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2021-22 College Football Bowl Schedule

The 2021-22 College Football Bowl Schedule kicked off on Friday, Dec. 17, 2021. In the College Football Playoff National Championship on Monday, Jan. 10, 2022, the Georgia Bulldogs defeated the Alabama Crimson Tide 33-18 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Ind.

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College football bowl game schedule for 2021-22: Dates, times, matchups

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College football bowl season is here. In all, there are 44 bowl games, including the College Football Playoff and the national championship games, beginning Friday, Dec. 17, and ending on Monday, Jan. 10.

Here's a look at all of this season's games.

(All times Eastern)

Bowl schedule

Friday, Dec. 17

Tailgreeter Cure Bowl Coastal Carolina 47, Northern Illinois 41

Bahamas Bowl Middle Tennessee 31, Toledo 24

Saturday, Dec. 18

RoofClaim.com Boca Raton Bowl Western Kentucky 59, App State 38

Cricket Celebration Bowl South Carolina State 31, Jackson State 10

PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl Fresno State 31, UTEP 24

Radiance Technologies Independence Bowl UAB 31, BYU 28

LendingTree Bowl Liberty 56, Eastern Michigan 20

Jimmy Kimmel LA Bowl pres. by Stifel Utah State 24, Oregon State 13

R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl Louisiana 36, Marshall 21

Monday, Dec 20

Myrtle Beach Bowl Presented by TaxAct Tulsa 30, Old Dominion 17

Tuesday, Dec. 21

Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Wyoming 52, Kent State 38

Tropical Smoothie Cafe Frisco Bowl No. 24 San Diego State 38, UTSA 24

Wednesday, Dec. 22

Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl Army 24, Missouri 22

Thursday, Dec. 23

Frisco Football Classic Miami (Ohio) 27, North Texas 14

Union Home Mortgage Gasparilla Bowl UCF 29, Florida 17

Saturday, Dec. 25

TaxAct Camellia Bowl Georgia State 51, Ball State 20

Monday, Dec. 27

Quick Lane Bowl Western Michigan 52, Nevada 24

Tuesday, Dec. 28

TicketSmarter Birmingham Bowl Houston 17, Auburn 13

SERVPRO First Responder Bowl Air Force 31, Louisville 28

AutoZone Liberty Bowl Texas Tech 34, Mississippi State 7

San Diego County Credit Union Holiday Bowl UCLA vs. NC State Canceled, COVID-19

Guaranteed Rate Bowl Minnesota 18, West Virginia 6

Wednesday, Dec. 29

New Era Pinstripe Bowl Maryland 54, Virginia Tech 10

Cheez-It Bowl No. 19 Clemson 20, Iowa State 13

Valero Alamo Bowl No. 16 Oklahoma 47, No. 14 Oregon 32

Thursday, Dec. 30

Duke's Mayo Bowl South Carolina 38, North Carolina 21

TransPerfect Music City Bowl Purdue 48, Tennessee 45 (OT)

Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl No. 10 Michigan State 31, No. 12 Pitt 21

SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl Wisconsin 20, Arizona State 13

Friday, Dec. 31

TaxSlayer Gator Bowl Wake Forest 38, Rutgers 10

Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl Central Michigan 24, Washington State 21

Barstool Sports Arizona Bowl Canceled due to COVID-19

CFP Semifinal: Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic No. 1 Alabama 27, No. 4 Cincinnati 6

CFP Semifinal: Capital One Orange Bowl No. 3 Georgia Bulldogs 34, No. 2 Michigan Wolverines 11

Saturday, Jan. 1

Outback Bowl No. 21 Arkansas 24, Penn State 10

Vrbo Citrus Bowl No. 22 Kentucky 20, No. 15 Iowa 17

PlayStation Fiesta Bowl No. 9 Oklahoma State 37, No. 5 Notre Dame 35

Rose Bowl Game Pres. by Capital One Venture X No. 6 Ohio State 48, No. 11 Utah 45

Allstate Sugar Bowl No. 7 Baylor 21, No. 8 Ole Miss 7

Tuesday, Jan. 4

TaxAct Texas Bowl Kansas State 42, LSU 20

Monday, Jan. 10

CFP National Championship Presented by AT&T No. 3 Georgia 33, No. 1 Alabama 18

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2021 Bowl Games, college football scores: Schedule, results, highlights from all 37 postseason matchups

Ncaa football scores and highlights from the 2021-22 college football bowl games schedule.

From mayonnaise baths and squabbles over opt-outs to thrilling finishes, heroic performances and historic outcomes, Bowl Season brought a little bit of everything for college football fans over the holidays as the 2021 season came to an end. The action started on Dec. 17 with a Middle Tennessee win over Toledo in the Bahamas Bowl and ran all the way into January with captivating Fiesta Bowl and Rose Bowl games.

In between, there were memorable moments for programs all over the country who closed the book on their campaigns with one last hurrah. While bowl games may be relatively forgettable to some big-time programs left out of the College Football Playoff and New Year's Six games, they clearly meant a lot to some teams enjoying the national spotlight provided by a postseason platform.

