2005–06 NCAA football bowl games
The 2005–06 NCAA football bowl games were a series of 28 post-season games that was played in December 2005 and January 2006 for Division I-A football teams and all-stars from Divisions I-AA, II, and III, as well as from the NAIA. The post-season began with the New Orleans Bowl on December 20, 2005, and concluded with the Senior Bowl, played on January 28, 2006.
For the second consecutive year, the 28 team-competitive bowl games were played by 56 teams with winning records, as no teams with non-winning seasons were invited to participate in bowl games.
Schedule
Non-BCS bowls
With 64 teams having winning records, and 56 slots in bowl games, there were more teams than slots available for teams to get a bowl bid. Again, as in 2004, two conferences — the Pac 10 and the SEC — did not have enough teams to fill the required number of slots for their non-BCS bowls. A third conference — the Big Ten — had two teams in the BCS. The biggest beneficiary this year was the ACC, which replaced the SEC at the Music City Bowl and the Pac-10 at the Emerald Bowl; Conference USA also gained a slot, sending Memphis to the Motor City Bowl. Unlike last year, where a fighting incident during the game between Clemson and South Carolina led each team to impose a post-season ban, no school forfeited post-season play this year.The eight teams with winning records that did not get bowl bids were Louisiana Tech from the WAC, MAC teams Miami , Bowling Green, Western Michigan, NIU and Central Michigan, Mountain West representative New Mexico and the Sun Belt's Louisiana–Lafayette. Four teams made their Division I-A bowl debuts — Arkansas State, South Florida, Central Florida and Akron. Akron, notably, had been the only bowl-eligible team willing to accept an invitation to be left out of the 2004 bowl games. However, none of the teams benefitted from "beginner's luck", as each lost its game.
Participants in non-BCS bowls are selected on the basis of conference tie-ins. All bowl payouts are given in US dollars. All records shown are pre-bowl game.
New Orleans Bowl at Lafayette
- Southern Mississippi 31, Arkansas State 19
GMAC Bowl
The GMAC Bowl at Ladd–Peebles Stadium in Mobile, Alabama took place on December 21, 2005. Toledo, representing the Mid-American Conference, defeated C-USA's UTEP Miners 45–13. In his last game for the Rockets, quarterback Bruce Gradkowski threw for five touchdowns and 298 yards. Seven of the Miners' 13 points came off the leg of kicker Reagan Schneider, with Johnnie Lee Higgins' catching the only touchdown of the day for UTEP to account for the rest of the scoring.Las Vegas Bowl
- California 35, BYU 28
Emerald Bowl
- Utah 38, Georgia Tech 10
Poinsettia Bowl
- Navy 51, Colorado State 30
Fort Worth Bowl
The Fort Worth Bowl at Amon G. Carter Stadium on the campus of Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas was contested December 23, 2005. Kansas, from the Big 12, who qualified on the last Saturday in November for a bowl game, defeated Houston from C-USA, 42–13, thanks to Jason Swanson's four touchdown passes. Running back Jon Cornish paced the Jayhawks with 101 rushing yards on just 16 carries, while the defense pressured Cougars quarterback Kevin Kolb into three interceptions, also sacking him twice. After this season, the Bowl got a new sponsor in Bell Helicopters as well as a new name in the "Armed Forces Bowl", and started to invite a MWC teams to challenge the C-USA team as part of a rotation with the Pac 10.Hawaii Bowl
The Hawaii Bowl at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii was played on December 24, 2005. For the first time since the game was first contested in 2002, the Hawaii Warriors did not play in this game, as they had a losing record in 2005, disqualifying them from bowl eligibility. Nevada, the WAC co-champion, beat C-USA's Central Florida, 49–48, as Golden Knights kicker Matt Prater missed an extra point in overtime, sealing a defeat for UCF, who was playing in its first ever bowl game, having gone winless as recently as 2004. Each team gained over 550 yards, and each had three players average better than five yards per carry; freshman running back Kevin Smith led the Golden Knights with 202 yards and three touchdowns on 29 carries, while running backs B.J. Mitchell and Robert Hubbard combined to gain 304 yards on 38 carries, also adding five touchdowns.Motor City Bowl
- Memphis 38, Akron 31
Champs Sports Bowl
- Clemson 19, Colorado 10
Insight Bowl
- Arizona State 45, Rutgers 40
MPC Computers Bowl
- Boston College 27, Boise State 21
Alamo Bowl
