Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Jack Lausch (12) throws during the second half of the NCAA football game against the Ohio State Buckeyes at Wrigley Field in Chicago on Saturday, Nov. 16, 2024. Ohio State won 31-7.

Bowl hunt top of mind for Michigan, Northwestern

Coming off its second bye week in a transitional season, defending national champion Michigan will take another run at becoming bowl-eligible on Saturday afternoon when it takes on Northwestern in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Moving past recent struggles is the mission at Michigan (5-5, 3-4 Big Ten) as the Wolverines reel from four losses in the past five games following a promising start.

“It was buy-in week,” Michigan coach Sherrone Moore said. “We really took it upon us to make sure that we’re all bought into the next two games, to do everything we can to get better, and really working on the fundamentals, the little things … make sure we’re all in.”

The Wolverines nearly overcame extended sluggishness in a 20-15 loss at then-No. 8 Indiana on Nov. 9, but they fell a yard short of converting a fourth-and-10 in the closing minutes to curb their comeback bid.

Michigan scored just one touchdown in three trips inside the red zone, a 1-yard scoring run from Kalel Mullings with 9:35 to play. Quarterback Davis Warren was limited to 137 yards on 16-for-32 passing while the run game gained only 69 yards on 34 carries.

Moore said there was “fire” and “energy” in practices this week after a few days off. He said the relative disappointment of the team’s current record after reaching the college football mountaintop with a perfect record (15-0) and national title last season doesn’t change the importance of playing a postseason game.

“It’s huge for the program, obviously, playing another game, getting another chance to play with your team, but building on the future. Building, getting more practices,” Moore said. “It’s like another spring ball for the young guys. It’s more football for the guys that need to keep getting better at football. So it’s huge for us, and huge for the program.”

Michigan has won seven consecutive games in the series with Northwestern.

Also in the hunt for a bowl bid, Northwestern must accomplish something it hasn’t achieved this season to reach the postseason. The Wildcats (4-6, 2-5) need to win consecutive games.

In its most recent matchup, Northwestern fell 31-7 to No. 2 Ohio State at Wrigley Field last Saturday. Quarterback Jack Lausch passed for 201 yards and rushed for 44 and Northwestern’s lone TD. But the offensive line allowed four sacks, and Lausch lost a fumble while running downfield.

Northwestern coach David Braun realizes that winning won’t be easy in Ann Arbor, where the Wolverines are 36-6-2 against the Wildcats.

“Our guys just gotta do a great job of really eliminating interference,” Braun said. “… Whether it be the crowd noise, whatever that looks like. I’m confident that our group will handle that the right way and focus on what really matters. And that’s the 60 minutes of football we gotta go play.”

–Field Level Media

Utah State Aggies quarterback Levi Williams knows his way around the Potato Bowl. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-USA TODAY Sports

Weekend bowl games: Preview, picks and predictions

There are few experiences that approach the anxious energy of eagerly awaiting the final leg to hit on a plus-money, three-team parlay, especially when the final leg is a double-digit favorite teased to the moneyline.

The only hurdles to clear before enjoying the view of that final leg are the first two legs.

College bowl season is loaded with value opportunities. Given the impact of the transfer portal, many of those develop just days before kickoff.

We are focused on three bowl games this week, playing them together for a nice potential holiday bonus.

FAMOUS IDAHO POTATO BOWL

Utah State Aggies vs. Georgia State Panthers

Date, time: Saturday, Dec. 23, 3:30 p.m. ET
Site: Albertsons Stadium, Boise, Idaho
The line: Utah State -2.5, total 59.5

Utah State is a middling college football team as its 6-6 record (4-4 in the Mountain West Conference) would indicate. But the Aggies aren’t going to be adversely affected by the transfer portal.

Georgia State (6-6, 3-5 in the Sun Belt Conference) is less than a middling team – as its five-game losing streak would indicate. And the Panthers can’t get a break.

The transfer portal consumed a good chunk of the offense, which relied heavily on its ground-game success. Top rusher Marcus Carroll, right tackle Montavious Cunningham and top receiver Robert Lewis won’t play. And the defense lost starting cornerback Bryquice Brown.

Utah State has the familiarity card to play, as well. Coach Blake Anderson is 5-1 when facing Georgia State, and starting quarterback Levi Williams was a standout in the 2021 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl when playing for Wyoming.

Williams ran for more than 200 yards and four TDs and passed for another in that 52-38 win against Kent State.

