Monday, December 5, 2011

No BCS for TCU; Horned Frogs to Poinsettia Bowl

SAN DIEGO (AP)—TCU had been hoping for a berth in the Sugar Bowl, which would have been the Horned Frogs’ third straight trip to a BCS game.

Instead, they’ll have to settle for the consolation prize of another trip to San Diego.

“We’re obviously disappointed after we had the opportunity to be in BCS games the last couple of years,” coach Gary Patterson said after the No. 16 Horned Frogs accepted an invitation to play Louisiana Tech in the Poinsettia Bowl on Dec. 21.

The Mountain West Conference champion Horned Frogs (10-2) needed to move into the top 16 in the final BCS standings on Sunday to earn an automatic bid.

TCU remained No. 18 in the BCS standings.

“In the three polls we’re 15, 15 and 17, but in the BCS we were 18. Figure that out,” Patterson said. “But I’ve got a lot more important things to do than to worry about that with the polls. All I know is this: They gave us an opportunity the last two years; we earned our part. We went to the Fiesta Bowl and Rose Bowl and we were 1-1, and there’s a whole bunch of schools that have never been to any of those.

“Are we disappointed we didn’t get where we wanted to? Well, it’s our own fault. There’s nobody to blame but TCU because we had two losses. If we had one loss, we probably wouldn’t be in this situation,” he said.

TCU beat Wisconsin 21-19 in the Rose Bowl last season. The season before that, TCU lost 17-10 to Boise State in the Fiesta Bowl.

“We’ve been to two, but you’ve got a No. 6 Arkansas team that’s not going to a BCS bowl game either,” Patterson said. “Only `X’ amount of teams get a chance to go. We were fortunate a year ago. Boise got beat. The key to it is you’ve got to be a little lucky. I believe the football gods always make sure things happen the way they’re supposed to happen. If we were supposed to be there, there’s a good chance we would have been there.

“It’s really quite a compliment to the program and where we’ve been just in three years for us to even be considered or to be an outside shot with two losses,” he added. “It used to be common knowledge that if you didn’t go undefeated and you weren’t an automatic qualifier, you weren’t going to get a chance to be a part of it. For us, I’m excited we were a part of the conversation. It means we’ve come a long way as far as the voters were concerned. Now we need to go win a ballgame against Louisiana Tech. They’re a good football team and they will be fired up since it’s been a while since they’ve been to a bowl game.”

TCU has won seven straight games since an overtime loss at home against SMU on Oct. 1, including a victory at Boise State that ended the Broncos’ 35-game winning streak. The other TCU loss was 50-48 to Robert Griffin and Baylor in the season opener.

This is TCU’s third trip to the Poinsettia Bowl. It beat Boise State 17-16 in 2008 and beat Northern Illinois 37-7 in 2006.

Louisiana Tech (8-4) clinched a berth in the game when it won its first Western Athletic Conference championship since 2001 with a 44-0 victory against New Mexico State on Nov. 26.

The bowl bid is the fifth in school history and Louisiana Tech’s first since an Independence Bowl victory against Northern Illinois in 2008.


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BCS Decision Day: Alabama or Oklahoma State

Play it again, LSU and Alabama.

The Crimson Tide edged out Oklahoma State in the final round of voting Sunday and will play the top-ranked Tigers in the BCS national championship game on Jan. 9 in New Orleans.

Undefeated LSU is the only team to beat Alabama this season, and the head BCS official sees a do-over as a perfectly good title game.

"Absolutely, if they're 1 and 2, and they are in all the polls released today," executive director Bill Hancock said.

Still, it's not exactly a game the public was clamoring for — at least outside of Southeastern Conference territory. And it will do nothing to quiet the critics of the Bowl Championship Series or the calls for a college football playoff.

But like it or not, the system has ensured that the SEC — home to both schools — will run its streak of BCS championships to six in a row.

The Cowboys made a late surge by beating Oklahoma 44-10 on Saturday night, and closed the gap between themselves and Alabama in the polls. But it was not enough to avoid the first title game rematch in the 14-year history of the BCS.

The Tigers (13-0) beat the Tide 9-6 in overtime on Nov. 5 in Tuscaloosa.

"This could be a totally different type of game," Alabama coach Nick Saban said. "There's so many good players on both sides of the ball for both teams.

"There's so much opportunity for this game to play out completely different and have a completely different flavor than the first game."

