The Daily Collegian Outback t jwl wins, regardless of result By Andrew J. Cassavell Jim McVav is grinning from ear to ear. Never mind the Outback Bowl president has two 7-5 teams coming off extremely disap pointing seasons playing at his New Year's Day State and Florida take the field MY OPINION Jan. 1. it's a pair of tradition-rich football programs with massive fan bases. To MeVay. that can mean only one thing: dollars. Lots of them. "We are thrilled with the matchup." MeVay said on Monday's bowl teleconference. "We can't think of two teams that we are more proud of to have in our game than the Gators and the Nittany Lions.' MeVav's decision to select Men’s volleyball ready for Hawaiian opener By Joe Mclntyre While most students are trudging around campus during syllabus w eek in sub-freezing tern peralures. the Penn State men's volleyball team will be enjoying tin degree weather in Hawaii. For tie 1 lourth straight season, the Nittam Lions will begin their season in Honolulu. Hawaii for the Outrigger Invitational. Each of the teams they piay were ranked In the final AYCA Division I L top lb rankings No ft LOLA. No. i Hawaii and No 14 Ball State The Lions won the tournament two straight seasons from 200 i) 2000 but tailed to make it a triteeta last veer, losing to Southern Californio m the team's opening game Sinee these games are the Nittam Lions' hist regular season matchups, coach .Mark Pavtlk said the team plans on using the tour namenf as a measuring stick to see where it stands against some good opponents early in tin' sea son. 1 want to see where we re at Pavlik said It's one thing to be m the own Flot i and Penn State for his game just goes to show the entire college football landscape is shaped by dollars and cents not just the BCS. Take the jerseys aw ay and the contest has no ring to it. No star quarterback. No high ranking on the line. No dominant defense. Even the all-important confer ence bragging rights won't be too relevant in the game The Outback Bowl is one of three New Year's Day Big Ten-SEC matchups - not including Jan. 4 s Sugar Bow ! pitting Ohio State and Arkansas. Mix the Gator Chomp with Nittanv Nation, however, and MeVay shouldn't see many empty seals. Hidings will be high or at least as high its they can get for a bow l named after a steak house. That's why he chose the Lions over the low a Hawkeyes. who cruised against Penn State. 24-3. Oct. 2 and finished the season your own team- even da; nether thing to go sotn.-pk.ou re looking for r time with the p.Th::-,;).,!! nave been eompet ivi \Viiit<- contests i-'n'.lav afternoon. White !iu■ i.inn' nad a tew scrini inaue- ni iv, ;wceii. rocMiirt jiinior Itn- >!'iii|t 1 aid k> niltieult to get a i!i( learn w hen it lin.-t a-)];-her oppo- l LM )i)(! (i< >('!a■ tram haw gotten a. trip and the younger oi; h..Vo no choice but to a', cilia; nearlv .j.ttOO mHc- aw,!'. iua\ ><.-<'iii more diffi- SPORTS with the same record. But that decision is at least justifiable from a football standpoint. lowa strug gled in November, losing its final three games. South Carolina, on the other hand, won its final three regular season games in an impressive run to the SEC east crown. Forget the Gamecocks' blowout loss to Auburn last Saturday. Less than a month ago. they went to The Swamp and wal loped the Gators by 22 points. Nonetheless, it's Florida-Penn State in the Outback Bowl, while the Gamecocks and Hawkeyes. who were relegated to pre-New Year's Day bowl games, will be sitting home watching. "We re not trying to put on a national championship here," Outback Bowl representative Mike Schulze said earlier this week. "We have two teams that don't traditionally get to play each other ... On local TV sets and on TV sets all over on New Year's Day people will be excited." cult that playing a much closer opponent. Pavlik said it's the exact opposite. "We go to Fort Wayne and we re on the bus for eight or nine hours," Pavlik said. "We travel, we’re on the plane for eight or nine hours, you get off and you're in Honolulu. Do the math on where you'd rather be getting off at." While the majority of Penn State students will be wearing winter coats, scarves and boots, the volleyball team will be turning all that in for swim trunks, sun glasses and sandals. Coach Pavlik said the team will arrive in Honolulu the evening of Jan. 11 and have practice the next morning. The team will leave the rest of the day to enjoy the sandy beach es of the island instead of the snowy sidewalks of the valley. got manv "We ll be mainly going to the beach, doing a little sightseeing and stuff like that," sophomore Kyle Mars said. "Maybe see some of the mountains, you know, get a taste of what life is like over there in Hawaii." To e-mail reporter: jrms4ol@psu.edu “We have two teams that don’t traditionally get to play each other ... On local TV sets and on TV sets all over on New Year’s Day, people will be excited.” And those people likely won't be disappointed with a game that will likely be dose because both teams are so similar not nec essarily because they have much talent. Penn State and Florida each rank in the top-15 of all-time win ningest programs, and both have been featured prominently in the BCS recently. Joe Paterno has the chance to capture his 25th bowl victory against a Florida program he has vet to beat and a coach with similar success winning per centage-wise in bowl games. And Wednesday's announce- Joe Sunder (back) goes for the kill against Springfield last season Friday, Dec. 10, 2010 I Mike Schulze Outback Bowl representative ment that Florida coach Urban Meyer will retire after the game was McVay's proverbial cherry on top. Come game time, there w'on't be much rooting interest in McVay's suite. The head man at the Outback Bowl already got exactly what he wanted. Whatever else happens at Raymond James Stadium on Jan. 1 is just icing on the cake. Andrew J. Cassavell is a senior majoring in journalism and is a Daily Collegian football reporter. His e-mail address is ajcs23B@psu.edu