Among those falling in that category were UCF, which finally got a crack at Florida and beat the Gators 29-17 in the Gasparilla Bowl on Dec. 23. Another significant regional outcome came a week later, when South Carolina edged North Carolina 38-21 in the Duke's Mayo Bowl to finish with a 7-6 record in Shane Beamer's first season as head coach. 

While there was plenty of discussion about the flaws of the bowl game system as some coaches left their teams for new jobs and some players opted out, it was clear in the celebrations of most victors who got one last chance to play came with plenty of meaning.

We covered all the action here, and you can relive the big moments of bowl season by scrolling through for analysis and highlights from all the action.

More from 2021-22 bowl season

  • Fornelli : Ranking all 37 bowl games played in 2021-22
  • Palm : Bowl game records by conference for the 2021-22 postseason

Texas Bowl: Kansas State 42, LSU 20

The penultimate game of the FBS college football season turned out to be a snooze-fest. Wildcats running back Deuce Vaughn got loose to the tune of 146 rushing yards and four total touchdowns -- three rushing, one receiving -- in a stellar performance for the consensus All-American. Yes, this was a blowout, but there was still plenty of intrigue, particularly on the LSU side. Interim coach Brad Davis had just 38 scholarship players on the sideline, none of whom were quarterbacks. Senior wide receiver Jontre Kirklin took the snaps and completed 64% of his passes, tossed three touchdowns and rushed for 61 yards. 

Sugar Bowl: Baylor 21, Ole Miss 7

No. 7 Baylor beat No. 8 Ole Miss 21-7 as the Bears capped off a historic season in Dave Aranda's second year. In winning the Sugar Bowl for the first time since 1957, the Bears not only notched their first 12-win season in program history, but gained their first New Year's Six/BCS bowl victory since the system was introduced in 1998. 

The game was difficult for Ole Miss to swallow, however, as star quarterback Matt Corral was knocked out of the game in the first quarter after injuring his right leg on a sack. The play came on third down when defensive end Cole Maxwell hit Corral and his leg appeared to buckle. Ole Miss missed a field goal on the next play. 

True freshman Luke Altmyer came in and played admirably in relief, throwing for for 174 yards and a touchdown on 15 of 29 passing. However, Baylor's defense was dominant against an overmatched Rebels offensive line, posting 10 sacks, breaking up seven passes and forcing three interceptions against Corral and Altmyer combined. Cornerback Al Walcott caught an interception off a Matt Jones tip and took it 96 yards for the first score of the game. 

Baylor running back Abram Smith rushed for 172 yards on 25 carries to break the program record for single-season yards rushing, passing Terrance Ganaway's 2011 mark. Quarterback Gerry Bohanon struggled, completing 7 of 17 passes for 40 yards. However, he motioned Tyquan Thornton into a throw for a two-yard touchdown to put the game out of reach in the fourth quarter. Freshman Monaray Baldwin scored the Bears' other touchdown on a sweep. 

Ole Miss' defense played good situational football, holding the Bears without a third-or fourth-down conversion through the first half. However, the Bears finished the game converting 7 of 15 third downs. Ole Miss converted 5 of 6 fourth-down attempts, but missed two field goals that could have kept the game manageable. Ultimately, the floodgates opened as Baylor rushed for 279 yards in a physically dominant performance. | Takeaways

Rose Bowl: Ohio State 48, Utah 45

In a Rose Bowl Game that will live for the ages, No. 6 Ohio State came from behind to pull off an epic 48-45 win over No. 11 Utah on New Year's Day in Pasadena, California. This incredible game saw Ohio State's offense rewrite the record books and come back to win in the fourth quarter after trailing nearly the entire evening. OSU clinched its victory with a 56-yard drive in the game's final minute that set up a go-ahead 19-yard field goal with nine seconds left.

Utah took control early, jumping out to a 14-0 lead in the first quarter. Then both teams combined for six touchdowns in the second quarter, setting the scene for what would be a wild back-and-forth affair over the game's final 30 minutes.

It wasn't until Ohio State quarterback C.J. Stroud hit wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba for a 30-yard touchdown with 4:22 left to play that the Buckeyes took their first lead of the game at 45-38. It was the third time Stroud and Smith-Njigba hooked up for a score, and it was just the tip of the iceberg.

Stroud finished with 573 yards passing and six TDs. Smith-Njigba caught 15 balls for 297 yards and three TDs, setting Ohio State records for most receiving yards in a season as well as receptions in a single season. Wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr., who took on a starting role for the first time this season due to Garrett Wilson and Chris Olave opting out, caught six passes for 71 yards and three scores of his own.

For Utah, the game slipped away in the fourth quarter when QB Cam Rising left following what looked to be a concussion. Rising's head hit the turf after being sacked, and he laid motionless on his back for a few minutes before getting up and walking off the field on his own. His backup, Bryson Barnes, led a game-tying touchdown drive in the final minutes, before the game-deciding field goal. Rising finished the day with 214 yards passing and two touchdowns while also leading the Utes in rushing with 92 yards and a score. | Takeaways

Fiesta Bowl: Oklahoma State 37, Notre Dame 35

No. 9 Oklahoma State pulled off the biggest comeback in school history, storming back from a 21-point deficit to defeat No. 5 Notre Dame 37-35 in the Fiesta Bowl on New Year's Day. 

