Pac-12 to play Big Ten in Holiday, Fight Hunger bowls
The Big Ten and Pac-12 are strengthening their postseason ties with a pair of matchups in California bowl games.
The Holiday Bowl in San Diego and the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl in San Francisco announced six-year agreements Monday for teams from each conference to play each other starting in 2014.
Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott and Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany said the new configuration will also help avoid repeat matchups and teams returning to the same region frequently.
While the Pac-12 has a slotted selection order, Scott said the conference has "mechanisms" in place to allow for flexibility. Delany, who had previously talked openly about wanting the Big Ten to play more postseason games in California, said the Big Ten is not locking in a selection order with its bowl partners but will have three tiers of bowl games in which teams can be placed depending on their regular-season records.
"We're working with the bowls to create what I would describe as a process for selection and approval by each bowl subject to a series of parameters," Delany said. "We're going to really want different teams in different bowls."
The agreements shuffle the postseason landscape for both conferences.
The Big Ten replaces the Big 12 in the Holiday Bowl, where the Pac-12 already had an affiliation. The Fight Hunger Bowl will have the Pac-12's fourth selection after the College Football Playoff (of which the Rose Bowl is a part of), the Alamo Bowl in San Antonio, Texas, and the Holiday Bowl.
Scott said his focus in negotiations with bowls was about building markets that appeal to Pac-12 fans, many of whom live in San Diego and the San Francisco Bay Area. He also wanted to build upon established relationships with bowls and conferences.
The Fight Hunger Bowl, which is moving from the Giants' home at AT&T
Park to the 49ers' new stadium in Santa Clara in 2014, had been sixth.
The Big Ten is not locking in a selection order with its bowl partners
in the hopes of keeping the process flexible and giving more teams a
chance to play in more places.
"We felt that we had great bowl arrangements, great partnerships in the right markets for our teams, for our fans," Scott said. "So we looked at this process as one of optimizing our bowl arrangements going forward. In each the Holiday Bowl and Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl, we feel like we've done that."
The Fight Hunger Bowl has had tie-ins with the Atlantic Coast Conference, the service academies and BYU over the years. If BYU is eligible this season, the Cougars will play a Pac-12 team in the final Fight Hunger Bowl played at AT&T Park, one of baseball's best venues but one that has odd sightlines and configurations for football. If not, an ACC team is next in line.
"Our objective entering negotiations for the next bowl cycle was to
elevate the game," Fight Hunger Bowl executive director Gary Cavalli
said in a statement. "Specifically, we wanted to move up in the Pac-12
and secure the highest-quality opponent possible. We're thrilled that
we've been able to achieve both goals. With a Pac-12 vs. Big Ten matchup
and a new world-class stadium, we've positioned our game very well for
the future."
The new agreements also solidify the Holiday Bowl's place in the upper tier of each conference's selection process.
Bruce Binkowski, executive director of the Holiday Bowl, said the deal will have a strong economic impact on the San Diego area and help answer any questions potential sponsors had about the event's stability. He said Bridgepoint Education chose not to renew its sponsorship rights on the event a few weeks ago and bowl officials are searching for a new partner.