The MAC has lost 13 straight bowl games, and this is no accident as it is one of the slowest footed conferences in the country. Look for more of the same as South Florida romps.
The bottom line for the MAC now shows a hideous 13-game losing streak in bowls, and to fully understand that, it must be noted that it is not because they are being forced to step all that far up in class.
These are losses against mostly teams from their own class, and when they do face a team from a BCS conference, it is someone that has had a disappointing season. So far in 2009 they have fallen victim to the likes of Idaho and Marshall, arguably the two weakest teams to earn bowl spots.
Free NCAAF Pick: South Florida -6½ (-110)
And the reasons are simple: first, this league just does not have the speed and athleticism to match up against the rest of the nation when the opposition is taking the games seriously (keep in mind that some of those regular-season successes in non-conference games can come from opponents taking MAC teams lightly); second, most of the schools are based in locations that make December practices awkward and inefficient, at best.
That takes us to this game, which we see as simply more of the same, as a slow Northern Illinois Huskies squad is subject to being fully exploited in this setting vs. the South Florida Bulls.
This will be the fourth straight season for the Big East to face the M.A.C. in this bowl, and the results so far have been deceptive – although the Big East is 3-0 SU and 2-1 ATS, the talent gap has been even wider than the scoreboards have been able to show. Two years ago Rutgers nearly pulled off the bowl rarity of a “Double 300”, rushing for 292 yards and passing for 303 in an easy win over Ball State.
And last year’s 38-20 scoreboard win for Connecticut over Buffalo did not even come close to measuring the game on the field, with the Huskies out-rushing the Bulls by a 358-24 count, one of the widest gaps ever for that category in a bowl game.
So now we fast forward to this season and what is different? Not all that much. If anything the matchup becomes even more awkward, for while South Florida does have issues in terms of discipline year-in and year-out, the Bulls bring as much speed and athleticism as any team in the Big East, and that provides a tough challenge for a Northern Illinois team that is severely challenged in those areas.
The Huskies play smart football and when in against their own class have been able to control the line of scrimmage, but they went 0-4 against bowl teams this season, including losses to light-weights Idaho and Ohio, and in what should have been their step-up game, that regular-season finale at Central Michigan, they were beaten by much worse than the 45-31 final score.
They allowed the Chippewas to roll to a 38-10 lead after three quarters, and over 200 yards both running and passing. Now they find the running lanes closed here, and a passing attack that produced only 151.7 yards per game, #109 in the nation, can not pick up the slack.
South Florida has played twice since the last time Northern was on the field, and practicing in Tampa in December is much more pleasant than what the Huskies have had to do. The time off provides the opportunity to finally tweak the offense around B. J. Daniels, who had to go right into the mix when Matt Grothe went down, and Daniels had to learn under real pressure, with seven of his nine starts coming against bowl opponents.
In throwing for 1,766 yards and 12 touchdowns, and running for 798 yards and two more scores, he brings an explosiveness this defense rarely faces, and the added practice time means a chance to get more comfortable in the offense, creating the opportunity for a lot of big plays.