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The San Francisco Bowl was an annual postseason college football bowl game certified by the NCAA and played in the San Francisco Bay Area.Originally named the Diamond Walnut San Francisco Bowl during its first two editions from 2002 to 2003, it was the Emerald Bowl from 2004 to 2009, the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl from 2010 to 2013, the Foster Farms Bowl from 2014 to 2017, and the Redbox Bowl ...
Super Bowl XXIV: San Francisco 49ers 55, Denver Broncos 10 MVP: Joe Montana | Location: Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans | Date: Jan. 28, 1990 Super Bowl XXIII: San Francisco 49ers 20, Cincinnati ...
The Super Bowl may have developed immunity against a terrible game. Early Nielsen data and a projection from Fox and the NFL showed 126 million viewers watched Sunday's telecast of the ...
The 1980s San Francisco 49ers and 1990s Dallas ... The Chiefs have won 17 straight one-score games, and the Eagles figured out how to get around that. ... Reid and the Chiefs' dynasty was in big ...
The 2002 San Francisco Bowl was the final collegiate game of Tech running back Lee Suggs, whose two touchdowns allowed him to finish his collegiate career with 336 points, the second-most career points scored by a player in the Big East. [20] Suggs also extended his NCAA-record streak of consecutive games with a rushing touchdown to 27. [38]
The following is a detailed list of results and scores from National Football League (NFL) games aired on NBC under the game package NBC Sunday Night Football. The list includes both regular season and post-season game results, both produced by NBC Sports , from the 2006 NFL season to the present.
Super Bowl 16 in 1982 marked the first appearance in the game for both teams. San Francisco raced out to a 20-0 lead by halftime and held on in the second half. ... to score the game-winning ...
The San Francisco Bowl (formerly the Redbox Bowl) was canceled for a second straight season when organizers could not come to terms with all parties involved with the game. [4] On December 2, 2021, the NCAA approved a 42nd bowl game, later named the Frisco Football Classic, in order to accommodate all 84 bowl-eligible teams. [5]