The Fighting Irish came out blazing on offense against Oklahoma State's highly-ranked defense with quarterback Jack Coan rolling up 342 yards and four touchdowns in the first half. Notre Dame built up a 28-7 with just over a minute left in the second quarter, but a quick Oklahoma State score before halftime and an impressive drive to start the third quarter quickly cut the lead to 28-21. 

But while the Cowboys offense finally got into a rhythm, it was assisted by an Oklahoma State defense that made the necessary halftime adjustments to slow down Coan and the Notre Dame offense. The Irish signal-caller may have had 342 yards and four touchdowns in the first half -- numbers that were already good enough for the best performance by a quarterback against Oklahoma State this season -- but he had just 40 passing yards in the third quarter. It should be noted Coan did finish the game with 509 yards and an impressive effort late in the fourth quarter, setting a Fiesta bowl passing record with the performance. 

The play of the game might have come early in the fourth quarter when All-American safety Kolby Harvell-Peel crashed in to make a stop on Notre Dame freshman running back Logan Diggs and stripped the ball free before he was brought to the ground. Even though Notre Dame would get the ball right back with a forced fumble at the goal line, the loss of field position and the impact it had on Oklahoma State's confidence set the tone for the fourth quarter. 

The previous record for the biggest comeback in Oklahoma State history was 20 points -- in 1979 against Colorado. | Takeaways

Citrus Bowl: Kentucky 20, Iowa 17 

Kentucky nearly blew a 10-point halftime lead but Wan'Dale Robinson and Chris Rodriguez helped lead a game-winning touchdown drive in the final minutes to secure the Citrus Bowl victory against Iowa. 

Robinson was the star of the game, pulling 10 catches for 170 yards including some incredible grabs on the game-winning drive. More than half of Will Levis' pass completions went to Robinson, and his performance against a very good Iowa pass defense made up nearly two quarters of scoreless football from the Kentucky offense in the second half. 

Iowa had the opposite game flow offensively, stuck in the mud in the first half and then finally putting things together for two touchdown drives near the end of the third quarter and beginning of the fourth quarter. But ultimately three Iowa turnovers kept the Hawkeyes from being able to claim the win, as the Wildcats picked off Spencer Petras in the final minute to seal the win. 

This is Kentucky's fourth straight bowl win under Mark Stoops, who has gotten the Wildcats to the postseason every years since 2016. | Box Score

Outback Bowl: Arkansas 24, Penn State 10

The Razorbacks finished off an impressive 2021 season with a 24-10 win over Penn State in the Outback Bowl on New Year's Day. Penn State, which was missing a number of starters -- particularly on the defensive side of the ball -- came out strong to start but seemed to run out of gas in the second half. The Nittany Lions were up 10-7 at halftime, but the Razorbacks took control with a 17-point third quarter and it was all she wrote.

The Razorbacks struggled early a bit themselves, as the offense seemed unsure of itself with star receiver Treylon Burks opting out of the game. The Hogs then began to lean on their ground game with quarterback K.J. Jefferson and a host of backs, and it was effective against a thin Penn State defense. Jefferson finished with 110 yards rushing and only threw for 90 yards, while Dominique Johnson, Raheim Sanders and Malik Hornsby combined for 231 yards rushing as the Razorbacks rushed for 361 yards as a team.

As for Penn State, it was its own worst enemy at times. The Nittany Lions managed only three points out of three red-zone trips, and failed to take advantage of two Arkansas red-zone turnovers. | Box score

Orange Bowl semifinal: No. 3 Georgia 34, No. 2 Michigan 11

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. -- No. 3 Georgia crushed No. 2 Michigan 34-11 on New Year's Eve in the Orange Bowl, setting up a 2021 SEC Championship Game rematch with No. 1 Alabama in the 2022 College Football Playoff National Championship. The Bulldogs and Crimson Tide will meet in the title game for the second time in the last five years.

Georgia marched 80 yards on its first possession of the game and never stopped in the opening 30 minutes, becoming the first team in CFP history to score points on its first five possessions. While that didn't make for an exciting game, it at least allowed any neutral parties to get on with their holiday plans.

After Georgia took a 7-0 lead, the Michigan offense responded well and drove into UGA territory. Unfortunately for the Wolverines, a pass from Cade McNamara to Erick All on fourth down was off All's fingertips and resulted in a turnover on downs. A few plays later, Georgia's Kenny McIntosh took a hand-off on a sweep and surprised nearly everyone in Hard Rock Stadium when he pulled up and tossed an easy touchdown pass to Adonai Mitchell.

