BOISE, IDAHO - When Tulsa's bowl status was pending, coach Steve Kragthorpe joked that he would snowshoe to Alaska if that's what it took to extend the season.<br>
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He was more on target than he thought.<br>
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"Our athletic director, after we got invited to this, said, 'You made it about half way,'" said Kragthorpe, whose Golden Hurricane play Georgia Tech on Saturday in the Humanitarian Bowl.<br>
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After consecutive one-win seasons, Tulsa is thrilled to be in one of the less exotic bowl destinations, playing on a funky blue surface that was ringed with snow Friday.<br>
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Nobody on either team is complaining.<br>
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"This whole year, it's been so great," said offensive lineman Austin Chadwick, who has lived up to a pledge he made when Tulsa was struggling early in the season by shaving his head for the game.<br>
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Several of his teammates have followed his lead.<br>
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Tulsa (8-4) got the Humanitarian bid when Western Athletic Conference champion Boise State opted out of another home game in favor of playing a ranked opponent in TCU in the Fort Worth Bowl. The Broncos won, but left the hometown bowl organizers looking for a new team to play Tech (6-6).<br>
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The Golden Hurricane were eager to accept after last appearing in a bowl in 1991. Tulsa had gone just 2-21 over the last two seasons, then Kragthorpe, an assistant with the Buffalo Bills, took over after Keith Burns was fired.<br>
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After a 3-4 start, Tulsa closed the regular season with a five-game winning streak and got Kragthorpe plenty of recognition. He tied for third with Oklahoma's Bob Stoops in the AP coach of the year voting.<br>
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Not bad for a rookie head coach.<br>
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"I voted for Steve Kragthorpe for national coach of the year," Tech coach Chan Gailey said. "A team that's won two games total in two years and they go to a bowl with an 8-4 record? Shoot, that's an unbelievable job."<br>
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The Yellow Jackets are in their seventh straight bowl, although this one is certainly a new experience. Wednesday's practice was held in snow, something many of the Yellow Jackets had never seen.<br>
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"I bet it was pretty unique for them. Those guys from Miami, they think it's sand," Gailey said.<br>
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The Yellow Jackets actually enjoyed the snow so much they took a trip to Idaho City for some snowmobiling, tubing and snowball fights on Thursday. After just a few days, they felt plenty acclimated to the weather.<br>
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"I think it's colder in Atlanta sometimes with the wind chill factor than it is right here," wide receiver Nate Curry said.<br>
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Tech had a chance at one of the Atlantic Coast Conference's more high-profile games before losing consecutive games to Virginia and Georgia the last two games of the regular season and falling to .500.<br>
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Gailey said the difference between finishing 6-7 and 7-6 is huge.<br>
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"We started at a point where I think everybody thought we'd start at and I think we've improved a great deal," Gailey said. "We're a totally different team, but we still have a game to go so it's hard for me to say yet. These seniors have never had a losing season. I think that's big."
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