Coastal Carolina, Cincinnati headline Bowl Day snubs
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. He said the system is working exactly as expected.
“Is it broken? Depends on who is it broken for,” he said. “For the G-5’s, it is. I don’t think it was ever fixed for them. For the Power 5s and for what they’re trying to get there, it’s working out the way they want it to work out.”
Tulsa coach Philip Montgomery lobbied for the American Athletic Conference after his team lost to Cincinnati in the title game.
“I think our conference is one of the toughest conferences in the nation, top to bottom,” Montgomery said. “Every week’s going to be a battle. Everybody’s got good players. There’s good coaches in this league.
Montgomery said he felt Cincinnati deserved a spot in the playoff.
“If we’re not going to get somebody out of our conference at some point in time into the college playoff, then we’ve either got to expand it, we’ve got to do something different,” he said. “But our teams deserve the opportunity to go continue to compete.”