USA TODAY Sports projects Gators to make this bowl ahead of 2022 season

Just ahead of the first full week of the college football season, USA Today took a shot at projecting how each bowl game might shape up.

With just four days left until Florida’s 2022 season officially kicks off, there’s still time for experts to lock in their preseason predictions before being proven laughably wrong or triumphantly correct at the end of the year.

USA Today’s Erick Smith released his preseason bowl game projections on Tuesday and has the Florida Gators playing the Iowa Hawkeyes in the Music City Bowl on December 31. A matchup against a Big Ten team isn’t the worst draw for Florida, assuming they aren’t in contention for one of the New Year’s Six games.

The consensus heading into the year is that Florida will be bowl eligible but nowhere near elite, so this might be one of the better prognostications the Gators receive. Iowa is ranked just outside the Associated Press Top 25 to start the year.

Florida has a 3-1 record against Iowa, most recently beating the Hawkeyes 30-3 in the 2017 Gator Bowl (end of the 2016 season). A repeat performance in Nashville would be an encouraging way to end the first year of the Billy Napier era.

Over the summer, College Football News projected Florida to play Penn State in the Citrus Bowl, and ESPN picked the Gators to match up with Miami in the Gator Bowl or Kansas State in the Liberty Bowl.

[mm-video type=video id=01g9k1zfm6k09v4z56b0 playlist_id=01eqbz250mdknqvm5z player_id=01eqbvp13nn1gy6hd4 image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01g9k1zfm6k09v4z56b0/01g9k1zfm6k09v4z56b0-6b3d37b0ad3549d7d94c6ab6e64777dd.jpg]

[lawrence-related id=90636,90601,90630,90526,90518]

[listicle id=90570]

[listicle id=90345]

[listicle id=90158]

[listicle id=90044]

Follow us @GatorsWire on Twitter and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.

Let us know your thoughts and comment on this story below. Join the conversation today!

Sporting News makes Penn State bowl prediction for 2022 season

The Sporting News bowl projections send Penn State to face an SEC opponent in a new bowl game

As August begins, our itch for college football is growing uncontrollably. Penn State opened fall camp on Monday and programs around the country are hitting the practice field with the hope of having a successful season in the fall. For Penn State, the goal is to rebound and be more of a player in the Big Ten title race than the past two seasons have netted. But with the start of fall camp comes updated bowl projections from some of college football’s finest experts.

Bill Bender of The Sporting News took some time on Monday to provide his fresh batch of bowl projections for the upcoming college football season, including a possible bowl destination for the Nittany Lions. Unfortunately, Bender doesn’t see Penn State playing in the College Football Playoff or a New Years Six bowl game. Bender doesn’t even see Penn State laying in a traditional January 1 bowl game.

Instead, Bender’s bowl projection for Penn State has the Nittany Lions heading to Nashville, Tennessee to play in this season’s Music City Bowl on Dec. 31. Bender’s bowl projection for The Sporting News pairs Penn State up against LSU from the SEC in the Music City Bowl, which would make for a fun New Years Eve matchup.

Penn State has never played in the Music City Bowl, although the game had bowl tie-ins with the Big East, ACC, and SEC for the majority of its history. The Big Ten, replacing the Big East, had a four-year stint with the Music City Bowl from 2002 through 2006 before being replaced by the ACC. The Big Ten and SEC are paired up against each other in the Music City Bowl in a contract that spans from 2020 through the 2025 season.

Head coach [autotag]James Franklin[/autotag] is no stranger to the Music City Bowl, of course. In 2012, Franklin coached Vanderbilt to a 38-24 victory over NC State in the Music City Bowl to finish with a top 25 ranking for the Commodores. Franklin’s successful 2012 season with Vanderbilt helped fuel his candidacy to become Penn State’s next head coach following Bill O’Brien’s departure to the NFL.

Purdue won last season’s Music City Bowl with a 48-45 victory in overtime over Tennessee. Penn State opens the 2022 season on Thursday, September 1 at Purdue.

[listicle id=21681]

[lawrence-related id=21718,21716,21714,21712,21710,21708]

Follow Kevin McGuire on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook.

Follow Nittany Lions Wire on Twitter and like us on Facebook for continuing Penn State coverage and discussion. Let us know your thoughts by leaving a comment on this story below. Join the conversation today.

