The Morning Call

Big 12 eyes up to nine bowl berths

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The bizarre nature of the college football season in the Big 12 can be summed up by the fact that TCU and Texas Tech, both having already fired their coaches, could be headed to bowl games in a few short weeks.

In fact, half the league’s 10 schools already have reached the six-win threshold after Kansas State handled Kansas and Iowa State romped past Texas last weekend. They joined powerhouse Oklahoma, which at 9-0 is eyeing a spot in the college football playoff, Oklahoma State and Baylor in ensuring they’ll be playing in the postseason.

“So excited for our guys, to be 6-3 and bowl-eligible,” said Wildcats coach Chris Klieman, whose team lost its first three Big 12 games. “It tells you an awful lot about the character and resolve of our guys.”

The Wildcats aren’t the only ones rebounding, either.

Fresh off parting with longtime coach Gary Patterson, TCU and interim coach Jerry Kill pulled off a 30-28 upset of Baylor to match Texas and West Virginia with four wins apiece.

“I’m old and I’ve been through a lot of ball games,” Kill said afterward, “and I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a team with a more deserving group of kids having to go through what they did. ... I’m just so proud of those kids.”

Now, the Horned Frogs just need to win two against Oklahoma State, Kansas and Iowa State to reach bowl eligibilit­y.

“We truly deserved that win,” TCU quarterbac­k Chandler Morris said. “We know we can compete with anyone in the country, and I feel like we’ve been defeating ourselves up to this point and this was a great statement win.”

This season has hardly gone the way Steve Sarkisian envisioned when he took over Texas, especially when the Longhorns played Oklahoma to the wire in a 55-48 loss in early October. But that began a streak of four straight losses, and now they have to pick up two wins against Kansas, West Virginia and Kansas State to make a bowl game.

Speaking of the Mountainee­rs, they looked as if they were trending up after back-to-back wins over TCU and Iowa State had evened their record. But they were humbled by the Cowboys in a 24-3 loss in Morgantown, and now the rebuilding Mountainee­rs still need a pair of wins to reach bowl-eligibilit­y.

“The game’s hard. The league’s hard,” West Virginia coach Neal Brown said. “What a difference a week makes.”

What a difference a couple of weeks make at Texas Tech.

The Red Raiders started 5-2 under embattled coach Matt Wells, but a squeaker of a loss to Kansas State gave AD Kirby Hocutt the opening necessary to fire him. Sonny Cumbie was given the job on an interim basis, but Hocutt wasted no time in hiring Baylor associate coach Joey McGuire as the full-time guy.

Cumbie will finish the regular season and any potential bowl game — yes, one more win sends the Red Raiders to a nice reward in a trying season — while McGuire will work behind the scenes until taking over next season.

So if everything plays out right, the Big 12 could send nine of its 10 teams to bowl games — with some finessing.

The league has a spot in the Sugar Bowl opposite an SEC opponent, and tie-ins to the Alamo, Cheez-It, Texas, Liberty, Guaranteed Rate, Armed Forces and First Responder bowls. That would be enough spots for eight teams.

The Sooners could win out and land in the fourteam playoff, kicking the Big 12’s runner-up to the Sugar Bowl and giving it nine spots. Otherwise, the league would need to hope another conference doesn’t fill its bowl quota.

Regardless, reaching a bowl game remains a very tangible reward for nearly all the Big 12.

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