From there, the rout was on. Michigan had its moments, but it turned the ball over on four straight possessions (two interceptions, a fumble and once on downs) in the second and third quarters to immediately destroy any momentum it was attempting to build. Georgia was not nearly as wasteful with its opportunities and looked a lot more like the team we saw during the regular season than the one that lost to Alabama in the SEC title game a few weeks ago. | Takeaways

Cotton Bowl semifinal: Alabama 27, Cincinnati 6

ARLINGTON, Texas -- No. 1 Alabama rolled through No. 4 Cincinnati 27-6 behind a monster day from running back Brian Robinson Jr. The redshirt senior rushed for an Alabama bowl record 204 yards on 26 carries to deliver the Crimson Tide the Cotton Bowl and their sixth appearance in the College Football Playoff National Championship.

Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Bryce Young threw for just 181 yards against Cincinnati's elite pass defense, but he tossed three touchdown passes to as many different receivers. Young broke program records for both single-season yards passing and passing touchdowns in his first game since winning the Heisman. 

The Tide put together an 11-play scoring drive -- featuring 10 rushes -- on their first possession to set the tone for the game. The Bearcats managed to get into the red zone three times, but they settled for field goals twice against the most vaunted dynasty in college football history. Cincinnati managed to compile just 72 yards in the first half, the fewest in any half in College Football Playoff history. Cincy played better in the second half but still averaged just 3.8 yards per play. Quarterback Desmond Ridder struggled mightily, completing just 17-of-32 passes for 144 yards. Running back Jerome Ford had 77 yards but only got 15 rushes in the game. 

Alabama has now won all six matchups against Cincinnati in their combined history, though the teams had not played since 1990. The Tide await either No. 2 Michigan or No. 3 Georgia in the CFP National Championship on Jan. 10, 2022. | Takeaways

Sun Bowl: Central Michigan 24, Washington State 21 

Central Michigan accepted a late bid to the Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl, but showed no signs of being off-schedule with its fast start and eventual 24-21 win against Washington State. Jim McElwain's Chippewas were available to play after Boise State backed out of the Arizona Bowl, and so CMU made the four-hour road trip from Tucson to El Paso in time to play in Friday's historic bowl game. 

When the game started, Washington State showed no signs of an advantage from being slated to play in the game all month. CMU jumped to a 21-0 halftime lead and defended that advantage throughout the second half, holding on with a few key defensive stops in the fourth quarter for the victory. Washington State's offense was entirely ineffective early, but caught a spark when Victor Gabalis came came on at quarterback and led three touchdown drives in the final 20 minutes of the game. 

For Central Michigan, the win is the program's first in a bowl game since 2012 and snaps a five-game bowl losing streak. Jim McElwain now improves to 2-2 in bowl games overall, with a 1-1 mark at both CMU and Florida. | Box Score

Gator Bowl: Wake Forest 38, Rutgers 10 

Wake Forest has won 11 games for the second time in program history after an impressive effort to put away Rutgers in the second half of a unique edition of the Gator Bowl. The Scarlet Knights were the opponent invited after Texas A&M withdrew from the bowl game thanks to carrying the highest APR score among 5-7 teams. Early on in the game it looked like the heavy underdogs were poised to put a scare in the Demon Deacons, but the Wake Forest defense pulled in a couple of interceptions and came up big on third down en route to a second half shutout. 

Wake Forest quarterback Sam Hartman had a phenomenal game, totaling 304 yards and three touchdowns through the air leading an offense that moved the ball well most of the game. The 28-point margin could have been even larger if not for some red zone stands by the Rutgers defense that prompted field goals instead of touchdowns. Wake Forest kicker Nick Sciba was a perfect three-for-three on his field goal attempts, connecting from 23, 29 and 37 yards to extend the team's lead. 

In addition to getting Wake Forest to 11 wins for just the second time in school history, the victory improves the Demon Deacons to 4-2 in bowl games under Dave Clawson. | Box Score  

Las Vegas Bowl: Wisconsin 20, Arizona State 13

Wisconsin knocked off Arizona State 20-13 in a Las Vegas Bowl that was every bit as exciting as the final score suggested. While it finished as a one-score game, there was never a moment in the game when Arizona State -- which was down a host of starters on both sides of the ball -- felt like a real threat to take the lead. Jayden Daniels threw an interception on the game's first possession, which Wisconsin quickly turned into a touchdown. Not long after, it was 14-3 Wisconsin, and the Badgers never looked back.

Wisconsin's 17-year old running back (we are legally required to tell you he's only 17) Braelon Allen led the way for the Badgers offense, rushing for 159 yards on 29 carries. Wisconsin's passing attack was nonexistent for the most part, and Jake Ferguson led the team with three catches for 33 yards despite missing most of the game due to an injury.

Jayden Daniels did everything he could to keep the Sun Devils in the game, but his one-man show was one of many to fail in Las Vegas. Still, he threw for 159 yards and rushed for 40, accounting for 199 of the 219 yards the Sun Devils finished with.

The win improves Wisconsin to 9-4 on the season while Arizona State falls to 8-5.

Peach Bowl: Michigan State 31, Pittsburgh 21

Michigan State used a 21-point fourth quarter to come back from a 21-10 deficit and beat Pitt in the Peach Bowl. The Panthers began the game without star quarterback Kenny Pickett and were quickly reduced to their third-string QB when backup Nick Patti injured his shoulder in the first quarter. Michigan State overcame some shaky play of its own on offense as it was without star running back Kenneth Walker III, but the Spartans got things together just in time. Payton Thorne threw for 354 yards and three touchdowns, while Jalen Nailor and Jayden Reed combined for 12 catches, 188 yards and two scores.

