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College Green: Aer Lingus College Football Classic. [200] First show broadcast from outside the United States. Sheamus: None [n] August 31, 2024 7 Notre Dame Fighting Irish: 23: 20 Texas A&M Aggies 13 College Station, Texas: Aggie Park Johnny Manziel: Notre Dame Fighting Irish September 7, 2024 3 Texas Longhorns: 31: 10 Michigan Wolverines 12 ...
Starting with the 2009 season, a celebrity guest picker gives picks for the day's key games alongside the GameDay regulars (such as Bob Knight when GameDay aired from Texas Tech in 2008, NASCAR star Dale Earnhardt Jr. when GameDay aired from Bristol Motor Speedway (a NASCAR track) in 2016 and Verne Lundquist in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, since it was ...
College GameDay or ESPN College GameDay may refer to one of several shows produced by the sports network, ESPN: College GameDay (football TV program) ...
Fox acquired its first college football telecast in 1998, when it obtained the broadcast rights to the annual Cotton Bowl Classic held each January on (eventually, the day after) New Year's Day; the first game to be shown on the network as part of the deal was held on January 1, 1999. Fox renewed its contract to carry the game in 2010, in a ...
From 1981 until 2014, ABC aired the in-studio pre-game show College Football Countdown before its slate of regional games at 3:30 p.m. Eastern Time. For many years, College Football Countdown was broadcast from ABC's Time Square Studios. This ended in 2011 when a new set was built at the ESPN studios in Bristol, CT.
The games primarily serve as a source of live content for ESPN during the early weeks of bowl season, prior to the larger, traditional games in proximity to New Year's Day (such as the New Year's Six games of the College Football Playoff, which are also broadcast by ESPN). This strategy has been successful for ESPN, although it has in recent ...
TBS became the first cable network to nationally televise college football games. [1] [2] They aired a package of live Division I-AA games on Thursday nights and Division I-A games on Saturdays. [3] WTBS was only able to show teams that had not been on national television in 1981. There were a maximum of four teams that had been on regional ...
When College GameDay tipped off its 7th season on January 15, 2011, the show expanded to two hours, with the first hour airing on ESPNU, followed by the second hour on ESPN. The first game of the 2011 schedule marked the first time the show has originated from a site that has featured a men's and women's game played in the same day.