The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

If college football is played, will bowls be salvaged, too?

- By Ralph D. Russo

College football leaders are in the process of piecing together plans for a regular season during the COVID-19 pandemic.

If it is possible to play, everyone anticipate­s there will be disruption­s, added expenses and loads of stress just to get through it.

So how motivated will schools be to tack on a postseason game after all that? Especially one that doesn’t determine a national title?

“You’ve got to think they’ll be such a heightened sensitivit­y to adding another opportunit­y that doesn’t contribute to something else,” Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick said. “I imagine the top bowls will want to try and still do it. But you’ve got to wonder if the schools will be willing to play. You made it through the regular season and now your going to add another event that adds complexity and cost.”

There are more bowl games scheduled for the coming season than ever before in major college football: 42, not including the College Football Playoff championsh­ip. Less than five months away from bowl season, most of them don’t even have a date locked in yet. If the regular season can be saved, can the postseason be salvaged, too?

“I have yet to hear one thought on the part of any of the conference­s that they would have a regular season and not have a postseason,” said Nick Carparelli, the new executive director of the Football Bowl Associatio­n.

At the top of the postseason hierarchy is the playoff.

The semifinals are scheduled to to be played Jan. 1 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, and te Sugar Bowl in New Orleans. The championsh­ip game is set for Jan. 11 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

As of now, none of that has changed, CFP executive director Bill Hancock said.

“This is an event you can’t just pick up and easily move to a different time window,” Hancock said.

Then there are the other New Year’s Six games. The Cotton Bowl in Arlington, Texas, is scheduled for Dec. 30. The Peach Bowl in Atlanta is set for early afternoon New Year’s Day, leading into the semifinal games. The Fiesta Bowl in Glendale, Arizona, and Orange Bowl in South Florida are scheduled for Jan. 2.

Those games, along with the semifinals, are part of 12-year, $5.6 billion media rights deal with ESPN that pays about $470 million annually. Most of the money ends up with the Power Five conference­s, though some trickles down to FCS.

“We’re going to be as flexible as they need us to be,” Peach Bowl chief executive officer Gary Stokan said. “If they need us to move back two weeks, we’ll move back two weeks.”

Fiesta Bowl CEO Mike Nealy said bowls of all shapes and sizes will need to be flexible this year.

“From our standpoint, we know that dates could change,” said Nealy, whose organizing group also runs the Cactus Bowl played at Chase Field in Phoenix.

According the website FBSchedule­s.com, dates and times have not been locked in yet for 31 majorcolle­ge bowl games.

Those could start falling into place soon with conference­s expected to roll out new regular-season schedules as soon as next week. The Big Ten and Pac12 have already said they will play only conference games.

The other Power Five conference­s appear to be moving toward playing mostly conference games. That causes issues with the bowl selection process from the CFP down to the Cure Bowl, which matches Group of Five teams in Orlando, Florida.

Fewer nonconfere­nce games will make it more challengin­g for the playoff selection committee to pick a four-team field and rank teams to create the other New Year’s Six bowl matchups.

“The committee’s job fundamenta­lly hasn’t changed,” Hancock said.

As for the rest of the bowls, if teams are mostly playing within their conference­s, with fewer opportunit­ies to pad records against lesser competitio­n, it will make it more difficult for 84 teams to finish the season with at least a .500 record, the minimum for bowl eligibilit­y.

The NCAA already has contingenc­ies to allow teams with losing records to play in bowl games. That might need to be reassessed if the number of games played fluctuates from conference to conference and team to team.

“Is there something else we define as a deserving team?”said West Virginia athletic director Shane Lyons, who leads the NCAA’s football oversight committee.

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