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Liberty Bowl

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Location
  
Memphis, Tennessee

Operated
  
1959–present

Liberty Bowl ilovememphisblogcomwpcontentuploads201512Li

Previous stadiums
  
John F. Kennedy Stadium (1959–1963) Convention Hall (1964)

Previous locations
  
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1959–1963) Atlantic City, New Jersey (1964)

Conference tie-ins
  
Big 12 #4 Pick vs SEC Pool Pick The American (alternate)

Previous conference tie-ins
  
C-USA (1996–2013) MWC (1998–2005) winner of the Commander in Chief's Trophy (1989–1992)

Stadium
  
Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium

Instances
  
2014 Liberty Bowl, 2009 Liberty Bowl, 1987 Liberty Bowl, 1982 Liberty Bowl, 2016 Liberty Bowl

The Liberty Bowl is an annual U.S. American college football bowl game played in late December or early January since 1959. Since 1965, the game has been held at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium in Memphis, Tennessee. For its first five years, it was played in Philadelphia. Since 2004, the game has been sponsored by Memphis-based auto parts retailer AutoZone. Because of the scheduling of the bowl game near the end of the calendar year, no game was played during calendar years 2008 or 2015, while two games were played in calendar years 2010 and 2016.

Contents

Liberty Bowl Photos AutoZone Liberty Bowl The Collegian

liberty bowl georgia bulldogs vs tcu horned frogs in 30 minutes 12 30 16


History

Liberty Bowl Liberty Bowl Wikipedia

A. F. "Bud" Dudley, a former Villanova athletic-director, created the Liberty Bowl in Philadelphia in 1959. The game was played at Philadelphia's Municipal Stadium. It was the only cold-weather bowl game of its time, and was plagued by poor attendance. The inaugural game was the most successful of the five held in Philadelphia, as 38,000 fans watched Penn State beat Alabama 7–0 in 1959.

Liberty Bowl AutoZone Liberty Bowl

A group of Atlantic City businessmen convinced Dudley to move his game from Philadelphia to Atlantic City's Convention Hall for 1964 and guaranteed Dudley $25,000. It would be the first major (University Division, now Division I) bowl game played indoors. AstroTurf was still in its developmental stages and was unavailable for the game. Convention Hall was equipped with a 4-inch-thick (100 mm) grass surface with two inches of burlap underneath it (as padding) on top of concrete. To keep the grass growing, artificial lighting was installed and kept on 24 hours a day. The entire process cost about $16,000. End-zones were only 8 yards long. 6,059 fans saw Utah rout West Virginia. Dudley was paid $25,000 from Atlantic City businessmen, $60,000 from the gate, and $95,000 from television revenues, for $10,000 net profit.

Liberty Bowl AutoZone Liberty Bowl UGA Alumni Association

Dudley moved the game to Memphis in 1965, where it has made its home at what became Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium to much larger crowds and has established itself as one of the oldest non-BCS bowls.

Matchup

Liberty Bowl Images Liberty Bowl

During the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Liberty Bowl offered an automatic invitation to the winner of the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy, if that team was bowl eligible.

Beginning in 1996, the Liberty Bowl began an affiliation with the newly-launched Conference USA, offering its champion an automatic bid. Beginning in 2005, the winner of C-USA was determined by the newly-created C-USA championship game. The winner of that game was customarily offered the bowl berth from 2005-2013.

In 1996 and 1997, the opponent for the C-USA champion was a team from the Big East. In 1998, the Liberty Bowl replaced the Holiday Bowl in a shared contract with the Cotton Bowl and had second choice between the WAC champion and a team from the SEC. From 1999 to 2005, the opponent for the C-USA champion was the Mountain West champion. There were two exceptions:

  • 2004: Mountain West champion Utah qualified for the BCS. In their place, the Liberty Bowl chose WAC champion Boise State.
  • 2005: Mountain West champion TCU chose to play in the Houston Bowl. At-large WAC team Fresno State took their place.
  • In 1999, the Mountain West Conference did not have an outright champion, as three teams tied for the conference lead. The conference's bid for the game was given to Colorado State.

    The bowl's contract from 2006 until 2013 pitted the winner of the C-USA championship game against the eighth pick from the SEC. The American was to provide its fifth-place team as an alternate if the SEC could not provide a team. The SEC was also given veto power for the bowl, and elected to use it in 2011 to block C-USA champion Southern Miss from playing Vanderbilt; instead Cincinnati got the spot and Southern Miss accepted an invitation to the Hawaii Bowl instead.

    Since 2014, the matchup features a team from the SEC against the #4 pick from the Big 12 Conference. The Liberty Bowl is part of a six-bowl SEC pool arrangement that also involves the Belk, Music City, Outback, TaxSlayer, and Texas bowls; these bowls will choose one representative from the conference each, while the College Football Playoff receiving first choice (usually the Sugar Bowl in years it does not serve as a national semifinal) and the Citrus Bowl second choice.

    The game is televised nationally on ESPN, and is carried nationwide by ESPN Radio, and internationally by ESPN International.

    Recent matchups of note

    The 2010 win by UCF was the program's first-ever bowl victory.

    The 2011 game matched Coaches' Poll #24 ranked Cincinnati against upstart Vanderbilt, and unlike most lower tier bowls, it aired on the broadcast network ABC rather than its cable brethren ESPN. Cincinnati defeated Vanderbilt in a second-half comeback.

    The 2012 Liberty Bowl featured a matchup between the Iowa State Cyclones (9th place in the Big 12) and the Tulsa Golden Hurricane (Conference USA champions). Iowa State defeated Tulsa 38–23 in the season's first weekend, however Tulsa defeated Iowa State 31–17 in the rematch of the regular season game. Though the bowl normally selects a team from the SEC, it invited Iowa State because the SEC did not have enough bowl-eligible teams to fill all of its contracted bowl games.

    Game results

    Mountain West Conference champion Utah was released from their contractual obligation to the Liberty Bowl after earning a BCS berth in 2004. Western Athletic Conference champion Boise State took Utah's place.

    References

    Liberty Bowl Wikipedia


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