Bowl swag has players smiling


Associated Press

The bowl swag has gotten a lot better.

Yes, players still get a watch and a ring for participating in a bowl, but Florida State kicker Roberto Aguayo has managed to outfit a personal entertainment system, including a home theater recliner.

“I have the chair from last year, a Bluetooth surround sound system and a little Bluetooth speaker,” said the redshirt junior, who has played in a College Football Playoff semifinal at the Rose Bowl and a national championship game also in Pasadena. He is looking to add to his collection at the Peach Bowl when the Seminoles face Houston on Thursday.

Each Peach Bowl participant will receive a $300 Visa gift card in the game sponsored by Chick-fil-A.

The home theater recliner — which featured two USB outlets for charging mobile devices and a cup holder — was very popular last season. More than 1,000 players, coaches and staff members opted for the recliners, according to the Performance Award Center, which does the gift suites for the bowl games.

This season’s swag includes a four-person Coleman tent, custom-made binoculars, stereo headphones, blenders, pots and pans, and the always useful gift cards — like the $450 shopping spree at a Belk department store for the Belk Bowl participants.

Wait, there’s more.

While NCAA rules cap what bowl organizers can spend on each of a school’s 125 bowl participants at $550, schools can spend up to $400 and conferences can allot $400 for postseason rewards — another $800 per participant.

Often those are used on rings but Mack Brown, the former Texas coach and current ABC/ESPN college football analyst, said many times the equipment and strength coaches would get with the seniors and choose the best gifts and spread them out during preparations “so they don’t get them all at once.”

Brown said, “It is one of the real joys of bowl seasons to watch the kids smile.”

Temple quarterback P.J. Walker had a smile on his face after picking up some stereo speakers before the Boca Raton Bowl.

“I’m going to make sure during the summer I’ll take it home to my mother and let her use it,” Walker said. “But once I get back to school I’m bringing them back with me.”

Of the 41 bowls, 25 have gift suites, like the one where Walker snared his headphones. Jon Cooperstein, director of the sports marketing division for PAC, said bowls have been doing gift suites for 11 years because games were essentially giving the same gifts.

Cooperstein said underclassmen have a tendency to go for the big-ticket items — like the high-tech recliner or a television — while upperclassmen go for items on smaller tiers so that they can do a little holiday shopping for family.

And to top it off, gift suite items are not subject to taxes because players select their gifts on a tier level instead of a cash value being attached, according to the NCAA.