Michigan State finishes the season 11-2, which is the most wins it's had in a season since going 12-2 in 2015. Pitt finishes the season at 11-3, its most wins since 1981. Even with the loss, it's hard to argue that any season that includes an ACC title is anything but a rousing success for the Panthers. | Box score

Music City Bowl: Purdue 48, Tennessee 45 (OT)

A wild Music City Bowl ended Thursday with Purdue winning a 48-45 thriller over Tennessee, thanks in part to a controversial overtime officiating decision. Mitchell Fineran won it for the Boilermakers on a 38-yard field goal after the Volunteers failed to score in overtime. However, there was debate over whether Tennessee running back Jaylen Wright scored or was stopped short of the goal-line on a fourth-down attempt during the Volunteers' possession in overtime. The ruling on the field was that Wright was stopped short. However, a video review appeared to show that he was never down and reached the ball over the goal-line while on top of a Purdue defender.

But after a review, the officiating crew upheld the call on the field, which gave the Boilermakers the football needing only a field goal to win it. Fineran's make then brought an end to a game that featured nearly 1,300 yards of total offense between the two teams. It was the highest scoring Music City Bowl ever due to a frenetic finish to regulation. The teams combined for 28 points in a span of less than three and a half minutes late in the fourth quarter.

Tennessee kicker Chase McGrath came up short on a potential game-winning 56-yard field goal attempt as time expired, and the controversial overtime period ensued. With the win, Purdue finishes the season 9-4, while Tennessee finished 7-6. In some ways, the loss for the Volunteers mirrored their 31-26 loss to Ole Miss in October when Tennessee fans littered the field with trash amid displeasure with the officiating. The Volunteers were penalized a whopping 15 times for 128 yards in the Music City Bowl, which only served to heighten the frustration with the overtime spot for a pro-Tennessee crowd at the game in Nashville, Tennessee.

Duke's Mayo Bowl: South Carolina 38, North Carolina 21 

South Carolina was a double-digit underdog by kickoff, but the Gamecocks got off to a roaring start with two splash-play touchdowns and 18-0 start to the game. South Carolina used two quarterbacks as both Dakereon Joyner and Zeb Noland had success running an offense that leaned on the ground game once the Gamecocks established their advantage in the game. North Carolina's inability to stop the run proved to be the fatal flaw in their performance, as South Carolina rolled up 301 rushing yards on 51 attempts and only punted twice across nine offensive possessions. 

The win is absolutely massive for Shane Beamer as an emphatic finish to a first year on the job that had already exceeded preseason expectations. Beating Auburn, Florida and making it to the postseason was plenty to celebrate, but adding a dominant win against a border war rival in front of plenty of fans and alumni in the Charlotte area is a great way to head into the offseason. 

Alamo Bowl: No. 16 Oklahoma 47, No. 14 Oregon 32

 Oklahoma scored 24 unanswered points in the second quarter of the Alamo Bowl to blast the Ducks 47-32 in a matchup that was not as close as the final score. The Sooners held a 30-3 lead at the half behind four combined touchdowns from quarterback Caleb Williams and running back Kennedy Brooks. The dynamic backfield finished with six TDs on the day.

But perhaps the best moment of the evening came when Drake Stoops, son of legendary (and, for this game, interim) coach Bob Stoops, caught a touchdown pass from Williams. 

Oregon running back Travis Dye had a strong day with 153 yards and quarterback Anthony Brown added 306 yards, but too much of their production came after the game was decided in the second half. Brooks rushed for 142 yards, while Williams had 242 yards passing on just 27 attempts. 

The victory gives Stoops his 10th bowl victory and a career winning bowl record. The Sooners have won back-to-back bowl games for the first time since 2011. |  Takeaways

Cheez-It Bowl: Clemson 20, Iowa State 13

Down by one score in the final minute of the fourth quarter, Iowa State was driving with a chance to tie the game. Unfortunately, the Cyclones had one heartbreak left. Quarterback Brock Purdy ran for a first down on a fourth-and-2, but fumbled the ball back behind the first down marker to turn it over on downs and suffer a Cheez-It Bowl loss to No. 19 Clemson. 

Clemson running back Will Shipley posted 116 total yards and a touchdown to lead the Tigers and kicker B.T. Potter nailed field goals of 51 and 23 yards. Cornerback Mario Goodrich added a defensive touchdown with an 18-yard pick-six off a twice-batted Purdy pass. 

The loss finished off one of the most painful 7-6 seasons imaginable for Iowa State. Five of the losses came by one score and were decided on the final possession. Conversely, Clemson captured its 11th consecutive 10-win season, the third-longest streak in college football history behind Nick Saban's Alabama and Bobby Bowden's Florida State. | Box score

Pinstripe Bowl: Maryland 54, Virginia Tech 10

Maryland quarterback Taulia Tagovailoa tied the program's single-season passing touchdown record and broke the yardage record, as the Terrapins handed Virginia Tech its worst bowl loss in program history. Tagovailoa threw for 265 yards and two touchdowns in the win on 24 pass attempts, with 111 yards and both scores going to Darryl Jones. 

