular season in the Backyard Brawl against the University of Pittsburgh as the number two team in the rankings. The Sooners were coming off a win over Missouri in the Big 12 Championship Game.

The Sugar Bowl loss was the fourth straight in the BCS for head coach Bob Stoops' Sooners. Bill Stewart, who led the Mountaineers after Rich Rodriguez bolted for Michigan after the regular season, was rewarded for his work in this game by being named permanent head coach for the 2008 season.

Orange Bowl

While the rest of the nation focused on the 2008 Iowa Presidential Caucuses on January 3, 2008, the University of Kansas Jayhawks defeated the Virginia Tech Hokies, 24-21, at the Fed Ex Orange Bowl in Miami Gardens, Florida's Dolphin Stadium, in a game that lived up to expectations, something that had not happened in the 2008 BCS.

2008 BCS National Championship Game

The 2008 Allstate BCS National Championship Game was played on January 7, 2008 at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans. The SEC Champion Louisiana State University Tigers overcame a 10-0 deficit to beat the Big Ten Champion Ohio State University Buckeyes, 38-24, in front of 79,651 partsian fans. LSU became the first team to win two BCS titles and the first to win a national championship with two losses (both in triple overtime to Kentucky and Arkansas).

Conference Bowl Records

NOTE: BCS conferences had a 6-2 mark against their "mid-major" brethren in 2007-08.

Conference Record Percentage Winners Losers Conference Head-to-Head Records
ACC 2-6 .250 (14) Boston College, Wake Forest Maryland, Florida State, Georgia Tech, (15) Clemson, (3) Virginia Tech, (21) Virginia 1-0 vs. Big 10, 1-0 vs. Big East, 0-1 vs. Pac 10, 0-2 vs. SEC, 0-1 vs. WAC, 0-2 vs. Big 12
Big East 3-2 .600 (9) West Virginia, (22) Cincinnati, Rutgers (25) UConn, (21) South Florida 1-0 vs. C-USA, 0-1 vs. ACC, 0-1 vs. Pac 10, 1-0 vs. Big 12, 1-0 vs. MAC
Big Ten 3-5 .375 Purdue, Penn State, Michigan Michigan State, (18) Wisconsin, Indiana, (13) Illinois, (1) Ohio State 1-0 vs. MAC, 1-1 vs. Big 12, 0-1 vs. ACC, 1-2 vs. SEC, 0-1 vs. Pac-10
Big 12 5-3 .625 (19) Texas, (6) Missouri, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, (8) Kansas Texas A&M, Colorado, (4) Oklahoma 1-0 vs. Pac-10, 1-1 vs. Big Ten, 1-1 vs. SEC, 2-0 vs. ACC, 0-1 vs. Big East
C-USA 2-4 .333 East Carolina, Tulsa Memphis, Southern Mississippi, Central Florida, Houston 1-0 vs. WAC, 0-1 vs. Sun Belt, 0-1 vs. Big East, 0-1 vs. SEC, 0-1 vs. MWC, 1-0 vs. MAC
Independents 0-1 .000 Navy 0-1 vs. Mountain West
MAC 0-3 .000 Central Michigan, Ball State, Bowling Green 0-1 vs. Big Ten, 0-1 vs. Big East, 0-1 vs. C-USA
MWC 4-1 .800 Utah, New Mexico, (17) Brigham Young, Texas Christian Air Force 1-0 vs. Independents, 1-0 vs. WAC, 1-1 vs. Pac-10, 1-0 vs. C-USA
Pac-10 4-2 .667 Oregon State, Oregon, California, (7) Southern California UCLA, (11) Arizona State 1-0 vs. ACC, 1-0 vs. Big East, 1-1 vs. Mountain West, 0-1 vs. Big 12, 1-0 vs. Big Ten
SEC 7-2 .778 Mississippi State, Alabama, Kentucky, (23) Auburn, (16) Tennessee, (5) Georgia , (2) LSU Arkansas, (12) Florida 1-0 vs. C-USA, 1-1 vs. Big 12, 2-0 vs. ACC, 2-1 vs. Big Ten, 1-0 vs. WAC
Sun Belt 1-0 1.000* Florida Atlantic 1-0 vs. C-USA
WAC 1-3 .250 Fresno State Nevada , (24) Boise State, (10) Hawaiʻi 1-0 vs. ACC, 0-1 vs. Mountain West, 0-1 vs. C-USA, 0-1 vs. SEC

* - The Sun Belt is ineligible for the Bowl Challenge Cup as they failed to have the minimum three teams to qualify.

- Clinched 2007-08 Bowl Challenge Cup.

Final Rankings

All-Star Games

References

  1. ^ "2007-08 Bowl Information". NCAA. June 5 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-16. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/standings
  3. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3136699
  4. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3150783
  5. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3145534
  6. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3131738
  7. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3153106
  8. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3146691
  9. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3127846
  10. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3141458
  11. ^ Associated Press (2007-12-29). "Former UCLA quarterback Neuheisel named head coach". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2007-12-29. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  12. ^ http://myespn.go.com/s/conversations/show/story/3160147
  13. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3157941
  14. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3152088
  15. ^ "Chick-fil-A Bowl a ratings success as game sets records". Atlanta Business Chronicle. 2008-01-08. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
Preceded by NCAA Bowl Games, by year
2007-2008
Succeeded by

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