How does a southern team have a home field advantage by playing a bowl game in warm weather? I don't understand how it gives a southern team an advantage.
Under Ferentz, Iowa is 4-1 against southern teams in Florida.
Also, what if a northern city hosted a bowl game and the teams didn't show up. The game in New York was a complete mess. The teams couldn't get to New York. They couldn't practice. Their practices consisted of walk throughs in their hotels.
It doesn't even work in the NFL. The Giants couldn't even get to Minneapolis. The roof collapses so the game gets moved to Detroit. The snow in Philadelphia. It goes on and on.
If it was financially feasible it would have been done long ago. There have been numerous attempts to hold bowl games in the north. The first five Liberty Bowls were held in Philadelphia. It was dubbed the "Deep Freeze Bowl." Before moving to Memphis, one game was played indoors in Atlantic City.
The Medowlands hosted the Garden State Bowl for a few years. Wisconsin played Tennessee in '81. There also have been the Cherry Bowl in Detroit & the Gotham City Bowl.
Like the Super Bowl, the BCS Championship Game could work in a northern city. Because of the huge national demand for tickets and national interest, the game would sell out.
I still want to know about this home field advantage the southern schools have. Last year; Iowa, Penn State & Wisconsin all beat southern schools in Florida.
However, I do think that one BCS game should be played in the north every other year. In a traditional Rose Bowl, the Pac-10 teams have a tremendous home field advantage over the Big Ten. Especially, when USC or UCLA are the west coast representative. Its UCLA's home field.