The Terrapins dominated every phase of the game as Maryland captured its first winning record since 2015 and first bowl victory since Ralph Friedgen retired in 2010. Tarheeb Still returned a punt 92 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter to get things going, and Greg Rose recovered a fumble and returned it for a score. Three different rushers reached the end zone for Maryland. 

Virginia Tech quarterback Connor Blumrick played the first meaningful snaps of his career against the Terrapins, throwing for 110 yards and rushing for a score. However, Virginia Tech compiled just 259 yards of total offense to reach its third losing season in four years, the first time the Hokies have fallen to that mark since 1979. Former Penn State defensive coordinator Brent Pry takes over the program in 2022. | Box score

Guaranteed Rate Bowl: Minnesota 18, West Virginia 6

Minnesota's defense suffocated West Virginia as the Gophers rolled in a two-score victory over the Mountaineers. WVU mustered just 51 yards rushing and 191 total yards against the physical Minnesota defense as the Gophers dominated the game in the trenches. Freshman running backs Ky Thomas and Mar'Keise Irving each easily cleared 100 yards rushing as part of a 261-yard day for Minnesota on the ground. West Virginia quarterback Jarret Doege posted just 140 yards passing and an interception as WVU was held scoreless in the second half. Minnesota is now 23-10 over the past three seasons under head coach P.J. Fleck. | Box score

Liberty Bowl: Texas Tech 34, Mississippi State 7

Texas Tech came into the Liberty Bowl as nearly double-digit underdogs against a Mississippi State squad with multiple ranked victories on its résumé. When the dust settled, it was Red Raiders interim coach and former QB Sonny Cumbie -- who is heading to Louisiana Tech as head coach -- who emerged victorious over his former coach Mike Leach to lead Tech to its first winning season since 2015. 

Tech quarterback Donovan Smith threw for 252 yards and added two total touchdowns after entering the year as the third-string quarterback. Running backs Tahj Brooks and SaRodorick Thompson ran wild with a combined 187 yards and two touchdowns on 30 carries. 

Mississippi State struggled to find any momentum on either side of the ball, as the Bulldogs posted just 344 yards and averaged just 4.7 yards per play. Quarterback Will Rogers threw for 290 yards, one touchdown and one interception in Leach's first matchup against the team that fired him more than one decade ago. | Box score

First Responder Bowl: Air Force 31, Louisville 28

Air Force came into the First Responder Bowl with the top rushing offense in the country, so it's only natural that it topped Louisville in its final game of the season with a wide open aerial attack. Haaziq Daniels threw for 252 yards and two touchdowns -- both of which were to senior Brandon Lewis -- to lead the Falcons to their second bowl win in three seasons. Those 252 passing yards are just shy of the 269 passing yards that the Falcons had during the entire month of October (four games). Daniels also added two more touchdowns on the ground to account for all four of the their end zones on the afternoon. | Box score

Birmingham Bowl: Houston 17, Auburn 13

Cougars quarterback Clayton Tune found Jake Herslow for 26-yard touchdown with 3:27 to play to give Dana Holgorsen's crew a hard-fought win over Auburn in the Birmingham Bowl. The loss means this Tigers team will finish the season at 6-7 -- the first sub-.500 season for the program since 2012. The game-defining touchdown came after a prolonged Cougars scoring drought that started midway through the first quarter after they took a 10-0 lead. 

The game puts to bed a disappointing first season for Auburn coach Bryan Harsin. His team lost its last five games, including a four-overtime loss to Alabama and a blown 28-3 lead at home against Mississippi State. Needless to say, pressure will be on the former Boise State coach going into the 2022 season. | Box score

Quick Lane Bowl: Western Michigan 52, Nevada 24 

Western Michigan won its second-ever bowl game as a program in its home state, jumping all over Nevada early and cruising to a 52-24 win in the Quick Lane Bowl. 

Nevada did enjoy the element of surprise in the early stages of the game thanks to the overwhelming number of absences from the team that got the Wolf Pack to this game. Head coach Jay Norvell left to take the job at Colorado State, and with multiple coordinators also departing for other jobs, this was a skeleton staff on the sideline leading a team that was down nearly 20 players because of injuries, transfers and opt-outs. The offense, in particular, lacked star quarterback Carson Strong and the top five pass-catchers from the regular season. So when backup quarterback Nate Cox led two scoring drives in the first 20 minutes of the game, it inspired some belief in this undermanned Nevada squad. 

But Western Michigan made good adjustments defensively, and Nevada's defense had a difficult time getting stops. Each of the Broncos' first five possessions ended in scores with four reaching the end zone, and by the time they punted for the first time, it was a 28-point game in the third quarter. Western Michigan's ground game was punishing, rolling up 352 yards and four touchdowns, and the effort was complimented by huge plays in special teams starting in the game's early stages when Sean Tyler -- who also led the Broncos in rushing with 146 yards -- ran a kickoff back 100 yards for the first touchdown of the game. 

