I'll stand corrected, but I think I've gotten this about right.UK Peregrine wrote:Is that right? I thought the NCAA ruled a team must have a winning record in an 11-game regular season this year. I assumed a 6-5 team would be bowl eligible despite the outcome of a championship game. Does anyone know for sure concerning this season?Schadenfreude wrote: But backing in -- and then losing -- would leave Bowling Green 6-6. The Falcons wouldn't even be eligible for a bowl game at that point, much less desirable.
Next year however, a 6-6 team would for sure be allowed to get into a bowl game though, correct?
Previously, the rule was that 6-6 teams could go to bowl games if their league had a contract with a bowl game that could not otherwise be met. This was a temporary rule that went along with the decision to experiment with 12-game seasons, depending on how the calendar fell.
When the NCAA decided to permanently go to 12-game seasons, I believe they also got rid of that temporary rule.
As it stands, as far as I know, 6-6 does not qualify. The NCAA may come back to that rule and tinker with it. But I'm not aware that they have.
Another possibility is that a division champion could petition the NCAA for an exemption -- just as 5-6 North Texas did successfully in 2001 when they won the Sun Belt and Nevada did in 1992 when they won the Big West (the Wolf Pack lacked enough I-A wins).
But it would be a moot point. The MAC's bowl games would invite someone else.


