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1939 Rose Bowl; 1942 Rose Bowl; 1945 Sugar Bowl; 1955 Orange Bowl; 1958 Orange Bowl; 1961 Cotton Bowl Classic; 1989 All-American Bowl; 1995 Hall of Fame Bowl; 2012 Belk Bowl; 2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl; 2014 Sun Bowl; 2015 Pinstripe Bowl; 2017 Quick Lane Bowl; 2018 Independence Bowl; 2022 Military Bowl; 2023 Birmingham Bowl; 2025 Gator Bowl
The Gator Bowl is an annual college football bowl game held in Jacksonville, Florida, usually contested on or around New Year's Day. It has been held continuously since 1946, making it the sixth oldest college bowl, as well as the first televised nationally. [2] The game was originally played at Gator Bowl Stadium through
First bowl game for HBCUs, hosted by Prairie View A&M. Pretzel Bowl 1951 Reading, Pennsylvania: West Chester Golden Rams vs. Albright Rams: Pythian Bowl: 1949–1951 Salisbury, North Carolina: First bowl game that was played in North Carolina. Known in 1952 as the Lions Bowl. Refrigerator Bowl: 1948–1956 Evansville, Indiana: Rice Bowl 1957 ...
This may be the one bowl game that doesn’t take four hours to complete. ... TaxSlayer Gator Bowl (Jan. 2, 7:30 p.m., ESPN) ... Duke closed the season on a three-game win streak that was capped ...
Jim Hickey replaced Tatum after the 1958 season and coached North Carolina to one bowl game, the 1963 Gator Bowl, where they won their first bowl game in program history. [4] [5] Bill Dooley succeeded Hickey as head coach and led the Tar Heels to six bowl games through his eleven-season run as head coach. [6]
Jaxson Dart threw four touchdown passes and Ulysses Bentley IV ran for a pair of scores as No. 14 Ole Miss overwhelmed Duke in a 52-20 Gator Bowl romp Thursday night in Jacksonville, Fla.
The 1994 team played in the program's first New Years Day Bowl game since 1961, falling to Wisconsin 34–21 in the 1995 Hall of Fame Bowl, [61] [60] later known as the Outback Bowl. After 1994, however, Duke's football program continued to decline, with the team only winning a total of nine more games under Goldsmith's watch. [ 62 ]
This article lists the all-time win/loss NCAA Division I FBS sanctioned bowl game records for all NCAA college football teams. Win–loss records are current as of the 2024–25 bowl season. The columns for "last bowl season" and "last bowl game" have been updated to reflect 2024–25 bowl appearances for all games played through January 20, 2025.