Etihad Stadium, with a retractable roof and seating for 53,000 in Melbourne, wants a college bowl game.

MELBOURNE — Hey, Huskies and Cougars fans, fancy a trip Down Under?

In the great tradition of the Bacardi Bowl, played in Havana in 1910, the Coca Cola Classic, played in Tokyo in 1988, the Toronto Bowl from 2007-1000, and the Bahamas Bowl played Dec. 24 in Nassau, it appears that college football is going international again in 2016.

Officials from Etihad Stadium in Melbourne are close to sealing a deal with the Pac-12 and Mountain West conferences to host a post-season bowl game in December 2016.

Paul Sergeant, CEO of Melbourne Stadiums Ltd., which manages Etihad, said this week, “It’s still a work in progress – we’ve made a lot of progress – but we haven’t signed a deal yet.”

Sergeant, who ran Wembley Stadium when the NFL played its American Bowl there, hopes to have the contract finished in the next couple of months.

He says that the bowl has not been given a name yet and will be given no special concessions as far as team match-ups are concerned.

“It’s out of our hands,” Sergeant said, “And in terms of selling tickets it’s almost immaterial.”

“We’re selling the concept and the game. It’s competitive and it’s authentic.”

Schools with name recognition Down Under (USC, Boise State) would be preferable to say, Colorado or New Mexico, but Sergeant is under no illusions about who might make the journey. The game likely will have a pairing of bottom-tier teams that are bowl eligible.

“We know we’re at the lower end of the pecking order,” he said.

For 2015, the NCAA has sanctioned a record 42 bowls.

If the deal is done, all Pac 12 and Mountain West schools will be told in advance that their teams could be traveling to Australia, so they will have plenty of time to get passports, visas and other travel-related requirements.

Although it’s easy to see this as a novelty act, Sergeant hinted that he wants to make it a long-term proposition.

Australians are some of the world’s most passionate and knowledgeable sports fans, and awareness of college football is on the increase.

ESPN shows plenty of live college football, with Pac-12 and Mountain West games often kicking off at fan-friendly times like noon on Sunday in Melbourne.

In addition, the number of Aussies playing in the college ranks has jumped dramatically, thanks mainly to punters like Cam Johnston of Ohio State and Tom Hackett from Utah, who won the Ray Guy Award last season asthe NFL’s best punter.

Current Georgia Tech defensive tackle Adam Gotsis, former Alabama star and Seahawks draftee Jesse Williams and just-graduated wide receiver/punter/returner Scott Harding of Hawai’i have also garnered some media attention.

Perhaps surprisingly, a bowl game in Melbourne isn’t unprecedented.

In 1985, Wyoming beat UTEP 24-21 in the uncreatively named Australia Bowl Two years later, Brigham Young edged Colorado State 30-26 in the somewhat more accurately descriptive Melbourne Bowl.

The total attendance for the games was less than 30,000.

Sergeant has already said on Melbourne radio that he is hoping for a sellout (around 53,000) at Etihad, a 15-year old venue with a retractable roof.

 

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11 Comments

    • Coug, I can tell you while it’s still a “niche” sport in a land of many sports, American football continues to grow rapidly. Televised games rarely compete with Aussie sports and we aren’t subjected to blackout rules – we get all MNF, SNF and TNF games, plus Sunday double-headers every week. College games on ESPN and ESPN 2, often on a Sunday morning.

  1. A bowl game in Australia? Brilliant! They might get 50K+ if they sell tickets for the game and all the Foster’s you can drink…for AU$5 each. At least it isn’t Shreveport.

    • You struggle to find Foster’s here, but you can get Sierra Nevada…at $24 a six pack!

      • Sierra Nevada a better beer than Fosters but $24 is to expensive. I’m a humble man. The beer in my hand is my favorite.

  2. I think this would be a great trip for coaches and players. Australia is on my bucket list! It’d be a trip they’d never forget. However I can see head coaches questioning what’s the advantage when this bowl is so far away from the recruiting trail. However the fact that a school went to this bowl could be a selling point as well. I’m all for this happening!

    • Having been to Australia, I endorse an all-expenses-paid trip for the players. I think the coaches won’t like it, but it’s damn fine for an eighth seed.

  3. College Football as we know it continues to be eviscerated before our very eyes.