Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bowl season is rolling along nicely

- GARY KLEIN LOS ANGELES TIMES

The college football bowl season, a gift that keeps on giving, is in full holiday swing and building toward the College Football Playoff championsh­ip game on Jan. 11 in Glendale, Ariz.

With 40 games plus the final to be played in a 24-day period, some critics are screaming that the system is out of control.

Just ask Craig Thompson, commission­er of the Mountain West Conference.

“Clearly, the system is broken,” Thompson said after Nevada and Colorado State of the Mountain West were paired in the Arizona Bowl, while teams with losing records received more prestigiou­s bids.

College football fans aren’t complainin­g, at least the ones that enjoy a steady stream of games that fill ESPN’s broadcast schedule with unending programmin­g.

For some, through three days of games — no one is that foolish to schedule a Sunday bowl game against the NFL — the so-called lesser bowls provided as much entertainm­ent value as Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Without the wait in line. In the Las Vegas Bowl, Utah and Brigham Young renewed the rivalry nicknamed the Holy War, the Utes taking a 35-0 first-quarter lead before BYU stormed nearly all the way back in a 35-28 defeat.

San Jose State and its 5-7 record made the bowl field by virtue of academic performanc­e. The Spartans proved worthy by defeating Georgia State in the Cure Bowl. Top that Duke (Pinstripe), Northweste­rn (Outback) and Stanford (Rose).

Louisiana Tech running back Kenneth Dixon (Strong) scored four touchdowns in a New Orleans Bowl victory over Arkansas State, giving him an FBS-record 87 in his career. That sets up another dramatic opportunit­y for Navy quarterbac­k Keenan Reynolds, who has 83 touchdowns going into the Military Bowl against Pittsburgh.

And Western Kentucky followed up last season’s sensationa­l Hail Mary-multiple-lateral victory over Central Michigan in the Bahamas Bowl with a trick-play-filled victory over South Florida in the Miami Beach Bowl.

And we’re not even through the first quarter of the bowl season.

Not that everything is worth celebratin­g.

Other than fans watching on television, the main beneficiar­ies of the bowl experience are ESPN, game organizers, coaches with contract bonuses and conference­s and their member schools.

Oregon State and Colorado, for example, did not make bowl games but still share in Pac-12 payouts.

USC Coach Clay Helton echoes most coaches who welcome bowl practices as a means of developing talent for the next season. Quarterbac­ks Max Browne and Sam Darnold, for example, have already begun competing to replace senior Cody Kessler.

“That’s why you love going to bowl games,” Helton says, “because you can really progress the young kids.”

It can be argued that players deserve compensati­on beyond gifts that include belt buckles, watches, backpacks, caps and gift certificat­es from big-box stores. And don’t forget the hair dryers. There may come a time when unionized college football players collective­ly bargain for a share of bowl revenues. But it appears no strikes are on the horizon — vanguard Northweste­rn is scheduled to play Tennessee in the Outback Bowl on Jan. 1.

That doesn’t mean every college player privately loves the idea of extra practices — and the potential for injury — after a long season.

USC linebacker Su’a Cravens, Ohio State running back Ezekiel Elliott and others who have declared for the draft might want to avoid potential risk and start working on their 40-yard dash times.

Several UCLA players set to play against Nebraska in the Foster Farms Bowl on Saturday in Santa Clara, Calif., and several USC players readying for Wisconsin and the Dec. 30 Holiday Bowl in San Diego, say the bowl experience is anything but a drag.

Kessler has traveled with the Trojans and played in bowl games in El Paso, Las Vegas and San Diego, where the team will play in the Holiday Bowl for the second consecutiv­e year. Not exactly glamorous bowl destinatio­ns, but Kessler is not complainin­g.

He likes the excitement created by unexpected matchups. “So many scenarios,” he says. Next season’s final college game will be played in Tampa, Fla.

Good luck to all players, coaches and fans trying to get there.

Until then, enjoy the bowl season. And pass the remote.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States