The Alamo Bowl at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas was the second game played on December 28. In a battle of perennial powerhouses, Nebraska, returning to post-season play after a one-year absence, overcame an 11-point Michigan lead in the final 8:09 of the game to win, 32–28. The Big 12's Cornhuskers were buoyed by the play of senior running back Cory Ross, who carried 28 times for 161 yards and a touchdown. Though he was intercepted twice, quarterback Zac Taylor managed an efficient game, completing only 14 passes but for 167 yards and three touchdowns. In defeat for the Big Ten's Wolverines, quarterback Chad Henne used his arm and legs to give Michigan a 28–17 lead, taking advantage of excellent field position provided by kickoff returners Steve Breaston and Carl Tabb II, who averaged 35 yards per return. Nebraska rallied, though, scoring two touchdowns and adding a two-point conversion on two three-play drives each of under 40 yards. The game's final play was a Henne pass to wide receiver Jason Avant, which the Wolverines followed by eight laterals, eventually reaching the Nebraska 17-yard-line; the play brought to mind the 1982 Stanford-California game in which, similarly, players from each team streamed onto the field during the last play, thinking the game to be over, and much of the blame for the confusion was later assessed to the officials, who were provided by the Sun Belt Conference. It also brought to mind the 2002 Kentucky-LSU game as Nebraska players gave their coach the Gatorade dunk before the final play had ended. Though the two offenses combined to score 60 points, neither was superb; Michigan averaged only 4.1 yards per play, committed three turnovers, and allowed five sacks, while Nebraska was only marginally better, gaining an average of 4.6 yards per play, committing two turnovers, and also allowing five sacks. The loss meant that the Michigan, who began the season ranked fourth in Associated Press writers' and USA Today coaches’ polls, would finish the year with a record of 7–5 and unranked in both polls. The Cornhuskers finished 24th in the writer's and coach's polls with a record of 8–4.Music City Bowl
The Music City Bowl at The Coliseum in Nashville, Tennessee was the first of four games played on December 30, 2005. Virginia, representing the ACC in a slot forfeited by the SEC, which failed to qualify enough teams for bowl eligibility, came back from a second-quarter 14-point deficit to drive for a game-winning field goal with 1:08 to play, ultimately defeating the Big Ten's Minnesota, 34–31. The Cavaliers were paced by quarterback Marques Hagans, who threw for 359 yards and two touchdowns, and running back Wali Lundy, who ran for only 60 yards but added two touchdowns, including a game-tying score on a 72-yard drive with less than 10 minutes to go in the game. Golden Gophers quarterback Bryan Cupito shined in defeat, completing 65 percent of his passes for 267 yards and four touchdowns, as Minnesota took a 21–7 lead with less than seven minutes to go in the second quarter. Virginia kicker Connor Hughes added a field goal as the half ended to bring the Cavaliers within 11, and he came through again with a 39-yarder to give Virginia the lead for good; Hughes finished with ten points. Although Minnesota finished with a nearly seven-minute edge in time of possession, thanks in part to the running of Laurence Maroney and Gary Russell, who combined for 190 yards on 49 carries, and to forcing two Virginia turnovers in the fourth quarter, the Golden Gopher defense allowed the Wahoos to drive from their own three-yard line to record the final field goal and break the tie. Cupito led a last-minute drive for Minnesota, crossing midfield with 37 seconds to go before throwing an end-zone interception that allowed Virginia to run out the clock.Sun Bowl
- UCLA 50, Northwestern 38
Independence Bowl
- Missouri 38, South Carolina 31
Meineke Car Care Bowl
- North Carolina State 14, South Florida 0
Liberty Bowl
- Tulsa 31, Fresno State 24
Houston Bowl
- TCU 27, Iowa State 24
Non-BCS New Year's Day Bowls
Because New Year's Day 2006 fell on a Sunday, a day when the NFL plays most of its games, the league played all but two of its final regular season games that day, and all college football bowl games traditionally held that day were moved to January 2, which fell on a Monday.These games are generally considered to be the more important of the non-BCS bowls, with half — the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic, the Toyota Gator Bowl and the Capital One Bowl — broadcast on over-the-air television rather than cable, and with these six games' having larger-than-average purses; in 2005, for example, the Toyota Gator Bowl paid the lowest purse of the sextet, which, at $1.6 million still more than doubled the $750,000 purse standard for most non-New Year's Day bowls, while the Capital One Bowl handed out the largest non-BCS purse at roughly $5,312,000.
