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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.
Won Motor City Bowl against Toledo 39–10 — — 2005: 7th 5 6 — — — 2006: 7th 4 8 — — — 2007*^ T-1st* 9 4 Lost Meineke Car Care Bowl against Wake Forest 10–24 — — 2008^ 5th 8 5 Won International Bowl against Buffalo 38–20 — — 2009^ 5th 8 5 Won PapaJohns.com Bowl against South Carolina 20–7 — — 2010*^ T-1st* 8 5 ...
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
The Wildcats have experienced futility for much of its existence. The team has several winless seasons, including setting an NCAA Division I record for consecutive losses when it lost 34 straight games from 1979 to 1982. [1] [2] The Wildcats went 64 years without winning a bowl game after the 1949 Rose Bowl.
Sid Gillman, a member of the College and National Football League hall of fame shrines, was the architect of one of the top eras of Cincinnati football history. He directed the Bearcats to three conference titles and a pair of bowl game appearances during his six seasons (1949–54) before leaving for the professional ranks.
Here is a year-by-year list of every Super Bowl: NEVER MISS A SNAP: Sign up to get the latest NFL news and features delivered directly to your inbox Super Bowl history
Year Coach Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches # AP ° Butchel College (1891–1913) 1891 No coach 1–3: 1892 Frank Cook: 3–4: 1893 John Heisman: 5–2: 1894 John Heisman 1–0: 1895 No coach 3–2: 1896 Harry Wilson 0–1: 1897 No team: 1898 No team: 1899 Archie Eves 2–1: 1900 No coach 2–3–1: 1901 No team: 1902 Forest ...
1977 Super Bowl (11): Oakland Raiders 32, Minnesota Vikings 14 1978 Super Bowl (12): Dallas Cowboys 27, Denver Broncos 10 1979 Super Bowl (13): Pittsburgh Steelers 35, Dallas Cowboys 31