Bowl Coalition | |
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In operation | 1992–1994 |
Preceded by | National Polls (1869–1991) |
Succeeded by | Bowl Alliance (1995–1997) |
Number of Coalition bowls | 6–7 per season |
Championship trophy | AFCA National Championship Trophy |
Most Coalition bowl appearances | Florida, Florida St., Miami (FL), Nebraska, Notre Dame (3) |
Most Coalition bowl wins | Florida St. (3) |
Most Coalition bowl championships | Alabama, Florida St., Nebraska (1) |
Conference with most appearances | ACC, Big East, Big 8, SEC, SWC (6) |
Conference with most game wins | SEC (5) |
Conference with most championships | ACC, Big 8, SEC (1) |
Last championship game | 1995 Orange Bowl |
Last champion | Nebraska |
The Bowl Coalition was formed through an agreement among Division I-A college football bowl games and conferences for the purpose of forcing a national championship game between the top two teams and to provide quality bowl game matchups for the champions of its member conferences. It was established for the 1992 season after co-national champions in both 1990 and 1991. The agreement was in place for the 1992, 1993, and 1994 college football seasons. It was the predecessor of the Bowl Alliance, and later the Bowl Championship Series.
Following two consecutive seasons of split national championships in 1990 and 1991, there was a renewed effort in devising a system that would help create a #1 vs. #2 national championship bowl game. Since the AP Poll began crowning its national champion after the bowl games in 1968, the two top-ranked teams going into the bowls had only played each other in a bowl six times, most recently after the 1987 season.
The Bowl Coalition consisted of five conferences (the SEC, Big 8, SWC, ACC, and Big East), independent Notre Dame, and seven bowl games (the Orange, Sugar, Cotton, Fiesta, Gator, John Hancock/Sun, and, for the 1992 season only, the Blockbuster bowl).