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The 2008–09 NCAA football bowl games, which concluded the 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season, contained a record number of bowl games scheduled in college football history. A total of 37 bowl games, 34 team-competitive games and three all-star games, were played starting on December 20, 2008, with four contests and concluding with the ...
A total of 32 team-competitive plus four all-star postseason games were played. While bowl games had been the purview of only the very best teams for nearly a century, this was the second consecutive year that teams with non-winning seasons participated in bowl games. To fill the 64 available bowl slots from the 119 schools in the Bowl ...
SEC Bowl Games Game Date Location/Time* Television Winner + Score Loser + Score Attendance Payout Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl: December 31, 2008 LP Field Nashville, Tennessee 2:30 p.m. ESPN: Vanderbilt: 16 Boston College: 14 54,250: $1,700,000 Chick-fil-A Bowl: December 31, 2008 Georgia Dome Atlanta, Georgia 6:30 p.m. ESPN: LSU: 38 Georgia ...
The regular season began on August 28, 2008, and ended on December 6, 2008. The postseason concluded on January 8, 2009, with the BCS National Championship Game in Miami Gardens, Florida , which featured the top two teams ranked by the Bowl Championship Series (BCS): the No. 2 Florida Gators (No. 1 in the AP Poll ) and No. 1 Oklahoma Sooners ...
Here's a look at the College Football Playoff bracket to get you ready for all the games, including a full schedule of bowl games and how to watch the action: COLLEGE FOOTBALL GOES PRO: ...
Alabama's 2008 schedule was officially released on January 4, 2008. [11] It featured six pre-season AP Top 25 teams, five of which were ranked in the top 10, eight of which made bowl games in 2007. [11] [12] In accordance with conference rules, Alabama faced all five Western Division opponents: Arkansas, Auburn, LSU, Mississippi State, and Ole ...
The first round of the highly anticipated 12-team College Football Playoff format kicks off in less than a month on Friday, Dec. 20 with a primetime Friday night game.
The game was part of the 2008–2009 bowl game schedule and was the concluding game of the 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season for both teams. This seventh edition of the Hawaiʻi Bowl, sponsored by Sheraton Hotels and Resorts, was planned as a matchup between the WAC and Pac-10, however the Pac-10 was not able to supply a bowl-eligible team.