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During the Bowl Coalition and Bowl Alliance era, without the participation of the Big Ten and Pac 10 conferences, scheduling a definitive championship game was somewhat "hit or miss." For instance, 1994 #2 Penn State and 1997#1 Michigan were obligated to play in the Rose Bowl pursuant to the Big Ten 's contractual commitment and were therefore unable to participate in the championship game.

Since the formation of the Bowl Championship Series , there have also been several controversies regarding the formula used for selecting the participating teams. Most notably, following the 2003 season, the BCS ranking system excluded consensus No. 1 University Of Southern California from the BCS Championship Game. ''See Bowl Championship Series#BCS Controversies for a further discussion of these controversies''.

Despite their respective problems, the Bowl Coalition , Bowl Alliance , and Bowl Championship Series championship games have succeeded in producing winners that have captured or shared the National Championship in every season since 1992 .


RESULTS


Bowl Coalition/Bowl Alliance results



Bowl Championship Series results


Notes:



HISTORY

  • Bowl Coalition I (1993-1995). The SEC , Big 8 , Southwest Conference , ACC and Big East champions, Notre Dame , and two conference runner-ups from among the Big 8, SWC , ACC, Big East and Pac-10 were included. The Orange, Sugar, Cotton and Fiesta Bowls were the associated bowls. The Orange, Sugar and Cotton Bowls hosted Big 8, SEC and SWC champs, respectively. The top “host” team played the top “at-large” team in the host team’s affiliated bowl. If the top 2 teams were both “at-large”, then the Fiesta would have hosted the title game.


  • Bowl Alliance II (1996-1998). It involved the SEC, Big 12 Conference , ACC and Big East champions and two at-large teams (SWC champ in 1996, special provisions for Notre Dame). It included the Orange, Sugar and Fiesta Bowls. The championship game rotated among all three bowls. The top two teams would play in the title game.


  • Bowl Championship Series III (1999-2006). The Big Ten, Pac-10, SEC, Big 12, ACC and Big East champions and two at-large teams (special provisions for Notre Dame and non-BCS conference teams) are included. It involves the Rose, Orange, Sugar and Fiesta Bowls. The Championship game rotates among all 4 bowls. The top two teams in BCS standings play in the title game.


  • Bowl Championship Series IV (2007-2010). The Big Ten, Pac-10, SEC, Big 12, ACC and Big East champions, one non-BCS conference champion, and three at-large teams (special provisions for Notre Dame) will be included. It will involve the Rose, Orange, Sugar and Fiesta Bowls, and have a separate National Championship Game. The championship game will rotate among the sites of 4 bowls and will be played one week later. The top two teams in BCS standings will play in the title game.



FUTURE

Beginning with the 2006 College Football season, the National Championship Game will be a separate event from the host bowl played at the same site as the host one week after New Year's Day . The game's location will rotate between the four main bowl sites of Glendale, New Orleans, Miami Gardens and Pasadena.


Future sites



Potential evolution

Many critics of the Bowl Championship Series favor a full scale championship tournament with eight to sixteen teams, similar to that administered by the NCAA for its Division I-AA , Division II and Division III football championships. Others favor adopting the incremental step of adding a single post-bowl championship game between the winners of two BCS games among the top four ranked teams in the BCS standings, the so-called "plus one" option.

However, many football traditionalists strongly oppose a playoff system because of concerns that a playoff would destroy the bowl game tradition and reduce the importance of games played during the regular season. Critics of a playoff often point to the NFL where leading teams will often bench their starting players in the final few games of the regular season because a loss will cause no harm. This does not happen in the BCS because such an action would be almost certain to cost a team the chance to play for the national championship.


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