The four teams (ordered by seeding) that made the postseason were the Sioux City Bandits, Texas Revolution, Wichita Force, and Amarillo Venom. On Thursday, June 11, Texas defeated Wichita 39–27. Two days later, Sioux City beat Amarillo 83–52. This pitted Texas against Sioux City in Champions Bowl I on June 20 in Iowa.
x = clinched playoffs, y = clinched home playoffs, z = clinched top seed
Semifinals
Champions Bowl I
3
Wichita
27
2
Texas
39
2
Texas
61
1
Sioux City
76
4
Amarillo
52
1
Sioux City
83
Game summary
The Champions Bowl was a highly anticipated event in both
Siouxland and the
Dallas-Fort Worth area, as the number one offense (Sioux City) faced the top defense (Texas). It was a well-fought game, especially at halftime, as the score was tied 35–35. But a rushing touchdown for eventual Champions Bowl MVP Drew Prohaska and a Rahn Franklin interception sealed the deal for the Bandits as they defeated the "Revs", 76–61 in front of a raucous crowd.
The four teams (ordered by seeding) that made the postseason were the Sioux City Bandits, Texas Revolution, Wichita Force, and Amarillo Venom. On Thursday, June 11, Texas defeated Wichita 39–27. Two days later, Sioux City beat Amarillo 83–52. This pitted Texas against Sioux City in Champions Bowl I on June 20 in Iowa.
x = clinched playoffs, y = clinched home playoffs, z = clinched top seed
Semifinals
Champions Bowl I
3
Wichita
27
2
Texas
39
2
Texas
61
1
Sioux City
76
4
Amarillo
52
1
Sioux City
83
Game summary
The Champions Bowl was a highly anticipated event in both
Siouxland and the
Dallas-Fort Worth area, as the number one offense (Sioux City) faced the top defense (Texas). It was a well-fought game, especially at halftime, as the score was tied 35–35. But a rushing touchdown for eventual Champions Bowl MVP Drew Prohaska and a Rahn Franklin interception sealed the deal for the Bandits as they defeated the "Revs", 76–61 in front of a raucous crowd.