Top target Jalen Royals led the FBS with seven touchdown receptions of 50+ yards.

The Aggies defense is anchored by graduate senior linebacker MJ Tafisi Jr., whose 131 tackles (10.9 per game) rank No. 8 in the country.

LAS VEGAS BOWL

Northwestern Wildcats vs. Utah Utes

Date, time: Saturday, Dec. 23, 7:30 p.m. ET
Site: Allegiant Stadium, Las Vegas
The line: Utah -6.5, total 41.5

These teams appear headed in opposite directions, with Northwestern rallying in the wake of a coaching change and Utah cursing the football gods.

The Utes (5-4, 8-4 Pac-12) dropped three of their final five games and are the more affected of the teams with regard to the transfer portal.

The Wildcats (5-4, 7-5 Big Ten) capped their season with victories at Wisconsin, at home against Purdue and at Illinois.

This matchup has all the potential to be messy – and likely within two touchdowns.

Bryson Barnes, who threw for 1,517 yards on 134 completions, 12 touchdown passes and nine interceptions, would need to play a virtually flawless game to ignite a blowout. His ESPN QB rating was 123.6.

Northwestern’s Ben Bryant completed 150 throws for 1,585 yards and had 11 touchdown passes and six interceptions with a rating (per ESPN) of 126.5.

With comparable QBs and modest offenses, look for a relatively tight game.

HAWAI’I BOWL

San Jose State Spartans vs. Coastal Carolina Chanticleers

Date, time: Saturday, 10:30 p.m. ET
Site: Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex, Honolulu
The line: San Jose -10.5, total 52.5

Both teams finished the regular season 7-5, but the Spartans closed with a rush following a 1-5 start and tied for first in the Mountain West Conference.

The Chanticleers and long-time (40 starts) quarterback Grayson McCall were 7-3 before McCall was hurt and they dropped their final two games.

McCall won’t play Saturday, either, having entered the transfer portal.

Coastal Carolina must fly 5,000 miles for this “neutral site” matchup against San Jose State, which has played – and won – in Hawai’i three times in the past four years.

San Jose State opened as a 7.5-point favorite and has seen plenty of public support in the days since.

Spartans quarterback Chevan Cordeiro probably feels this is somewhat of a home game, having played there in high school and at the University of Hawai’i.

Running back Kairee Robinson should be able to find plenty of room to run against the Chanticleers’ shaky rush defense.

Cordeiro threw 19 touchdown passes and only four interceptions while Robinson scored 18 TDs to anchor a ground game that exceeded 200 yards in five of San Jose State’s final six games this season.

Robinson rolled up 200 yards by himself in a Nov. 11 victory over Fresno State.

Barring a big turnover disparity, this one falls into the late-night comfort zone – just win the game outright, Spartans!

The bet, with a +150 payout (DraftKings): Three-team teaser parlay Utah State +3.5, Northwestern +12, San Jose State moneyline of -380.

–Field Level Media

Dec 2, 2022; Las Vegas, NV, USA; Utah Utes quarterback Cameron Rising (7) throws the ball against the Southern California Trojans in the first half of the Pac-12 Championship at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Utah, Penn State to Rose Bowl as full bowl game schedule revealed

Utah and Penn State will square off in the Rose Bowl and Alabama will face Big 12 champion Kansas State in the Sugar Bowl as part of this season’s slate of 41 bowl games, which were finalized Sunday.

Teams were invited to their respective bowls after the College Football Playoff selection committee named Georgia, Michigan, TCU and Ohio State to the four-team playoff. No. 1 Georgia and No. 4 Ohio State will play in the Peach Bowl in one semifinal and No. 2 Michigan will meet No. 3 TCU in the Fiesta Bowl for the other.

As for the other New Year’s Six bowls, ACC champion Clemson drew SEC at-large Tennessee in the Orange Bowl, and No. 16 Tulane, the highest-ranked team from the Group of Five conferences, will go to the Cotton Bowl and play Southern California.

No. 8 Utah won the Pac-12 title game in a 47-24 rout of USC, allowing the Utes to punch their ticket to the Rose Bowl for the second straight season. Last week, the Rose Bowl had floated the idea of taking the Nittany Lions over Ohio State to avoid the same matchup in consecutive years, but that was rendered moot when the Buckeyes made the playoff field.

Alabama was ranked No. 5 in Sunday’s final CFP rankings, the first team out of the playoff. Kansas State moved up a spot to No. 9 after edging TCU 31-28 in overtime Saturday to win the Big 12 title.

