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Mid-majors make big strides

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Northern Illinois football coach Rod Carey watches over practice Saturday at Huskie Stadium in DeKalb. The Huskies are the first MAC representative to make a BCS appearance. But the BCS bowls have included a nonautomatic qualifier every year but two since 2005. (Rob Winner – rwinner@shawmedia.com)

DeKALB – Chandler Harnish arrived at Northern Illinois four years ago a virtual unknown.

The 6-foot-2, 220-pound Indiana native was pretty much ignored outside of NIU, even by Ball State.

NIU not only offered Harnish a scholarship, but a chance to be part of a program that, over the course of his career, turned a major competitive corner, leading to this year’s 12-1 finish and an unprecedented Orange Bowl bid.

Even in 2008, Harnish – the final selection in last spring’s NFL draft by the Indianapolis Colts – believed the Huskies were destined for bigger things than Mid-American Conference championships.

For three years, Harnish had watched three non-automatic qualifiers earn berths in the Bowl Championship Series, paving a road for mid-major programs like Northern Illinois to share the spotlight with bigger, more traditional football powerhouses.

“Our goal when I was there was to be the next Boise State, and it really looks like we’re heading that way,” Harnish said in phone interview last week. “Now, it’s about consistency and doing those things year in and year out.”

The Huskies are the first MAC representative to make a BCS appearance. But the BCS bowls have included a non-automatic qualifier every year but two since 2005.

Since then, Boise State, Texas Christian and Utah have made two BCS appearances apiece, registering bowl victories against schools such as Oklahoma, Alabama and most recently, Wisconsin. TCU beat Wisconsin, 21-19, in the Rose Bowl in 2011.

Hawaii, which appeared in the 2008 Sugar Bowl after winning the Western Athletic Conference, is the only mid-major to date that did not fare well in a BCS bowl appearance. The Warriors lost, 41-10, to Georgia in New Orleans four years ago.

The recent mid-major representation comes in contrast to the 54 years before the BCS was formed in 1999. In the five decades that preceded the BCS, only five schools from non-AQ conferences appeared in upper-tier bowl games.

It’s something the BCS set out to change, providing more equity for conference champions such as NIU.

“Those access points were negotiated out of a sense of fairness and doing what’s best for the game,” BCS executive director Bill Hancock told the Northwest Herald last week.

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