In addition to being the second bowl win in WMU program history it is the first for head coach Tim Lester, who improves to 32-25 overall across five seasons at his alma mater. Nevada now officially moves into the Ken Wilson era, as the longtime former Wolf Pack assistant and recent Oregon defensive coordinator takes over as the program's head coach. Box Score

Camellia Bowl: Georgia State 51, Ball State 20

Georgia State used a 28-point third quarter to turn an entertaining and competitive Camellia Bowl into an absolute blowout. Ball State jumped out to a 7-0 lead in the first quarter, but it only held the lead for a few more minutes before never seeing it again. The Panthers put together three touchdown drives of 75, 68 and 71 yards to take a 41-13 lead before Antavious Lane picked off a Drew Plitt pass and returned it 55 yards to make it 48-13 Georgia State on the final play of the quarter.

Georgia State quarterback Darren Grainger introduced himself to a national audience by throwing for 203 yards and three touchdowns while also leading the team in rushing with 122 yards and a touchdown. Aubry Payne led the Panthers with 109 yards on eight receptions, while Ball State's Jayshon Jackson caught 12 passes for 146 yards and a score.

The win gives Georgia State a record of 8-5 on the season with eight wins being the most it's had in any season since joining the FBS. |  Box score

Memphis 'crowned' Hawaii Bowl champions

Well, the Hawaii Bowl may be off because of COVID-19 issue s within Hawaii's program, but apparently that doesn't mean there isn't a Hawaii Bowl champion. Looks like Memphis is heading back home with some hardware. Ladies and gentlemen, your 2021 Hawaii Bowl champions ... the Memphis Tigers. 

Gasparilla Bowl: UCF 29, Florida 17

The Knights had been waiting for the chance to take a bite out of the Gators since the Knights re-appeared in the national spotlight in 2017. It feasted Thursday night in Tampa. Isaiah Bowser ran for 155 yards and two touchdowns and Ryan O'Keefe added 110 on the ground and 85 as a receiver to take the 29-17 win. The dagger came late in the third quarter when Knights quarterback Mikey Keene found O'Keefe open down the left sideline for a 54-yard touchdown that gave them a 26-17 lead. 

Ex-UCF athletic director Danny White pushed hard for a home-and-home series with the Gators before White moved on to Tennessee. Terry Mohajir took over for White and agreed to a 2-for-1 deal that will send the Gators to Orlando in 2030, with the two playing in Gainesville in 2024 and 2033. | Box score

Frisco Football Classic: Miami (OH) 27, North Texas 14

The inaugural Frisco Football Classic was tight early, but one fatal error late in the second quarter proved to be the game-changing play in the RedHawks' 27-14 win over the Mean Green. The Mean Green were down 20-14 late in the half when Jacquez Warren picked off Mean Green QB Austin Aune on the Miami 10-yard line to thwart a 10-play, 61-yard drive and give the Redhawks momentum going into halftime. Miami went 75 yards on eight plays to open the third quarter, and Brett Gabbert hit Nate Muersch with an 11-yard scoring strike to push the lead to two scores. The defense held from there and the Redhawks got their first bowl win in 11 years. | Box score

Armed Forces Bowl: Army 24, Missouri 22

Cole Talley drilled a 41-yard field goal as time expired to give Army a 24-22 win over Missouri in a thriller in Fort Worth, Texas. The walk-off kick capped off an eight-play, 51-yard drive that took the final 1:11 off the clock. 

The fourth quarter of the Armed Forces Bowl was by far the most action-packed. Army got things started when backup quarterback Tyheir Tyler hit Brandon Walters all alone in the end zone from 15 yards out to give the Black Knights a 21-16 lead. Tyler was one of three quarterbacks who played in the game for Jeff Monken's crew.

But Missouri would respond when it needed to most. Freshman quarterback Brady Cook, who got his first career start over Connor Bazelak, found Keke Chism in the back of the end zone from six yards out with 1:11 to go to give the Tigers a 22-21 lead. Cook's touchdown pass capped off an 11-play, 83-yard drive that began with Missouri taking over with 2:44 to play and no timeouts. However, Cook missed an easy throw on the ensuing two-point conversion that would have made it a three-point game. That allowed Army's field goal to end the game instead of taking it to overtime. |  Box score  

Frisco Bowl: No. 24 San Diego State 38, UTSA 24

San Diego State quarterback Lucas Johnson put together the best performance of his career to lead the Aztecs past UTSA 38-24 in the Frisco Bowl, capping off the program's first 12-win season in history. Johnson was masterful through the air, completing 24 of 36 passes for 333 yards and three touchdowns and adding another rushing score to sink the Roadrunners. 

San Diego State boasted one of the top defenses in college football in 2021, but its offense had to come to the rescue as UTSA jumped out to a 14-7 lead. Johnson led scoring drives of 10, nine and six plays in the second and third quarters to spur a 17-0 run that gave the Aztecs a lead they would never relinquish. Wide receiver Jesse Matthews, who finished with 175 yards on 11 catches, caught a pair of touchdowns in the first half to add to the lead. 