All records shown are pre-bowl game.
Holiday Bowl
The Holiday Bowl, which as of 2005 became the second post-season college football game played at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California, is considered to be part of this group in spite of the fact that the game is not played on New Year's Day, given the bowl's payout of $2,000,000 and the frequency with which highly ranked teams participate. The 2005 edition was the second of two games played on December 29, 2005, with the Big 12's Oklahoma Sooners defeating the Pac-10's Oregon Ducks, 17–14, in a matchup of teams each with something to prove. The Ducks were playing to show that they deserved a BCS bowl bid, having gone 10–1 during the regular season, while the Sooners, who had lost in the BCS championship game each of the past two years, were trying to show that they really were the team that came into the season ranked fifth in the USA Today coaches' poll and seventh in the AP writers' poll than the team that lost to Texas by 33. Although Oregon got off to an early 7–3 lead and held that lead for nearly half the game, 22:38, the offense was unable to muster much against an Oklahoma defense that recorded four sacks, held the Ducks to 2.6 yards per carry, and allowed only six third-down conversions in 18 attempts. Rotating between Dennis Dixon and Brady Leaf at quarterback, as they had done since losing starter Kellen Clemens earlier in the year, the Ducks gained 244 passing yards on 44 attempts, but much of that came in the fourth quarter as the Sooners defense tired during two extended drives. Oregon managed little success on the ground, with their top rusher, senior Terrence Whitehead, going for only 42 yards. Oklahoma's offense played largely efficiently, gaining 365 yards, with redshirt freshman quarterback Rhett Bomar completing 59 percent of his passes for 229 yards and one touchdown. Sophomore Adrian Peterson led the way on the ground, accumulating 79 yards on 23 carries. In spite of their general success, Bomar and Peterson each provided Oregon hope, with Bomar's throwing an interception and Peterson's fumbling within a yard of the goal line. The Ducks, trailing by 10 points in the fourth quarter, were unable to convert a first-down in the shadow of their own goal posts against the aggressive Sooners defense and thus failed to capitalize on the Peterson turnover. Their defense, though, stymied every Oklahoma drive in the fourth quarter, getting two more possessions for the offense, and Oregon drove 81 yards in 14 plays, with Brady Leaf's hitting Tim Day for a three-yard touchdown. Once more the Sooners offense failed to convert a third-down on their ensuing possession as the Ducks defense tightened, and, behind a resurgent Leaf, Oregon drove to the Oklahoma 19-yard-line before Sooners senior linebacker Clint Ingram intercepted a Leaf pass to seal the victory for the Sooners.On July 11, 2007, following an investigation into the use of two players being used in a fake job scandal by Sooner boosters, the NCAA announced that the game, along with eight victories from the 2005 regular season would be stricken from the record books. However, the NCAA reversed its field on February 22, 2008, and restored all eight forfeited wins to the record books, including the Holiday Bowl. Since bowl games are not sanctioned by the NCAA, Oklahoma was allowed to keep their payout.
Peach Bowl
- LSU 40, Miami 3
The outcome, though, was anything but close as the Hurricanes struck first with a field goal six-plus minutes into the game and then watched as the Tigers, led by sophomore quarterback Matt Flynn, who replaced the injured JaMarcus Russell after having thrown only 15 passes all year, scored 40 points on eight straight possessions to claim a 40–3 win. Flynn played efficiently for LSU, which was coming of an upset by Georgia in the SEC championship game, played four weeks earlier in that same stadium, completing 13 of 22 passes for 197 yards and two touchdowns, including a 51-yard strike to wide receiver Craig Davis, who was the leading Tigers receiver with five catches for 100 yards. The ground game, however, was LSU's best weapon, as the Tigers possessed the ball for 39:08 and accumulated 282 rushing yards, averaging 5.1 yards per carry against a Hurricanes defense that came into the game having allowed more than 17 points only once during the regular season. Running back Joseph Addai led the way with 24 carries for 128 yards and one touchdown; fullback Jacob Hester and added 66 yards and one touchdown on 13 carries. The Tigers kicking game also added in the scoring, as Colt David made four extra points and Chris Jackson connected on four field goals, including a 50-yarder to end LSU scoring, and participated in a fake field goal the Tigers used to convert a first down already up 31.
