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The West Virginia Mountaineers college football team competes as part of the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), representing the West Virginia University in the Big 12 Conference (Big 12). Since the establishment of the team in 1891, West Virginia University has appeared in 41 bowl games. [1]
0–9. 1922 San Diego East-West Christmas Classic; 1938 Sun Bowl; 1949 Sun Bowl; 1954 Sugar Bowl; 1964 Liberty Bowl; 1969 Peach Bowl; 1972 Peach Bowl; 1975 Peach Bowl
Since 2012, West Virginia has competed as a member of Big 12 Conference. Through the 2022 season, West Virginia has compiled an official overall record of 769 wins, 513 losses, 45 ties and has appeared in 39 bowl games, with its most recent appearance coming in the 2021 Guaranteed Rate Bowl. This is a list of their annual results. [3] [4]
The 1989 Sunkist Fiesta Bowl, played on Monday, January 2, was the 18th edition of the Fiesta Bowl. It featured the top-ranked Notre Dame Fighting Irish and the third-ranked West Virginia Mountaineers. With both teams undefeated, the Fiesta Bowl was the stage for the "national championship" for the second time in three
The Heels and Mountaineers faced off in the 2008 bowl in Charlotte, then known as the Meineke Bowl, with West Virginia winning 31-30. Hakeen Nicks caught eight balls for 217 yards and three TDs ...
Despite losing its bowl game, West Virginia finished with a 9–4 record and was ranked in both the final Coaches (No. 20) and AP (No. 25) polls for the first time since 1993. The momentum generated from the 2002 campaign was short-lived as the Mountaineers stumbled to a 1–4 record early in the 2003 season.
UNC won at the 1996 Gator Bowl and West Virginia beat the Tar Heels in Charlotte in 2008. UNC lost to South Carolina in the 2021 Duke’s Mayo Bowl. ... After losing six of their last seven bowl ...
The 2007 Gator Bowl was a post-season college football bowl game between the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets and the West Virginia Mountaineers played on January 1, 2007, at Jacksonville Municipal Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida, United States. For sponsorship reasons, the bowl was officially known as the Toyota Gator Bowl. [1]