Eighty-two of the 131 FBS teams will play in a bowl game, starting Dec. 16 when Miami (Ohio) and UAB kick off the Bahamas Bowl, and Troy and UTSA — which snuck into the final CFP rankings at Nos. 24 and 25, respectively — play in the Cure Bowl in Orlando, Fla.

The full bowl schedule is below:

Friday, Dec. 16
Bahamas Bowl: Miami (Ohio) vs. UAB
Cure Bowl: No. 24 Troy vs. No. 25 UTSA

Saturday, Dec. 17
Fenway Bowl: Cincinnati vs. Louisville
New Mexico Bowl: SMU vs. BYU
LA Bowl: Washington State vs. Fresno State
LendingTree Bowl: Rice vs. Southern Miss
Las Vegas Bowl: Florida vs. No. 14 Oregon State
Frisco Bowl: North Texas vs. Boise State

Monday, Dec. 19
Myrtle Beach Bowl: Marshall vs. UConn

Tuesday, Dec. 20
Idaho Potato Bowl: Eastern Michigan vs. San Jose State
Boca Raton Bowl: Liberty vs. Toledo

Wednesday, Dec. 21
New Orleans Bowl: Western Kentucky vs. South Alabama

Thursday, Dec. 22
Armed Forces Bowl: Baylor vs. Air Force

Friday, Dec. 23
Independence Bowl: Louisiana vs. Houston
Gasparilla Bowl: Wake Forest vs. Missouri

Saturday, Dec. 24
Hawaii Bowl: Middle Tennessee vs. San Diego State

Monday, Dec. 26
Quick Lane Bowl: New Mexico State vs. Bowling Green

Tuesday, Dec. 27
Camellia Bowl: Georgia Southern vs. Buffalo
First Responder Bowl: Memphis vs. Utah State
Birmingham Bowl: Coastal Carolina vs. East Carolina
Guaranteed Rate Bowl: Wisconsin vs. Oklahoma State

Wednesday, Dec. 28
Military Bowl: UCF vs. Duke
Liberty Bowl: Kansas vs. Arkansas
Holiday Bowl: North Carolina vs. Oregon
Texas Bowl: Texas Tech vs. Ole Miss

Thursday, Dec. 29
Pinstripe Bowl: Syracuse vs. Minnesota
Cheez-It Bowl: Oklahoma vs. No. 13 Florida State
Alamo Bowl: No. 20 Texas vs. No. 12 Washington

Friday, Dec. 30
Duke’s Mayo Bowl: Maryland vs. No. 23 NC State
Sun Bowl: Pitt vs. No. 18 UCLA
Gator Bowl: No. 21 Notre Dame vs. No. 19 South Carolina
Arizona Bowl: Ohio vs. Wyoming
Orange Bowl: No. 6 Tennessee vs. No. 7 Clemson

Saturday, Dec. 31
Sugar Bowl: No. 5 Alabama vs. No. 9 Kansas State
Music City Bowl: Iowa vs. Kentucky
Fiesta Bowl: No. 3 TCU vs. No. 2 Michigan (CFP semifinal)
Peach Bowl: No. 4 Ohio State vs. No. 1 Georgia (CFP semifinal)

Monday, Jan. 2
ReliaQuest Bowl: Mississippi State vs. Illinois
Cotton Bowl: No. 16 Tulane vs. No. 10 USC
Citrus Bowl: No. 17 LSU vs. Purdue
Rose Bowl: No. 11 Penn State vs. No. 8 Utah

Monday, Jan. 9
College Football Playoff national championship game: TCU-Michigan winner vs. Ohio State-Georgia winner

–Field Level Media

Nov 19, 2022; Columbia, Missouri, USA; New Mexico State Aggies quarterback Diego Pavia (10) runs the ball against the Missouri Tigers during the first half at Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports

New Mexico St. granted waiver to play in bowl at 5-6

New Mexico State was approved to play in a bowl game despite playing only 10 games against FBS opponents and winning five of them.

The Aggies (5-6) had sought a waiver from the NCAA Division I football oversight committee for their extenuating circumstances. The school had an Oct. 22 game against San Jose State postponed and eventually canceled after San Jose State running back Camdan McWright was killed in a scooter accident that week.

New Mexico State, an FBS independent, was unable to schedule a replacement game against an 11th FBS opponent. Eleven is the normal scheduling requirement, with six wins being the usual mark for bowl eligibility.

