2015 Arizona Bowl
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| 2015 Nova Home Loans Arizona Bowl | |||||||||||||||||||
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| Date | December 29, 2015 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Season | 2015 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Stadium | Arizona Stadium | ||||||||||||||||||
| Location | Tucson, Arizona | ||||||||||||||||||
| MVP | Offense: James Butler (RB-NEV) Defense: Ian Seau (DE-NEV) | ||||||||||||||||||
| Favorite | Colorado State by 31⁄2[1] | ||||||||||||||||||
| Referee | Tracy Jones (AAC)[2] | ||||||||||||||||||
| Halftime show | Los Lobos Band | ||||||||||||||||||
| Attendance | 20,425[2] | ||||||||||||||||||
| United States TV coverage | |||||||||||||||||||
| Network | ASN/Campus Insiders | ||||||||||||||||||
| Announcers | Ron Thulin, Doug Chapman, Monica McNutt (sideline) and Shae Peppler (sideline)[3] | ||||||||||||||||||
The 2015 Arizona Bowl (known as the 2015 NOVA Home Loans Arizona Bowl for sponsorship reasons) was a post-season college football bowl game between the Nevada Wolf Pack and the Colorado State Rams played on December 29, 2015, at Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Arizona. It was the inaugural edition of the Arizona Bowl and the final game of the 2015 NCAA Division I FBS football season for both teams. In an unusual circumstance for a postseason bowl game, both teams were from the Mountain West Conference due to issues fulfilling the bowl's conference tie-ins, resulting in the first bowl game to feature conference opponents since the 1979 Orange Bowl.[4][5]
Nevada Wolf Pack
The Arizona Bowl, new for 2015, had tie-ins with Conference USA (C-USA) and the Mountain West Conference. If one of those conferences did not have enough bowl-eligible teams, the Sun Belt Conference was an alternative.[6] At the end of the regular season, Mountain West had seven bowl-eligible teams and six guaranteed spots, leaving the placement of individual teams uncertain.[7] When neither C-USA or Sun Belt were able to provide a team to the Arizona Bowl, a matchup between two Mountain West teams was the result, marking the first time since the 1979 Orange Bowl that a non-championship bowl game was played between members of the same conference.[8]
The outcome drew the ire of Mountain West commissioner Craig Thompson, who criticized how the NCAA selected teams with losing records to gain bowl eligibility "on an equal footing with 6–6 teams", explaining that "our Conference representatives argued steadfastly for an approach whereby all 6–6 teams would first be placed according to primary and secondary agreements among the conferences and bowl games. Our position was that only then would the safety net of 5–7 teams be activated for those games which had not yet secured participants, rather than allow those teams to fulfill conference agreements and usurp 6–6 teams from conferences with backup agreements."[8]
The two Mountain West teams selected for the Arizona Bowl had not met in the regular season, as they were in opposite divisions, and were not in the rotation to play each other during the season.
The Nevada Wolf Pack finished the regular season 6–6 (4–4 in conference) under third-year head coach Brian Polian, becoming bowl-eligible after defeating San Jose State.[9] This game was Nevada's tenth bowl appearance in eleven seasons.[10]
Colorado State Rams
The Colorado State Rams finished the regular season 7–5 (5–3 in conference) under first-year head coach Mike Bobo, becoming bowl-eligible for the third straight year after defeating New Mexico.[11]