The Hurricanes turned the ball over only once, as freshman quarterback Kirby Freeman entered the game with Miami down 37 and promptly threw an interception, but they allowed LSU to sack quarterback Kyle Wright four times; pressure and tight coverage led to Wright's making only 10 of 21 passes for just 99 yards. Neither was the running game able to get any traction for Miami, as the Hurricanes averaged just 2.0 yards per carry, with leading rusher sophomore Charlie Jones recording only 49 yards on eight carries, 42 of that on one run.
The loss was the worst in post-season history for the Hurricanes. The contest, the last to be termed the "Peach Bowl", was marred by a postgame scuffle in which an ersatz fight between Tigers and Hurricanes players was ostensibly misunderstood by several Hurricanes, who initiated actual physical contact, necessitating the intervention of Georgia State Patrol officers and medical treatment for Miami offensive lineman Andrew Bain, who was reported to have been briefly unconscious, but was instead dazed after being hit in the head by a helmet.
Outback Bowl
- Florida 31, Iowa 24
Cotton Bowl Classic
- Alabama 13, Texas Tech 10
In a humorous moment following the game at a press conference, Mike Shula, Alabama's coach, fell off the platform where he was sitting on, then got back up and stated "I hope that ESPN didn't film that." Too late for him, they showed that on SportsCenter that night.
Gator Bowl
- Virginia Tech 35, Louisville 24
Capital One Bowl
The Capital One Bowl, the second post-season game played at the Citrus Bowl Stadium in Orlando, Florida was the fourth played on January 2, 2006, and the final non-BCS game. Wisconsin, playing its final game for coach Barry Alvarez and representing the Big Ten, defeated Auburn, an SEC representative which a year ago finished its season undefeated but left out of the BCS championship game, 24–10. The Badgers recovered two Auburn turnovers in the game's first four minutes, intercepting quarterback Brandon Cox and forcing a fumble by running back Kenny Irons, but failed to score on short fields, punting once and missing a 53-yard field goal. It was when faced with poor field position, however, that the Wisconsin offense came alive, and, midway through the first quarter, quarterback John Stocco took the team 75 yards in just 57 seconds, connecting with Brandon Williams on a 30-yard pass for a touchdown to give the Badgers a seven-point lead; Williams was Stocco's leading receiver on the day, catching six passes for 173 yards. A tough Badgers defense, which sacked Cox four times on the day, forced an Auburn punt and the offense, behind a 61-yard carry by running back Brian Calhoun, who carried for 214 yards on 30 carries for the game, shredding the Auburn run defense, got to the two-yard line before stalling and settling for a 19-yard Taylor Mehlhaff field goal. Irons, who had been held below 100 yards in just two games during the regular season, managed little traction against Wisconsin, finishing the day with just 87 yards on 22 carries; the inability of Irons to get a first down ended two Auburn drives in the second quarter and led to a 12-play, 86-yard drive that culminated in Stocco's hitting Owen Daniels for a 13-yard touchdown, giving the Badgers a 17-point halftime lead. Stocco, committing the only Badgers turnover of the game, fumbled in the third quarter, giving Auburn the ball at the Wisconsin 18-yard line, but the Tigers were held to a 19-yard John Vaughn field goal, after which the teams traded punts to close the third quarter. Cox, who finished the day having completed only 45 percent of his passes for just 138 yards, led the Tigers on one final long drive, going 56 yards in 14 plays and hitting Courtney Taylor with a nine-yard touchdown pass; the drive was twice kept alive with third-down completions to senior wide receiver Ben Obomanu, who led the Tigers in receiving with five catches for 62 yards. The Badgers answered just 1:27 later, as Calhoun ran 33 yards for a touchdown to put the Badgers up by 14 points. After the Wisconsin defense held the Tigers at midfield, the Badgers took the ensuing possession, largely through the running of Calhoun, 98 yards to the Auburn one-yard line before allowing time to expire, securing Alvarez, who will continue in his role as the school's athletic director, his fourth season of double-digit wins. Defensive coordinator Bret Bielema assumed head coaching duties in 2006, and led them back to the game.[Bowl Championship Series] games
The purse for each BCS game was $14,998,000. All records shown are pre-bowl game.Fiesta Bowl
- Ohio State 34, Notre Dame 20
Sugar Bowl
- West Virginia 38, Georgia 35
Orange Bowl
- Penn State 26, Florida State 23
Rose Bowl Game
- Texas 41, Southern California 38
Non-All-Star Game Bowl Summary
Conference standings
The list of conferences infra includes all conferences with at least one team having played in a bowl game, and is sorted first by winning percentage, then by total games won, and finally alphabetically, by conference name.The conferences with the highest winning percentage received the Bowl Challenge Cup, sponsored by ESPN and Cooper Tires. Conferences must have had a minimum of three bowl teams to be eligible. With Texas' win in the Rose Bowl Game, the Big 12 and the ACC shared the title for 2005–06, in the first instance of a shared title in the promotion's brief history. Had Southern California defeated Texas, the Pac-10 would have finished with a 4–1 record and been the sole winner of the trophy.