The appeal was approved on Tuesday, which helps fill a spot among 82 overall bowl berths. According to the Action Network, 79 teams are bowl eligible after the inclusion of New Mexico State.

The 5-6 Aggies will be considered before any 5-7 teams. Auburn, which finished the year 5-7, is out of the running for a spot with the Aggies’ inclusion.

New Mexico State earned just its second bowl berth in 61 years.

Bowl game matchups will be finalized Sunday afternoon.

–Field Level Media

December 3, 2021; Las Vegas, NV, USA; Utah Utes helmet pictured with rose following the victory against the Oregon Ducks in the 2021 Pac-12 Championship Game at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports

Bowl season set with matchups for all 84 teams

Following the revelation that the College Football Playoff would feature Alabama, Michigan, Georgia and Cincinnati, the remaining slate of bowl games was filled out Sunday afternoon with a total of 84 teams learning their destinations.

The New Year’s Six bowls will begin Dec. 30 when ACC champion Pitt faces at-large Michigan State in the Peach Bowl in Atlanta.

After the CFP semifinal games on New Year’s Eve, Jan. 1 features three more major matchups: Big Ten champ Ohio State against Pac-12 champ Utah in the Rose Bowl; Big 12 champ Baylor against at-large Ole Miss in the Sugar Bowl; and at-larges Notre Dame and Oklahoma State squaring off in the Fiesta Bowl.

The rest of the bowl slate features some intriguing matchups, including regional rivals North Carolina and South Carolina descending on Charlotte, N.C., for the Duke’s Mayo Bowl, and an Alamo Bowl that pits Oregon and Oklahoma.

The full schedule and list of matchups is below. All times Eastern.

Dec. 17

Bahamas Bowl
Middle Tennessee vs. Toledo, Noon.

Tailgreeter Cure Bowl
Northern Illinois vs. Coastal Carolina, 6 p.m.

Dec. 18

RoofClaim.com Boca Raton Bowl
Western Kentucky vs. Appalachian State, 11 a.m.

PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl
UTEP vs. Fresno State, 2:15 p.m.

Radiance Technologies Independence Bowl
UAB vs. BYU, 3:30 p.m.

LendingTree Bowl
Eastern Michigan vs. Liberty, 5:45 p.m.

Jimmy Kimmel LA Bowl
Utah State vs. Oregon State, 7:30 p.m.

R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl
Louisiana vs. Marshall, 9:15 p.m.

Dec. 20

Myrtle Beach Bowl
Old Dominion vs. Tulsa, 2:30 p.m.

Dec. 21

Famous Idaho Potato Bowl
Kent State vs. Wyoming, 3:30 p.m.

Tropical Smoothie Cafe Frisco Bowl
UTSA vs. San Diego State, 7:30 p.m.

Dec. 22

Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl
Missouri vs. Army, 8 p.m.

Dec. 23

Frisco Football Classic
North Texas vs. Miami (OH), 3:30 p.m.

Union Home Mortgage Gasparilla Bowl
UCF vs. Florida, 7 p.m.

Dec. 24

EasyPost Hawaii Bowl
Memphis vs. Hawaii, 8 p.m.

Dec. 25

TaxAct Camellia Bowl
Georgia State vs. Ball State, 2:30 p.m.

Dec. 27

Quick Lane Bowl
Western Michigan vs. Nevada, 11 a.m.

Military Bowl
Boston College vs. East Carolina, 2:30 p.m.

Dec. 28

TicketSmarter Birmingham Bowl
Houston vs. Auburn, 12 p.m.

SERVPRO First Responder Bowl
Air Force vs. Louisville, 3:15 p.m.

AutoZone Liberty Bowl
Mississippi State vs. Texas Tech, 6:45 p.m.

San Diego County Credit Union Holiday Bowl
UCLA vs. NC State, 8 p.m.

Guaranteed Rate Bowl
West Virginia vs. Minnesota, 10:15 p.m.

Dec. 29

Wasabi Fenway Bowl
SMU vs. Virginia, 11 a.m.

New Era Pinstripe Bowl
Maryland vs. Virginia Tech, 2:15 p.m.

Cheez-It Bowl
Clemson vs. Iowa State, 5:45 p.m.

Valero Alamo Bowl
Oregon vs. Oklahoma, 9:15 p.m.

