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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, December 8, 2008

UnbeatenBoise St. settles for Poinsettia

Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Chris Petersen

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As a reward for yet another undefeated season, Boise State will be going to the Poinsettia Bowl.

If anyone's complaining, it's not the Broncos — at least not publicly.

"We're excited. We love San Diego. A lot of our players are from Southern California and this is a great, great matchup with TCU," Boise State coach Chris Petersen said.

Also yesterday, the scoffed-at ACC sent an NCAA-record 10 teams to bowl games, while Mississippi coach Houston Nutt got a chance to go the Cotton Bowl and Notre Dame's Charlie Weis learned he'll be going back to Hawai'i.

Although Arkansas went to Dallas last season, Nutt resigned in November. Weis has been to the Islands twice to woo a high school linebacker into joining the Fighting Irish, who are playing Hawai'i in the Hawai'i Bowl.

Nutt and the Rebels — who gave top-ranked Florida its only loss — will face No. 8 Texas Tech in the final game in the actual Cotton Bowl before the game moves to a shiny, new NFL field.

That send-off for the 1930s-vintage stadium will be one of six non-BCS games between teams ranked in the AP Top 25.

No. 13 Oklahoma State faces No. 15 Oregon in the Holiday Bowl; No. 16 Georgia meets No. 19 Michigan State in the Capital One; No. 22 Northwestern plays No. 25 Missouri in the Alamo; No. 18 Pittsburgh will see No. 24 Oregon State in the Sun; and No. 9 Boise State takes on the 11th-ranked Horned Frogs.

With 34 bowls, 68 of the 119 major college teams will be playing one more game. The only teams that reached the six wins needed for bowl eligibility and didn't get bids were Arkansas State and Louisiana-Lafayette of the Sun Belt Conference.

Boise State was perfect two seasons ago and made the most of it, shocking Oklahoma in a highly entertaining Fiesta Bowl.

Florida State will be making its 27th straight bowl appearance, against Wisconsin in the Champs Sports Bowl. The Seminoles inherit the longest active streak from Michigan, which had its run of 33 in a row come to an end with a 3-9 finish under first-year coach Rich Rodriguez.

In another intriguing matchup between unranked teams, Clemson will play Nebraska in the Gator and Miami will face California in the Emerald Bowl, just across San Francisco bay in the Giants' baseball stadium.

The Golden Bears are one of several teams playing what are essentially home games.

Bowl organizers were more inclined than usual to keep teams close to home because the sagging economy figures to make fans less likely to make long and costly trips to games.

Vanderbilt is back in a bowl for the first time since 1982, and the Commodores are going just down the road to the Music City Bowl.

Georgia Tech faces LSU in Atlanta's Chick-fil-A Bowl, Rice meets Western Michigan in Houston's Texas Bowl, and South Florida goes across Tampa Bay to play in the first St. Petersburg Bowl, where it will play Memphis.

Navy doesn't have far to go to play in another first-time bowl — it's just a short drive from Annapolis, Md., to play in the EagleBank Bowl at RFK Stadium in Washington.

Even the Granddaddy of Them All is going to be a home game — USC has gotten used to the short drive up the 110 freeway to Pasadena, where they'll play in their fourth straight Rose Bowl game. The No. 5 Trojans face No. 6 Penn State in a game between two one-loss teams left out of the BCS title game between Florida and Oklahoma.

Texas, which was jumped by Oklahoma in the BCS rankings and finished third, will face No. 10 Ohio State in the Fiesta, while the Orange will host Big East champion Cincinnati against ACC winner Virginia Tech.

No. 4 Alabama will get to play BCS buster Utah in the Sugar Bowl. The Utes — also a perfect 12-0 barged in to the BCS at No. 6 in the rankings, beating out Boise State to become the first team from a non-BCS conference to crash the big-money bowls a second time. Utah finished undefeated in 2004 and won the Fiesta.

AWARD

TEXAS' ORAKPO WINS NAGURSKI TROPHY

Texas defensive end Brian Orakpo won the Bronko Nagurski Trophy, awarded last night by the Charlotte (N.C.) Touchdown Club to the nation's top defensive player.

The strong and powerful 6-foot-4, 260-pound senior from Houston who ranks sixth in the nation with 10 1/2 sacks.

Orakpo arrived in Charlotte yesterday and met up with Bronko Nagurski finalists: Florida linebacker Brandon Spikes, TCU defensive end Jerry Hughes; and Wake Forest cornerback Alphonso Smith. The fifth finalist, USC linebacker Rey Maualuga, couldn't attend.

ELSEWHERE

Oklahoma: Oklahoma quarterback Sam Bradford is expected back at practice within 10 days after having surgery on his left hand yesterday. Bradford hurt his non-throwing hand against Oklahoma State in the Sooners' regular-season finale. He played Saturday in the Big 12 championship game, leading Oklahoma to a 62-21 win against Missouri.

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