Final Standings
Conference | Number of Teams | Wins-Losses | Winning Percentage | Teams |
ACC | 8 | 5–3 | .625 | Winners: Boston College, Clemson, North Carolina State, Virginia, Virginia Tech Losers: Florida State, Georgia Tech, Miami |
Big 12 | 8 | 5–3 | .625 | Winners: Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas Losers: Colorado, Iowa State, Texas Tech |
Pac-10 | 5 | 3–2 | .600 | Winners: Arizona State, California, UCLA Losers: Oregon, Southern California |
SEC | 6 | 3–3 | .500 | Winners: Alabama, Florida, LSU Losers: Auburn, Georgia, South Carolina |
C-USA | 6 | 3–3 | .500 | Winners: Southern Mississippi, Memphis, Tulsa Losers: Central Florida, Houston, UTEP |
MWC | 4 | 2–2 | .500 | Winners: TCU, Utah Losers: BYU, Colorado State |
MAC § | 2 | 1–1 | .500 | Winner: Toledo Loser: Akron |
Independent | 2 | 1–1 | .500 | Winner: Navy Loser: Notre Dame |
Big Ten | 7 | 3–4 | .428 | Winners: Ohio State, Penn State, Wisconsin Losers: Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Northwestern |
WAC | 3 | 1–2 | .333 | Winner: Nevada Losers: Boise State, Fresno State |
Big East | 4 | 1–3 | .250 | Winners: West Virginia Losers: Louisville, Rutgers, South Florida |
Sun Belt § | 1 | 0–1 | .000 | Winner: None Loser: Arkansas State |
§ — Did not field enough teams for inclusion in the Bowl Challenge Cup.
All-Bowl Teams
Both CBSSportsline.com and ESPN.com compiled an all-bowl team after the completion of bowl season, determining the top bowl performances by position. The chart infra gives the lists by position, with each player's school in parentheses; where ESPN.com has chosen the same player as CBSSportsline.com, only the last name is given in the second entry.Position | CBSSportsline.com Selection | ESPN.com Selection |
Quarterback | Vince Young | Young |
Running back | Steve Slaton, DeAngelo Williams, Reggie Campbell | Slaton, Williams |
Wide receiver | Brandon Marshall, Travis LaTendresse | LaTendresse; Ted Ginn, Junior |
Tight end | Tom Santi | David Thomas |
Offensive lineman | Travis Garrett, Ryan Stanchek, Dan Mozes, Jeremy Sheffey, Garin Justice | Chris Messner, Antron Harper, Antoine Caldwell, Will Arnold, Andrew Carnahan |
Defensive lineman | Mario Williams, Jason Berryman, Charlton Keith, Wallace Gilberry, Jeremy Clark, Mark Anderson | Keith, Jay Alford, Brodrick Bunkley, Melvin Oliver |
Linebacker | A. J. Hawk, Stephen Tulloch, Abdul Hodge | Hawk, Tulloch, Nelson Coleman |
Defensive back | Ryan Glasper, Brandon Flowers, Dwayne Slay, Anthony Trucks | Vernell Brown, Marcus King, Jarrad Page, Titus Brothers |
Placekicker | Jeremy Ito | Jamie Christensen |
Punter | Chris Hall | Phil Brady |
Kick or Punt Returner | Brandon Breazell, Willie Reid | Reid |
Top Individual Bowl Performances
The charts infra provide the top ten individual performances in each of three offensive categories from amongst all bowl game performances. Each chart is ordered by yards gained and each player's team is given in parentheses.Rushing
Player | Carries | Yards Gained | Touchdowns |
DeAngelo Williams | 31 | 238 | 3 |
Brian Calhoun | 30 | 213 | 1 |
Steve Slaton | 26 | 204 | 3 |
Kevin Smith | 29 | 202 | 3 |
Vince Young | 20 | 200 | 3 |
Marshawn Lynch | 24 | 194 | 3 |
B.J. Mitchell | 23 | 178 | 2 |
Cody Hill | 37 | 164 | 1 |
Cory Ross | 28 | 161 | 1 |
Brad Smith | 21 | 150 | 3 |
Passing