Dec. 30

Duke’s Mayo Bowl
North Carolina vs. South Carolina, 11:30 a.m.

TransPerfect Music City Bowl
Tennessee vs. Purdue, 3 p.m.

Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl
Michigan State vs. Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.

SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl
Wisconsin vs. Arizona State, 10:30 p.m.

Dec. 31

TaxSlayer Gator Bowl
Wake Forest vs. Texas A&M, 11 a.m.

Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl
Washington State vs. Miami, 12:30 p.m.

Barstool Sports Arizona Bowl
Central Michigan vs. Boise State, 2 p.m.

CFP Semifinal — Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic
No. 4 Cincinnati vs. No. 1 Alabama, 3:30 p.m.

CFP Semifinal — Capital One Orange Bowl
No. 3 Georgia vs. No. 2 Michigan, 7:30 p.m.

Jan. 1

Outback Bowl
Penn State vs. Arkansas, Noon.

Vrbo Citrus Bowl
Iowa vs. Kentucky, 1 p.m.

PlayStation Fiesta Bowl
Notre Dame vs. Oklahoma State, 1 p.m.

Rose Bowl Game
Ohio State vs. Utah, 5 p.m.

Allstate Sugar Bowl
Ole Miss vs. Baylor, 8:45 p.m.

Jan. 4

Texas Bowl
LSU vs. Kansas State, 9 p.m.

Monday, Jan. 10

CFP National Championship
Alabama or Cincinnati vs. Michigan or Georgia, 8 p.m.

–Field Level Media

Nov 27, 2021; Laramie, Wyoming, USA; Hawaii Rainbow Warriors running back Dedrick Parson (31) runs against the Wyoming Cowboys during the fourth quarter at Jonah Field at War Memorial Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Troy Babbitt-USA TODAY Sports

NCAA approves additional bowl game

The NCAA’s Football Oversight Committee on Thursday approved an additional bowl game to enable all bowl-eligible teams an opportunity to play in the postseason, according to The Action Network and The Athletic.

No date for the bowl game has been announced, but the contest reportedly will be played between two Group of 5 teams in Texas. ESPN will broadcast the game, per The Action Network.

Without the game, a pair of teams would not be playing in the postseason.

According to the NCAA, teams that win six games are bowl-eligible. This season, 84 teams had at least six wins.

The additional game will allow Hawaii (6-7) to play Memphis (6-6) in the Hawaii Bowl on Christmas Eve, according to multiple media outlets.

Seven bowl games are already scheduled to be played in Texas, including the Cotton Bowl, the Sun Bowl, the First Responder Bowl, the Alamo Bowl, the Armed Forces Bowl, the Frisco Bowl and the Texas Bowl.

–Field Level Media

Dec 12, 2020; Provo, UT, USA; San Diego State head coach Brady Hoke talks to other coaches before an NCAA college football game against BYU Saturday, Dec. 12, 2020, in Provo, Utah.  Mandatory Credit: George Frey/Pool Photo-USA TODAY Sports

San Diego State withdraws from bowl consideration

San Diego State coach Brady Hoke on Wednesday announced the Aztecs have withdrawn from consideration for a bowl game.

The Aztecs end their season at 4-4, 4-2 in Mountain West.

The announcement comes two days after Hoke expressed his displeasure with getting passed over for the New Mexico Bowl in favor of Hawaii, which San Diego State defeated during the season. Further, the Rainbow Warriors (4-4) had a worse conference record than the Aztecs.

“Our guys have really been through a lot, I think more than any of us could imagine,” Hoke said in a statement Wednesday night. “They get to play a game they love, but with the uncertainty of being able to play in a bowl game we have made the decision that we will not play another game this season.”

Hawaii earned the bowl bid in a complicated three-way tiebreaker over SDSU and Fresno State in the MWC, despite the Aztecs finishing alone in fourth. SDSU defeated the Warriors 34-10 on Nov. 14.

“Really disappointed. … The players played hard and I think they deserved an opportunity. We’re still working on opportunities,” Hoke said earlier in the week. “There was a concept, I thought, from a league perspective, that there were four bowl tie-ins and I believe we were fourth within the league. I was just shocked at Hawaii getting a bid before us.”

The Aztecs rank among the national leaders in several categories, including fourth in total defense (283.5), 14th in scoring defense (17.8), 33rd in rushing offense (199.4) and 40th in scoring margin (+6.9). This was the 11th consecutive season they were bowl-eligible.

–Field Level Media