Alabama (11-1) finished second in both the Harris and coaches' polls by a wide enough margin to make up for the fact that Oklahoma State was ahead in the computer ratings.

The Cowboys (11-1), champions of the Big 12, will play in the Fiesta Bowl against Stanford from the Pac-12.

"We can't control it," Oklahoma State quarterback Brandon Weeden said. "But I know we had a heck of a year and we beat really good football teams in this conference and we're conference champions, so we did everything that we could."

The other BCS matchups are:

— Michigan vs. Virginia Tech in the Sugar Bowl;

— Clemson vs. West Virginia in the Orange Bowl;

— Oregon vs. Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl.

No BCS busters made it into the big-money games for the first time since the 2005 season, teams such as Boise State, TCU and Houston, which had a chance but lost in the Conference USA championship on Saturday to Southern Mississippi. The Cougars will now play Penn State, which dropped to the Ticket City Bowl in Dallas following the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal that has overshadowed the Nittany Lions' season.

As the power-brokers in college football begin to plot how top-tier bowls will be set up in the future, the 2011 season is once more exposing the flaws in the current system.

Oklahoma State and Alabama, two teams with perfectly good arguments to play for a national championship, wound up fighting over one spot, with subjective voters and mysterious computer ratings — the formulas of which are not even publicly known — doing the choosing.

Alabama, with the nation's No. 1 defense, won out and will play for its second BCS crown in three years.

Oklahoma State, with one of the most potent offenses in the country, gets its first BCS appearance as a consolation prize.

"We wanted the opportunity to settle the debate that has gone all year about the offense in the Big 12 and the defense in the SEC," Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy said on ESPN.

A rematch between LSU and Alabama in the title game seemed almost a foregone conclusion heading into conference championship weekend.

But with Alabama idle, Oklahoma State made one last, dramatic statement against the Sooners on Saturday night in Stillwater. And the Cowboys had an impressive resume, beating three teams ranked in the final BCS top 15. Alabama had only one such victory.

So instead of Sunday being a coronation there was drama, and another BCS controversy.

Working in Alabama's favor was its dominance throughout the season — all its victories have been by at least 16 points — and the fact that no other team has challenged LSU this season the way Heisman Trophy contender Trent Richardson and the Tide did.

The Tide and Tigers played a hard-hitting defensive slog billed as the Game of the Century. And it was exciting in the way Notre Dame and Army's scoreless tie was exciting in the 1946 version of the Game of the Century.

Immediately the talk of rematch started, pro and con.

Oklahoma State was in position to keep it from happening. The Cowboys were undefeated and second in the BCS standings heading into a Friday night game at Iowa State, a day after Oklahoma State women's basketball coach Kurt Budke and an assistant coach were killed in a plane crash.

But the Cowboys lost 37-31 in double OT to the so-so Cyclones (6-6), missing a potential game-winning field goal at the end of regulation by inches.

With no other undefeated teams left from the major conferences, Alabama returned to No. 2 and the debate grew ever-more heated.

On one side, Alabama supporters said it was simple: The system is supposed to match the best two teams, regardless of conference, and the Tide have been one of the two most dominant teams in the country.

On the other side, Oklahoma State supporters said the Cowboys accomplished more to get to 11-1 than the Tide, playing a tougher schedule and winning their conference.

Not enough voters were convinced — so it's Tigers-Tide II.

Alabama claims 13 national championships overall and is one of the most decorated programs in the land. It's won seven AP titles since the wire service started its poll in 1936.

LSU will be seeking its third BCS championship since 2003 at the Superdome — the site of its first two.

Saban won that title for LSU in '03. Current Tigers coach Les Miles matched his predecessor in 2007, winning a championship with a team that lost two games.

These talented Tigers, led by dynamic defensive back Tyrann Mathieu, have rarely even trailed against a schedule that included Oregon and West Virginia.

"This team loves the big stage," Miles said.

Now Saban and Miles, who have been tussling for supremacy in the SEC West on the field and the recruiting trail, will square off for the ultimate prize.

And don't dare suggest to either of them that it's for anything less.

"I think whoever wins the game should be viewed as the national champion," Saban said, echoing Miles' sentiment. "Rather than rehash the system we should do research on what would make the system better in the future."

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AP Sports Writer Jeff Latzke in Stillwater, Okla., contributed to this report.

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Follow Ralph D. Russo at www.Twitter.com/ralphDrussoAP


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