For all the talk about worst college football bowl games in 2015-16, and why the 5-7 teams shouldn’t have made it to this year’s Bowlanza party, it turns out that even the so-called worst bowls bring a lot value and attract a lot of attention from fans as well as die-hard College Football Odds aficionados like you and me. This is not a personal opinion, but a provable fact, one that is affirmed by Sports Writer and Analyst Terry Toohey, who made this brief fact-based observation from the eight bowl games that were played between Saturday and Tuesday. Per his write-up, all the bowls played through Tuesday attracted a good number of audiences, including one game with the Utah vs. BYU game clocking over 100 percent attendance.
Let’s Take A Closer Look at the Most Forgettable Bowls in NCAA Football Betting History
Ranking 10 worst college football bowl games https://t.co/L6xf6hDiaE pic.twitter.com/VilUmZdmc8
— Sportsnaut (@Sportsnaut) December 11, 2015
So when I talk about worst bowls in college football history, it’s not that I am trying to mud-sling some school or condemn the criteria used for bowl selection; I do this simply to draw our attention to the acknowledgeable fact that some bowl games are—and will always be—better than others. With that, here is my list of most forgettable bowls in NCAAF history, arranged based on the dates they were played.