stinger78
Jacket by the grace of God.
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2008
- Messages
- 12,542
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Had the BCS existed in 1990, would Tech have made the National Championship game?
Had the BCS existed in 1990, would Tech have made the National Championship game?
We would have made it with the BCS or even with the old Bowl Coalition that went into effect just a couple years after 1990. The SEC, ACC, SWC, Big East, Big Eight, Notre Dame () and the big bowls of the time that had tie ins with these conferences agreed to match up 1 vs. 2 whenever possible within the existing contracts; that would have assured us against Colorado in the Orange back then.
Two things prevented us from playing them in 1990: the contract the ACC had for a few years with the Citrus Bowl, and the fact that all the bowls snagged up their matchups with several games left to play. That's how the Sugar ended up with a 4 loss VIrginia team that year.
Had the BCS existed in 1990, would Tech have made the National Championship game?
The Citrus Bowl tie-in had an escape clause. If a team was ranked #4 or higher on a certain date (I believe it was the first Monday in November), it could get out of the Citrus Bowl contract and go to any available bowl. We were ranked #5 on the date of reckoning.
Even had we qualified for the escape clause, we could not have played Colorado, since they were locked in to the Orange Bowl and the Orange Bowl had already invited Notre Dame at that time. The best we would have gotten was the Sugar Bowl slot UVa nabbed.
BTW, the only reason the escape clause existed is because Clemson insisted on it.
Had the BCS existed in 1990, would Tech have made the National Championship game?
Was the citrus bowl a sell out?
Was the citrus bowl a sell out?