the significance of going to a bowl- a NYD one in particular and beating a big name opponent.
That was a big part of my arguement about watering down our football schedule. Yes, some of the fans are going to say- shoot, I don't want to watch us beat Lousiana-Monroe- I'd rather see Ohio State. But I would rather play four winnable games and then go to the Gator Bowl and see us play a big name opponent than play "the toughest schedule in the country" and go 4-8. Of course, they would probably come back with "But I want to spend time with my family over the holidays- which is what is REALLY important." Like someone is forcing them to go to a bowl game.
Love it or hate it- the bowl season is the best exposure for our football team. People associate our team in a bowl = good team. And then there is the benefit of extra practice and it's good for recruiting- in the long run.
Playing a managable schedule helps us in the SEC as well- remember when we rested Ballard against UAB? We couldn't have rested him if we had played Georgia Tech. Having him fresh helped us when we had to play and beat UK, and later in the Egg Bowl. It also allowed LaDarius Perkins to develop which helped us out even more in the Egg Bowl. Those games help us build depth. So, those smaller school games do have some value even if they aren't all that exciting from a fan perspective.
I don't think it's a coincidence that we had our best season since 1999 with our easiest schedule in years- Memphis and UAB at home- two below average (being nice to Memphis, they were God awful) C-USA teams, Alcorn, and a tough, but winnable contest with Houston on the road, which having their All-World QB getting hurt helping us out.
But going to a bowl game is great- but now we have to build on this, and I think we will.