Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The 1976–77 NCAA football bowl games were a series of post-season games played in December 1976 and January 1977 to end the 1976 NCAA Division I football season. A total of 12 team-competitive games were played. The post-season began with the Independence Bowl on December 13, 1976, and concluded on January 2, 1977, with the Sun Bowl.
Also known as the Ford Motor City Bowl and the Motor City Bowl. Was replaced by the Quick Lane Bowl in 2014. Los Angeles Christmas Festival: 1924 Los Angeles, California: Mercy Bowl: 1961, 1971 Los Angeles, California: Miami Beach Bowl: 2014–2016 Miami, Florida: Sold and moved to Frisco, Texas: Montgomery Bowl: 2020 Montgomery, Alabama
The Little Caesars Pizza Bowl (known as the Motor City Bowl until 2009) was a post-season college football bowl game that was played annually from 1997 to 2013. The first five games (1997–2001) were played at the Pontiac Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan, and moved to the 65,000-seat Ford Field in downtown Detroit, Michigan in 2002—the past and present homes of the Detroit Lions respectively.
0–9. 1958 Sun Bowl (January) 1977 Independence Bowl; 1991 Fiesta Bowl; 1993 Liberty Bowl; 1998 Motor City Bowl; 1999 Humanitarian Bowl; 2000 Liberty Bowl
Detroit's bowl game dates to 1997, when it was first introduced as the Motor City Bowl and was played at the Pontiac Silverdome. Ford Field become the host in 2002, with the name remaining "Motor ...
They play their home games at Johnny "Red" Floyd Stadium, which has a seating capacity of 30,788. Middle Tennessee began playing football in 1911 as a small-college program. Following the NCAA's reclassification into divisions in 1973, the Blue Raiders competed as a Division II program for five seasons before moving up to the Division I-AA (now ...
Marshall met and defeated Toledo in the MAC Championship Game for the second year in a row. By virtue of the win they were invited to the Motor City Bowl where they played the Louisville Cardinals. Marshall won the game 48–29, marking the first bowl game victory in the history of Marshall football.
The Falcons were invited to a bowl game, defeating Northwestern, 28–24 at the Motor City Bowl at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan. The following season, Brandon went 9–3 including taking the Falcons to a second consecutive bowl game, defeating Memphis 52–35 at the 2004 GMAC Bowl in Mobile, Alabama. The Falcons finished 6–5 in 2005 after ...