Player | Completions | Attempts | Yards Gained | Touchdowns | Interceptions |
Rudy Carpenter | 23 | 35 | 467 | 4 | 0 |
Luke Getsy | 34 | 59 | 455 | 4 | 0 |
Brett Basanez | 39 | 70 | 416 | 2 | 2 |
Brett Ratliff | 30 | 41 | 381 | 4 | 0 |
Justin Holland | 26 | 33 | 381 | 3 | 0 |
Ryan Hart | 24 | 38 | 374 | 3 | 0 |
Matt Leinart | 31 | 41 | 365 | 1 | 1 |
Marques Hagans | 23 | 32 | 358 | 2 | 1 |
John Beck | 35 | 53 | 352 | 2 | 2 |
Troy Smith | 19 | 28 | 342 | 2 | 0 |
Receiving
Player | Receptions | Yards Gained | Touchdowns |
Travis LaTendresse | 16 | 214 | 4 |
Brandon Marshall | 11 | 211 | 3 |
Sidney Rice | 12 | 191 | 1 |
Jabari Arthur | 8 | 180 | 2 |
Brandon Williams | 6 | 173 | 1 |
Ted Ginn, Junior | 8 | 167 | 1 |
Dallas Baker | 10 | 147 | 2 |
Will Blackmon | 5 | 144 | 1 |
Keith Brown | 5 | 142 | 1 |
Ross Lane | 7 | 135 | 0 |
Top Team Bowl Performances
The charts provide the top five team performances in each of two offensive and defensive categories. Total offense and defense charts are ordered by yards gained and surrendered, respectively; scoring offense and defense charts are ordered by points scored and surrendered, respectively. "Scoring offense" and "scoring defense" points totals include points all points scored by a team, not solely those scored by the respective units.Total Offense
Team | Yards Gained | Bowl Game |
Arizona State | 687 | Insight Bowl |
Nevada | 617 | Hawaii Bowl |
Navy | 614 | Poinsettia Bowl |
Ohio State | 580 | Fiesta Bowl |
Northwestern | 579 | Sun Bowl |
Total Defense
Team | Yards Allowed | Bowl Game |
Clemson | 122 | Champs Sports Bowl |
LSU | 143 | Peach Bowl |
Wisconsin | 238 | Capital One Bowl |
Kansas | 247 | Fort Worth Bowl |
Toledo | 251 | GMAC Bowl |
Scoring Offense
Team | Points Scored | Bowl Game |
Navy | 51 | Poinsettia Bowl |
UCLA | 50 | Sun Bowl |
Nevada | 49 | Hawaii Bowl |
Central Florida | 48 | Hawaii Bowl |
Toledo | 45 | GMAC Bowl |
Arizona State | 45 | Insight Bowl |
Scoring Defense
Team | Points Allowed | Bowl Game |
North Carolina State | 0 | Meineke Car Care Bowl |
LSU | 3 | Peach Bowl |
Clemson | 10 | Champs Sports Bowl |
Utah | 10 | Emerald Bowl |
Alabama | 10 | Cotton Bowl Classic |
All-Star Games
The demise of the Blue–Gray Football Classic two years ago and the cancellation of the Gridiron Classic due to lack of sponsorship this year gave rise to one new game this year, bringing to five the number of post-season all-star games, each of which is now designed primarily to showcase draft-eligible players for NFL scouts, coaches, and general managers in order that players might be drafted into the professional ranks; each game, to that end, offers its own assortment of scouting sessions, open workouts, and individual practices to provide more opportunities during which NFL personnel might evaluate players. The games do serve ancillary purposes as well, though, as, for example, the Shrine game operates as a charitable fundraiser and the Hula Bowl sometimes provides the opportunity for Japanese players from the Kansai Football Association to test their mettle against NCAA stars.[Magnolia Gridiron All-Star Classic]
- White 17, Red 9
Las Vegas All-American Classic
- East 41, West 3
East–West Shrine Game">2006 East–West Shrine Game">East–West Shrine Game
- West 35, East 31
[Hula Bowl]
- East 10, West 7
[Senior Bowl]
- North 31, South 14