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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 ...
2009 Senior Bowl; 2008 St. Petersburg Bowl; 2009 Sugar Bowl; 2008 Sun Bowl; T. 2008 Texas Bowl This page was last edited on 12 February 2024, at 03:24 (UTC). Text ...
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 ...
The final Coaches Poll of the 2008 season (technically taking place in 2009) was notable in that the winner of the BCS Championship Game was not the unanimous number 1. . While the coaches are obligated to vote the winner of that game, Utah coach Kyle Whittingham voted his team number 1 after they defeated favored Alabama in the 2009 Sugar Bowl and completed the only undefeated season (13
The 2009 FedEx Orange Bowl was the 75th edition of Orange Bowl, an annual college football bowl game.It pitted the 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) champion Virginia Tech Hokies against the Big East Conference champion Cincinnati Bearcats on January 1, 2009, at Dolphin Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.
When the Horned Frogs played the Broncos in 2009, it was TCU’s first Jan. 1 bowl game in 51 years. Remembering TCU’s first Fiesta Bowl: 2009-10 vs. Boise State and Kellen Moore Skip to main ...
One of the most interesting college football seasons in recent memory — for good and bad — came to a close on Saturday in the Big Ten. Michigan (13-0. 9-0 in Big Ten play) once again ...
The payouts were $3.25 million for the higher priority selection from the ACC and $2.4 million for the SEC representative. The Chick-fil-A Bowl was the highest-rated ESPN-broadcast bowl game of the 2007–2008 season, and the highest rated in the game's history. [17]