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The Glass Bowl was an annual postseason college football bowl game played from 1946 to 1949. [1] It was held at the University of Toledo 's Glass Bowl . Toledo had been a manufacturing center for glass objects, including automotive glass for nearby Detroit factories.
In 1999, the Toledo-based Ohio Cannon of the Regional Football League played at various stadiums, including the Glass Bowl, but did not finish the season. [3] The stadium hosted the 2001 MAC Championship Game. [4] The stadium hosted the Italian Bowl on July 1, 2023, it was the final game of the 2023 Italian Football League season. [5]
Event: Brief description of the scoring play. (Examples: "Santonio Holmes 6 yard pass from Ben Roethlisberger (Jeff Reed kick)" or "28 yard field goal by Stephen Gostkowski") Score: The abbreviation of the leading team followed by the score of the game. (Example: USC 14–10 or Pitt 13–9 or NYG 17–14)
Super Bowl Squares reverse score Some people will opt to have two payouts per quarter rather than one. A reverse score is when a player has the right score, but the teams are inverted.
For annual matches such as the Super Bowl or the Pro Bowl, the |type= parameter is used to define certain game-specific titles and wikilinks. The |name= parameter is used to give the title of the game, but when used in conjunction with |type= only the specific number/numeral is necessary.
Scott High School Waite (H.S.) Bowl Armory Park (1918—1922) University Stadium (Scott Park) (1923—1931) St. John Field (1932—1933) Swayne Field (1934—1935, 1942) UT played five of six home games at Swayne Field in an effort to conserve fuel for the war effort. Libbey High School (1936) Glass Bowl (1937–present) Other Football Facilities:
The first New Year's game held in the Rose Bowl stadium occurred in 1923 when USC defeated Penn State, 14-3. A general overall aerial view of Rose Bowl Stadium facade, the site of the 111th Rose ...
A standard football game consists of four 15-minute quarters (12-minute quarters in high-school football and often shorter at lower levels, usually one minute per grade [e.g. 9-minute quarters for freshman games]), [6] with a 12-minute half-time intermission (30 minutes in the Super Bowl) after the second quarter in the NFL (college halftimes are 20 minutes; in high school the interval is 15 ...