Mississippi St., Northwestern to Gator Bowl

Mississippi St., Northwestern to Gator Bowl

Published Dec. 2, 2012 7:15 p.m. ET

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- The Gator Bowl
ended up with a less-than-marquee matchup thanks to the success of the
Southeastern Conference and the NCAA sanctions surrounding two Big Ten
programs.


The New Year's Day bowl in Jacksonville
landed Northwestern and Mississippi State, two teams with little or no
national prominence.


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The Wildcats (9-3) and Bulldogs (8-4)
accepted invitations Sunday, leaving the New Year's Day bowl game in
Jacksonville faced with the challenge of selling tickets and generating a
television audience.


Florida and Ohio State headlined the
Gator Bowl last year, a matchup that featured Urban Meyer's former team
against his future team.


This time, the bowl wasn't nearly as fortunate.


Sure, Northwestern is playing on New
Year's Day for the third time in four years. But the Wildcats aren't
known for filling stadiums or bringing buzz. The Gator Bowl would have
been in much better shape had Big Ten powers Ohio State (12-0) and Penn
State (8-4) been bowl eligible. And Wisconsin upsetting Nebraska in the
Big Ten title game shuffled the bowl lineup, too.


"A lot of things changed last night," Gator Bowl president Rick Catlett said.


Mississippi State is back in
Jacksonville for the second time in three years. In 2010, coach Dan
Mullen and the Bulldogs were one of the surprises of the SEC. This time,
though, MSU limps in having lost four its last five games.


With Alabama (12-1) and Florida (11-1)
getting berths in the Bowl Championship Series, that left the Gator with
the No. 7 team from the powerful league instead of the sixth. And
that's a significant drop-off considering the top six teams won at least
10 games and have some of the league's largest fan bases.


The best angle the Gator Bowl seemingly
had going Sunday was the relationship between Northwestern coach Pat
Fitzgerald and Mississippi State's Mullen.


They got to know each other pretty well
while recruiting the Houston area nearly a decade ago and have stayed
in contact since.


"It's going to fun," Fitzgerald said.
"You always love to compete, and when you get to compete against a
friend, it kind of makes it that much more special. ... It's not about
us. It's about the young me in our program."


Fitzgerald and Mullen said they rarely talk about schematics even though both teams run spread offenses.


"I've called him on a lot of different
occasions just about different questions and how to handle different
situations, how you set up your schedule and all the things that go on,
all the different issues you have to deal with on a daily basis as a
head coach," Mullen said. "Pat's somebody that has always been gracious
enough to help me out and help us when we had questions or ideas."


Don't expect Mullen to share any tips on playing well in Jacksonville, though.


The Bulldogs beat Michigan 52-14 in 2011, one of Mullen's more significant wins in his four seasons at Mississippi State.


"I think the challenge of playing a
team we've never played before is a great experience for our guys,"
Mullen said. "That lack of familiarity with the two teams makes it
pretty special."

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