Which bowl game does College Football News project the Iowa Hawkeyes to in 2022?

Let’s talk postseason! College Football News projects Iowa to make a bowl game, but which one?

The season might not start for a couple more months, but why not start thinking about the postseason?! Much like Roman Bellic from Grand Theft Auto IV, bowling is always on our minds, but which bowl should Iowa Hawkeye fans set their sights on? The good folks at College Football News recently gave their predictions for every Big Ten team’s bowl game for the 2022 season.

The Hawkeyes indeed were selected to go bowling this upcoming year, an honor that unfortunately will elude fellow Big Ten rivals Northwestern, Illinois, Indiana, and Rutgers. However, they are not on course to make the Rose Bowl like Michigan or contend for the national title like Ohio State. Instead, Hawkeye Nation should start to center their New Year’s Eve plans around Nashville, Tenn.

Currently, College Football News has Iowa facing off against Ole Miss in the Transperfect Music City Bowl against Ole Miss. It’s an intriguing matchup on the surface. Ole Miss has been one of the best offenses in college football over the past several seasons, while the Hawkeyes bring back plenty of key pieces to one of college football’s stingiest defenses in 2021. The Rebels are breaking in USC transfer quarterback Jaxson Dart in 2022.

While it doesn’t have the prestige of a College Football Playoff game or the Rose Bowl, the Music City Bowl does have one of the higher payouts amongst the bowl games… so there’s something at least. It’s also without the novelty of the Cheez-It Bowl or the Duke’s Mayo Bowl, but that just means you’re safe from a mayo bath this time Kirk Ferentz.

The Music City Bowl, played between SEC and Big Ten teams, has a history of upsets. That upset history is mostly from the early 2000s, but in recent years it has become one of the most exciting and tightly contested games in the postseason slate. Last year’s iteration between Purdue and Tennessee, a 48-45 overtime thriller, has an argument for the best postseason game last season even with a very controversial ending. Jaylen Wright 100% was in.

Iowa was supposed to be in the 2020 Music City Bowl, but the game was canceled due to COVID-19 issues within the Missouri program. Last year, Iowa lost to Kentucky 20-17 in the Vrbo Citrus Bowl. They hold a 20-17-1 overall bowl record and have gone 9-9 in bowl games under Iowa head football coach Kirk Ferentz.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01fvdcxf97xrgg1awc player_id=none image=https://hawkeyeswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Jacob on Twitter: @Jacobkeppen

Let us know your thoughts, and comment on this story below. Join the conversation today.

Full 2022-23 Big Ten bowl game and College Football Playoff schedule

Here is the entire Big Ten bowl schedule for the 2022 season.

The Big Ten officially confirmed a good number of kickoff times for throughout the duration of the 2022 college football season. Nestled in the release was a reminder about the Big Ten’s bowl lineup for the upcoming season that includes eight direct bowl tie-ins and the possibility of more bowl spots for the conference if things go well this season.

The Big Ten will take part in three New Years Day bowl games, which due to the NFL schedule will actually take place on January 2. The crown jewel of the Big Ten’s bowl lineup, of course, is the Rose Bowl Game, which remains in its traditional timeslot while the Sugar Bowl was forced to move to a noon kickoff to avoid a scheduling conflict with the NFL’s Monday Night Football programming. Yes, the Rose Bowl will serve as a leading for Monday Night Football to help ring in 2023.

The Big Ten will remain a part of the new year tradition with spots in the Tampa Bay Bowl and the Citrus Bowl in addition to the Rose Bowl.

Each of the Big Ten’s bowl games will be played after Christmas, although the possibility of a surplus of bowl teams could allow for a Big Ten team to play prior to Christmas if a bowl is in need of filling a spot.

The College Football Playoff is also once again playing its national semifinal games on New Year’s Eve, on Saturday, Dec. 31. This year’s playoff games will be held in the Peach Bowl and the Fiesta Bowl. The College Football Playoff national championship game is scheduled for Monday, Jan. 9 to bring a close to another season of college football.

Which of these bowl games will Penn State be playing in? We’ll have to wait and see. For now, here is the full Big Ten bowl lineup, plus the playoff schedule.

Two Tennessee games ranked as top-100 contests in 2021

Two Tennessee games ranked as top-100 contests during the 2021 college football season.

Tennessee finished its 2021 season with a 7-6 (4-4 SEC) record under first-year head coach Josh Heupel.

Two Tennessee games were ranked as top-100 contests during the 2021 college football season by ESPN.

ESPN ranked the Vols’ 48-45 overtime loss to Purdue in the TransPerfect Music City Bowl as the No. 14 game during the 2021 college football season.

Tennessee’s 31-26 loss to Ole Miss at Neyland Stadium on Oct. 16 is ranked as the No. 12 game.

The complete list can be viewed here.

Follow us at @VolsWire on Twitter and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of University of Tennessee athletics. Let us know your thoughts, comment on this story below. Join the conversation today.

[vertical-gallery id=48491]

[vertical-gallery id=52892]

Mike Denbrock’s offenses through the years

A look back at Mike Denbrock’s offenses

At this point, this is not breaking news, but Mike Denbrock will be calling the plays for LSU in 2022. It had been speculated for a while given the history between Denbrock and Kelly, but after Alabama put an end to Cincinnati’s season, it became official.

Denbrock has been around the game for a long time. He’s 57 years old and hails from Michigan. Denbrock and Kelly go all the way back to the late ’80s where they both got their starts in coaching at Grand Valley State.

Debrock has never coached in the SEC before and LSU fans may be unfamiliar with his offenses, so today we will take a by-the-numbers look at what we might be able to expect from Denbrock’s unit.

Mike Denbrock’s first time calling plays at a high level was at Notre Dame in 2014. LSU and Notre Dame actually met that year, when the Irish downed the Tigers in the Music City Bowl.

Notre Dame’s 2014 offense wasn’t special, but they were good. The Irish ranked 18th in the country in touchdowns, but only 40th in points thanks to some bad field goal kicking, which doesn’t fall on Denbrock.

It was an offense that ranked 15th in third-down conversion rate and 45th in red zone touchdown rate.

Unlike a lot of Notre Dame offenses in recent years, they were held back by their rushing game. The Irish were below average in most rushing categories.

Through the air, Notre Dame found more success. Denbrock was able to take advantage of having a talent like Will Fuller on the outside and his unit ranked top 25 in most passing categories.

Denbrock was only the OC at Notre Dame for one year before sliding to other positions on the staff. To get a bigger sample size, we have to look at Cincinnati, where Denbrock had been the OC since 2017.

The year before Denbrock’s arrival, Cincinnati was bad. The program was left in bad shape and head coach Luke Fickell had a long rebuild in front of him.

In 2017 under Denbrock, the offense showed some improvement, especially in the running game. They were still not by any stretch what one would consider good. But they did not sit outside the top 100 in most categories such as they did the year before.

2018 is where they really made the jump. It was Desmond Ridder’s first year as a starter, and it was now Fickell’s program.

Cincinnati was pretty much a top 25 offense across the board. Ridder wasn’t the most prolific passer, but he proved competent with his arm and legs.

The Bearcats ranked 7th in the country in third-down conversion rate, an area LSU has really struggled with outside of 2019. Denbrock’s unit this year also showed some explosiveness, something his groups haven’t always done.

In 2019, the passing game took a step back. The offensive line was one of the worst in the country in pass protection. Ridder only completed about 55% of his passes, saw his touchdown total go down and his interception total increase. The Bearcats had also lost their top receiver from the year before.

Cincinnati’s inability to create an effective pass game in 2019 with a bad offensive line should concern LSU. It’s no secret LSU’s had issues with that position the last couple of years and it’s no guarantee it’ll be better next year. That is certainly something to watch.

People may be more familiar with what happened with Cincinnati in 2020 and 2021. They were one of the biggest stories in college football with their only losses coming to Georgia and Alabama.

In 2020, Denbrock had them back closer to what they looked like in 2018. They just lacked some explosiveness.

2021 might have been the best year yet for their offense. They were balanced, proving they could be near the top of the country in efficiency in both the pass and run games.

It was Ridder’s fourth year in Denbrock’s system, and he put together his most complete season yet.

The Bearcats had a solid roster all-around, but it seems like they never had that standout receiver that can elevate an offense to the next level. At LSU, Denbrock will take over a receiver room that has a few guys with that type of potential.

