Morning Sun

Coastal Carolina is 11-0, but will not play in New Year’s Day Bowl

- By Cliff Brunt

The Coastal Carolina Chanticlee­rs did everything asked of them and then some.

Coastal played 11 games during a pandemic that wreaked havoc on schedules nationwide and won them all. The Chanticlee­rs even added unbeaten BYU late in the season on short notice and pulled out a victory in one of the season’s most exciting games.

That wasn’t enough for the Sun Belt co- champions to even get close to the College Football Playoff. The Chanticlee­rs were No. 12 in the rankings released on Sunday.

Cincinnati got snubbed, too. The Bearcats defeated Tulsa on Saturday night in the American Athletic Conference championsh­ip game to remain undefeated, yet the Bearcats finished No. 8 in the standings.

Once again, Group of Five teams have no representa­tion in the College Football Playoff. That’s been the case every year since the current format was introduced for the 2014 season.

“If a G-5 team wasn’t going to make it this year, I don’t know if they’re ever going to make it, just because of all the circumstan­ces,” Coastal Carolina coach Jamey Chadwell said.

Cincinnati was rewarded with a New Year’s Six game -- the Bearcats will play Georgia in the Peach Bowl. But Coastal was left out of the top-tier games. The Chanticlee­rs will play Liberty in the Cure Bowl on Dec. 26.

Chadwell called not getting a New Year’s Six bid “disappoint­ing.”

“I thought this year they might think differentl­y because this

year, outside of the top four, maybe the top six -- we’ll say top six -- our resume, Cincinnati’s resume, was just as good as everybody else’s,” he said. “I thought maybe in this year, maybe

they would put two G- 5’s together. Let us and Cincinnati play each other because the eye test was such a big deal. Let’s see what happens in that game.”

It wasn’t just the Group of Five teams that got bruised. No. 5 Texas A& M, with only a loss to topranked Alabama and seven straight wins in the rugged Southeaste­rn Conference, finishined No. 5 in the playoff rankings. The SEC often gets the benefit of the doubt, but not this time.

Texas A& M quarterbac­k Kellen Mond took to social media to voice his disappoint­ment.

“All of these SEC teams that are “MEDIOCRE” in the media’s eyes would run the table in some of these other leagues,” he tweeted. “Only a few teams out of the SEC can really play in the SEC.”

Texas A& M got a pretty good consolatio­n prize: The Aggies will play North Carolina in the Orange Bowl.

That’s the kind of bowl bid Chadwell thought Coastal deserved.

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