PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • 2010 Fiesta Bowl
rdfs:comment
  • The 2010 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl game was a post-season college football bowl game between the #4 TCU Horned Frogs, champions of the Mountain West Conference, and the #6 Boise State Broncos, champions of the Western Athletic Conference. The game was played Monday, January 4, 2010, at University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. The game was part of the 2009–10 Bowl Championship Series (BCS) of the 2009 NCAA Division I FBS football season and was the concluding game of the season for both teams involved. The historic milestones of this game were:
owl:sameAs
Visitor AP
  • 6
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:americanfootballdatabase/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Payout
  • 18000000
Home Coach
Home Name Short
  • TCU
Visitor School
  • Boise State University
Year Game Played
  • 2010
Visitor Coaches
  • 6
Ratings
  • 8.200000
Football Season
  • 2009
MVP
  • Defensive: Brandyn Thompson
  • Offensive: Kyle Efaw
Visitor Coach
Attendance
  • 73227
Home BCS
  • 4
Optional Subheader
  • BCS Bowl Game
Visitor Nickname
  • Broncos
Visitor BCS
  • 6
Visitor
  • 0
  • 3
  • 7
Game Name
  • Fiesta Bowl
Referee
  • Bill LeMonnier
Title Sponsor
  • Tostitos
US Announcers
  • Sam Rosen -
  • Tim Ryan -
Home AP
  • 3
Home
  • 0
  • 3
  • 7
City
Home Record
  • 12
Date Game Played
  • --01-04
Home Nickname
  • Horned Frogs
US Network
Home School
  • Texas Christian University
Visitor Name Short
  • Boise State
Stadium
Anthem
Home Coaches
  • 3
Visitor Record
  • 13
abstract
  • The 2010 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl game was a post-season college football bowl game between the #4 TCU Horned Frogs, champions of the Mountain West Conference, and the #6 Boise State Broncos, champions of the Western Athletic Conference. The game was played Monday, January 4, 2010, at University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. The game was part of the 2009–10 Bowl Championship Series (BCS) of the 2009 NCAA Division I FBS football season and was the concluding game of the season for both teams involved. For the second consecutive year, TCU and BSU faced off in a bowl game of historic significance. In the 2008 Poinsettia Bowl, TCU and Boise State played in the first non-BCS game ever in which both teams were ranked higher than both participants in a BCS bowl game in the same season (specifically the 2009 Orange Bowl), with the Horned Frogs winning 17–16. The historic milestones of this game were: * For the first time ever, two teams from the "non-BCS" or "non-AQ" (automatic qualifying) conferences earned BCS bowl berths in the same season. Accordingly, this was the first BCS game ever to feature two such teams. * For the first time ever, a "non-BCS" or "non-AQ" team was selected via an at-large invitation (BSU). (TCU earned an AQ bid via rule 3 of the BCS selection rules.) * Also for the first time ever, two unbeaten teams squared off in a BCS game other than the National Championship Game. * Boise State became the second team in Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) history to finish the season 14–0 (the other team being the 2002 Ohio State Buckeyes. Alabama became the third team to go 14–0 three days later). Because both non-AQ teams were placed in the same bowl game, the bowl was derisively referred to as the "Separate But Equal Bowl", the "Quarantine Bowl", the "Fiasco Bowl", the "BCS Kids' Table", etc. Some had called for a boycott because of this. There was wide speculation that the BCS bowl selection committees maneuvered TCU and Boise State into the same bowl so as to deny them the chances to "embarrass" two AQ conference representatives in separate bowls, as Boise State had done in the 2007 Fiesta Bowl and Utah had done in the 2005 Fiesta Bowl and 2009 Sugar Bowl (prior to the game, non-AQ teams were 3–1 versus AQ teams in BCS bowls). In response, Fiesta Bowl CEO (and, in 2012, convicted felon) John Junker called those allegations "the biggest load of crap that I've ever heard in my life" and said that "[w]e're in the business of doing things that are on behalf of our bowl game and we don't do the bidding of someone else to our detriment." Beyond the unappealing nature of "David vs. David" contest which resulted from this pairing in a major bowl, the appeal was further diminished due to the fact that it was a rematch of the Poinsettia Bowl from the previous bowl season. In the weeks prior to the game, a different controversy arose when past and present employees made public allegations that the Fiesta Bowl had made illegal campaign campaign contributions. WWE personality John Cena was the Grand Marshal and the coin tosser for the event. The Broncos won the game by a score of 17 points to 10.
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