Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Cash on the line with 2010 college football bowl schedule

Cash at stake with 2010 college football bowl schedule

The college football bowl plan is a large deal. There is much more involved within the college football bowl plan. The amount of money involved within the college bowl system makes it tough for making any changes. You will find calling to change the system, but it likely will not occur anytime soon. Article resource – 2010-2011 College football bowl schedule pulls in huge money by Money Blog Newz.

Final plan for 2010 bowl matchup

The bowl matchup's full list for 2010 is out. It is completed as well. From December 18 to January 10, 2011, the 2010 college football bowl plan will start at 2 p.m. Eastern time. These bowl matchups pit various college football teams from dozens of conferences against one another. The NCAA Division I Football season winner could be decided in the BCS National Championship Game.

There will be lots of cash going into the 2010 and 2011 college football schedule for the bowl

College football is, put mildly, large money. Not only for the colleges involved, but also for television networks and advertisers. The way business could be is what you’ll figure out by looking at the names of the 2010 college football bowls. You’ll see things like the "Tostitos Bowl" and the "Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl." The "Rose Bowl presented by Citi" and "Little Caesars Pizza" bowl are both there too. If you wanted to be a sponsor of a game, you'd have to pay a ton. Millions are spent on it. From $750,000 to $17 million is paid to every team for the football games.

Many say the college football bowl schedule needs transforming

All of the money is good for all the players behind the football teams. This is important within the football bowl game system if it’s going to work. The NCAA sport is very different from others in the system. It is the only one that does not put winners against winners in its system. The win-loss ratio of teams is taken into account along with computer rankings and conference championships. This is how the college bowl system works. Many individuals are calling for a change to make it fair for smaller teams to have the chance of winning the college bowl. With all the cash and players involved though, a change in unlikely.

Articles cited

Wikipedia

wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowl_Championship_Series

ESPN

espn.go.com/blog/ncfnation/post/_/id/22110/2010-11-bowl-schedule



No comments: