Conference USA Football Championship Game

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Conference USA Football Championship Game
Conference Football Championship
210px
Sport College football
Conference Conference USA
Current stadium Rotates yearly to home site of team in game
Played 2005–present
Last contest 2015
Current champion Western Kentucky
Most championships Tulsa, UCF, East Carolina (2)
TV partner(s) ESPN2, ABC
Official website ConferenceUSA.CSTV.com Football

The Conference USA Football Championship Game is an annual postseason college football game played to determine the champion of Conference USA (C-USA). From 1996 to 2004, the champion of Conference USA was determined by regular season record. In 2005, following the division of the conference into East and West Divisions and an expansion to twelve members, the conference began holding a championship game between the two division winners. The team with the better regular season record serves as the host team. From 2005 through 2010, C-USA was the only FBS conference not to have its championship game at a neutral site. Since then, several other leagues have followed C-USA's lead. The Mountain West Conference, which expanded to 12 football members in 2013, holds its championship game at the home field of the division champion with the higher ranking, as determined by the BCS rankings in 2013 and the College Football Playoff selection committee since then. The American Athletic Conference, which expanded to 12 football members in 2015, is holding its championship game at the home field of the division champion with the better conference record. After the Pac-12 expanded to 12 teams in 2011, it began holding its championship game at the home of the team with the better record, but changed to a neutral site in 2014.

The first C-USA Championship Game was played on December 3, 2005 between Tulsa and UCF, with Tulsa winning 44–27. It was held at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, which was then UCF's home field.

Each year, the game has been televised live on ESPN College Football. In the 2006 season, the game was moved from Saturday afternoon to Friday night. In 2011 the game was on ABC.

The winner of the C-USA Championship customarily receives a berth to play in the Liberty Bowl. However, the Liberty Bowl is not contractually obligated to choose the game's winner. If the C-USA champion finishes as the highest ranked non-power conference champion (as ranked by the College Football Playoff selection committee), it would receive a bid to a New Year's Six bowl game (Fiesta, Cotton, Chick-Fil-A, Orange, Sugar, Rose). Houston almost made it to a BCS game in 2011, but fell to Southern Miss in the conference championship game. The loser of the C-USA championship game receives a bid in one of C-USA's six other bowl berths.[1] Historically the C-USA runner up played in the GoDaddy.com Bowl against a team from the MAC, but C-USA's ties with that bowl ended in 2009.

Past winners

A view of the kickoff of the 2005 game

Conference USA champions (1996–2004)

  • AP final rankings shown, following bowl games
Season Champion(s) Conf.
record
Overall
record
Bowl result
1996 Houston 4-1 7-5 lost Liberty Bowl
Southern Miss 4-1 8-3
1997 #22 Southern Miss 6-0 9-3 won Liberty Bowl
1998 #7 Tulane 6-0 12-0 won Liberty Bowl
1999 #14 Southern Miss 6-0 9-3 won Liberty Bowl
2000 Louisville 6-1 9-3 lost Liberty Bowl
2001 #17 Louisville 6-1 11-2 won Liberty Bowl
2002 #23 TCU 6-2 11-2 won Liberty Bowl
Cincinnati 6-2 7-7 lost New Orleans Bowl
2003 Southern Miss 8-0 9-4 lost Liberty Bowl
2004 #6 Louisville 8-0 11-1 won Liberty Bowl

Conference USA Championship Game (since 2005)

Season West Score East Site Attendance Game notes
2005 Tulsa 44–27 UCF Citrus Bowl • (Orlando, FL) 51,978 Notes
2006 Houston 34–20 Southern Miss Robertson Stadium • (Houston, TX) 31,818 Notes
2007 Tulsa 25–44 UCF Bright House Networks Stadium • (Orlando, FL) 44,128 Notes
2008 Tulsa 24–27 East Carolina Skelly Field at H.A. Chapman Stadium • (Tulsa, OK) 22,740 Notes
2009 #21 Houston 32–38 East Carolina Dowdy–Ficklen Stadium • (Greenville, NC) 33,048 Notes
2010 SMU 7–17 #21 UCF Bright House Networks Stadium • (Orlando, FL) 41,045 Notes
2011 #6 Houston 28–49 #24 Southern Miss Robertson Stadium • (Houston, TX) 32,413 Notes
2012 Tulsa 33–27 UCF Skelly Field at H.A. Chapman Stadium • (Tulsa, OK) 17,635 Notes
2013 Rice 41–24 Marshall Rice Stadium • (Houston, TX)[2] 20,247 Notes
2014 Louisiana Tech 23–26 Marshall Joan C. Edwards Stadium • (Huntington, WV) 23,711 Notes
2015 Southern Miss 28–45 Western Kentucky Houchens Industries–L. T. Smith Stadium • (Bowling Green, KY) 16,823 Notes

Game notes

  • 2005: The game was advertised as Conference USA Championship Presented by Xbox 360. Following the victory, Tulsa received 3 votes in the AP Poll, but did not reach the top 25. Following a victory in the Liberty Bowl, Tulsa received 34 votes in the AP Poll, but still did not reach the top 25, ranking 27th overall.
  • 2006: *The game was advertised as Conference USA Championship Presented by Aéropostale. Following the victory, Houston received 21 votes in the AP Poll, but did not reach the top 25, ranking 29th. Houston did not receive any votes in the final poll.
  • 2007: The game was advertised as the Bright House Networks Conference USA Championship. UCF's Kevin Smith rushed for 284 yards, bringing his season total to 2,448, which stands as the second-most single season rushing yards in NCAA history. Following the victory, UCF received 35 votes in the AP Poll, but did not reach the top 25, ranking 27th.
  • Through 2008, no team entered or left the game ranked in any major poll.
  • 2009: The game was the first game in which one of the contenders was ranked in the top 25 when #18 Houston played East Carolina on December 5, 2009. East Carolina also had received 3 votes in the AP Poll. East Carolina won the competition and was the first to have won two championship games in the conference and was also the first to win two consecutive championship games in the conference.
  • 2010: The game was advertised as the Conference USA Championship presented by HotelPlanner.com. Going into the game, UCF was ranked 25th in the USA Today Coaches' Poll. UCF received 12 votes in the AP Poll, ranking 31st, 74 votes in the Harris Poll, ranking 27th, and two votes in the Legends Poll, ranking 31st. SMU had no votes in any poll entering the title game. Following the victory, UCF received 143 votes in the USA Today Coaches' Poll, ranking 24th, 63 votes in the AP Poll, ranking 26th, and finished the season ranked 25th in the final 2010 BCS Standings. UCF became the first team to finish the season nationally ranked following the championship game. UCF also became the first C-USA team to finish the season ranked in the final BCS Standings after playing in the conference title game.
  • 2011: The game was the first to feature both teams ranked entering the contest. It was televised for the first time on ABC rather than ESPN2. Houston was 12-0 entering the game, and with a win, would have likely qualified for BCS bowl berth. However, Southern Miss convincingly defeated the Cougars, securing a slot in the Hawaii Bowl (after a minor controversy regarding the C-USA berth in the Liberty Bowl). Houston wound up in the TicketCity Bowl.
  • 2012: The game featured Tulsa and UCF meeting in the game for the third time in eight years, the most of any FBS conference championship game during that time span. It was also a rematch of a regular season meeting two weeks prior. It was both Tulsa's fourth and UCF's fourth appearance in the game, tied for the conference record. In addition, it marked UCF's final appearance as part of C-USA, as they departed for the American Athletic Conference in 2013. Entering the game, both teams were unranked in the major polls; however, UCF had received five votes in the USA Today Coaches' Poll.
  • 2013: The game was the first for both Division Champions, Marshall and Rice. Because both teams had 7–1 conference records and did not play one another in the regular season, the game site was determined by the BCS standings of December 1.[3]
  • 2014: Marshall was crowned East Division champions after defeating defending conference champions Rice on November 15, 2014. This was Marshall's second time in the Championship game in back-to-back years. Louisiana Tech was crowned West Division champions also by defeating Rice at the end of the regular season. Louisiana Tech will head to the championship for the first time in West Virginia to compete against Marshall.

Results by team

Current members

Appearances School W L Pct
3 Southern Miss 1 2 .333
2 Marshall 1 1 .500
1 Rice 1 0 1.000
1 Western Kentucky 1 0 1.000
1 Louisiana Tech 0 1 .000

Former members

Appearances School W L Pct
4 Tulsa 2 2 .500
4 UCF 2 2 .500
3 Houston 1 2 .333
2 East Carolina 2 0 1.000
1 SMU 0 1 .000
  • Memphis and Tulane did not make an appearance in an Conference USA Championship Game when a member of the conference. UAB, which dropped football after the 2014 season but will reinstate the sport in 2017, also has not made a championship game appearance.

MVPs

Season MVP Team Position
2005 Garrett Mills Tulsa TE
2006 Vincent Marshall Houston WR
2007 Kevin Smith UCF RB
2008 Travis Simmons ECU CB
2009 Dwayne Harris ECU WR
2010 Latavius Murray UCF RB
2011 Tracy Lampley USM RB/WR
2012 Trey Watts Tulsa RB/PR/KR
2013 Luke Turner Rice RB
2014 Justin Haig Marshall K
2015 Brandon Doughty WKU QB

See also

List of NCAA Division I FBS Conference Championship games

References