Bottom Line

Denbrock has proven to be a competent play-caller. He’s never run a high-flying offense like some people may want to see, but this is a safe hire.

That doesn’t mean it will be good enough. These days, offenses need to be elite to win championships. They need to be able to spread it out and keep up with whatever Heisman contender Nick Saban has at quarterback.

It’s fair to ask whether Denbrock is the guy that can bring that offense to LSU. He’s never had the skill position talent as he does now, and he’ll have a sixth-year quarterback in the room in Myles Brennan. If he can take advantage of that, LSU may see immediate improvement on the offense.

Music City Bowl: Tennessee-Purdue ranked second-best bowl game

Music City Bowl: Tennessee-Purdue ranked as the second-best bowl game

Tennessee (7-6, 4-4 SEC) lost in overtime to Purdue (9-4, 6-3 Big Ten), 48-45, in the TransPerfect Music City Bowl Dec. 30.

College Football News ranked the Tennessee-Purdue contest as the second-best bowl game this season.

College Football News explains why the TransPerfect Music City Bowl finished as the No. 2 overall bowl game.

Tons of offense, tons of momentum swings, tons of drama, tons of energy, tons of fans in the stands, and one whopper of a controversy to close, this was what you want in a bowl game.

Tennessee was up 21-7, Purdue scored 16 straight points in the second quarter, the two teams traded shots back and forth in a wild second half, and then came the finish. Tennessee running back Jaylen Wright was stuffed on fourth down just before the goal line, kept creeping, got the ball in the end zone, and forward momentum stopped. Purdue ball, field goal, ball game.

With close to 1,400 yards of total offense helped by five touchdowns of over 40 yards, it was one of the highest-octane bowls of all-time.

The complete bowl game rankings can be viewed here.

[vertical-gallery id=52892]

Tennessee players, coaches thank Vol fans for support during 2021 season

Tennessee players and coaches thank Vol fans for support during the 2021 season following the Music City Bowl.

The 2021 season has concluded for Tennessee (7-6, 4-4 SEC) under first-year head coach Josh Heupel.

The Vols dropped a 48-45 overtime decision to Purdue in the TransPerfect Music City Bowl.

In 2021, the Vols recorded wins over Bowling Green, Tennessee Tech, Missouri, South Carolina, Kentucky, South Alabama and Vanderbilt, while suffering losses to Pittsburgh, Florida, Ole Miss, Alabama, Georgia and Purdue.

Following the conclusion of the 2021 campaign, Tennessee coaches and players thanked Vol fans for their support.

Below is a look at coaches and players thanking Tennessee fans.

Cedric Tillman becomes Tennessee’s first 1,000-yard receiver since 2012

Cedric Tillman becomes Tennessee’s first 1,000-yard receiver since Justin Hunter in 2012.

6-foot-3, 215-pound redshirt junior wide receiver Cedric Tillman totaled 64 receptions for 1,081 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns during the 2021 season.

He produced the first 1,000-yard receiving season for Tennessee since 2012.

Tennessee’s last 1,000-yard receiver was Justin Hunter in 2012. Hunter totaled 73 receptions, 1,083 receiving yards and nine touchdowns during the 2012 campaign.

Tillman announced Dec. 23 he will return to Tennessee for the 2022 season.

The Vols are slated to kickoff its 2022 season against Ball State at Neyland Stadium on Sept. 3.

Tennessee’s 2022 football schedule: Opponents, dates announced

Follow us at @VolsWire on Twitter and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of University of Tennessee athletics.

[vertical-gallery id=52892]

Tennessee-Purdue: Game balls

Game balls for Tennessee against Purdue in the Music City Bowl.

Tennessee (7-6, 4-4 SEC) lost to Purdue (9-4, 6-3 Big Ten), 48-45 in overtime, in the TransPerfect Music City Bowl.

Following the Tennessee-Purdue game, Vols Wire issues game balls for top performers on offense, defense and special teams.

Offense: Hendon Hooker

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire
  • 26-of-41 passing, 378 passing yards, five touchdowns
  • 18 rushing attempts, 56 rushing yards

NEXT: Game balls for Tennessee against Purdue (defense)