UTSA receiver Zakhari Franklin cleared the 1,000-yard receiving mark with 89 yards and a touchdown, but the Roadrunners could not keep pace in the game's middle quarters. With All-American running back Sincere McCormick out preparing for the NFL Draft, backups Brenden Brady and B.J. Daniels combined for 114 yards on 19 carries. SDSU running back Greg Ball rushed for 101 yards and a touchdown. 

The bowl victory is the second in third years for the Aztecs and first since Brady Hoke took over the program in 2020. UTSA is still searching for its first ever bowl victory after winning Conference USA in 2021 for the first time. 

Potato Bowl: Wyoming 52 Kent State 38

Wyoming quarterback Levi Williams ran for 200 yards and four touchdowns, threw for 127 yards and one more score to slice and dice the Kent State defense on the blue turf in Boise in the Cowboys' 52-38 win. His four rushing touchdowns are a single-game record for the Potato Bowl, and are three more than he had for the entire season prior to Tuesday night. Seven of the Cowboys' final nine drives resulted in points, and the two that didn't ding the scoreboard were the victory formation drives at the end of each half. 

Golden Flashes quarterback Dustin Crum had four passing touchdowns as his team racked up 656 total yards in a losing effort.

Myrtle Beach Bowl: Tulsa 30, Old Dominion 17

Tulsa caps its season with a fourth straight victory and first bowl win since 2016 behind a defensively dominant performance. Old Dominion's LaMareon James ran back the opening kick 100 yards for the first score of the game, but the Monarchs didn't score an offensive touchdown until the 7:15 mark of the fourth quarter, and by then it was too late to stage a rally. Ultimately, Old Dominion finished with just 247 yards and only 10 first downs.

Tulsa took a 30-10 lead with 9:04 left on quarterback Davis Brin's second touchdown pass of the game. The Golden Hurricane racked up 529 total yards and the production was evenly split between throwing and passing. Shamari Brooks, Anthony Watkins and Deneric Prince were each productive on the ground. 

The Golden Hurricane were one of the most turnover-prone teams in the FBS this season, but they won the turnover battle 2-0 today to put a nice cap on a season that began 1-4. But this is nothing for ODU to hang its heads over. The Monarchs started out 1-6 after not playing in the 2020 season. Great job just to reach a bowl. | Box score

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Complete schedule for college football's 2021-22 bowl season

bowl games 2021 schedule

The College Football Playoff committee made the field official on Sunday, ranked Alabama first , Michigan second , Georgia third and Cincinnati fourth in the final rankings. 

The semifinal games will be held Friday, Dec. 31 with the Crimson Tide and the Bearcats facing off in the Cotton Bowl Classic and the Wolverines and Bulldogs playing in the Orange Bowl.

College Football Playoff: Alabama gets No. 1 seed, followed by Michigan, Georgia and Cincinnati

Opinion: Snubbed again, the Big 12, Pac-12, ACC desperately need College Football Playoff expansion

Doc: The Cincinnati barbarians are at the gate of the College Football Playoff

The rest of the bowl schedule shook out later in the day. Other teams of local interest, including the Miami RedHawks, Ohio State Buckeyes, Kentucky Wildcats and Notre Dame Fighting Irish found out where they will be playing in their final games of the season.

Here is the complete 2021-22 college football bowl schedule:

Friday, Dec. 17

Bahamas Bowl

Nassau, Bahamas

Toledo (7-5) vs. Middle Tennessee (6-6), Noon (ESPN)

Orlando, Fla.

N. Illinois (9-4) vs. Coastal Carolina (10-2), 6 p.m. (ESPN2)

Saturday, Dec. 18

Boca Raton Bowl

Boca Raton, Fla.

W. Kentucky (8-5) vs. Appalachian St. (10-3), 11 a.m. (ESPN)

Celebration Bowl

SC State (6-5) vs. Jackson St. (11-1), Noon (ABC)

New Mexico Bowl

Albuquerque

Fresno St. (9-3) vs. UTEP (7-5), 2:15 p.m. (ESPN)

Independence Bowl

Shreveport, La.

No. 12 BYU (10-2) vs. UAB (8-4), 3:30 p.m. (ESPN)

LendingTree Bowl

Mobile, Ala.

E. Michigan (7-5) vs. Liberty (7-5), 5:45 p.m. (ESPN)

Inglewood, Calif.

Oregon St. (7-5) vs. Utah St. (10-3), 7:30 p.m. (ABC)

New Orleans Bowl

New Orleans

No. 16 Louisiana-Lafayette (12-2) vs. Marshall (7-5), 9:15 p.m. (ESPN)

Monday, Dec. 20

Myrtle Beach Bowl

Conway, S.C.

Old Dominion (6-6) vs. Tulsa (6-6), 2:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Tuesday, Dec. 21

Famous Idaho Potato Bowl

Boise, Idaho

Kent State (7-6) vs. Wyoming (6-6), 3:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Frisco Bowl

Frisco, Texas

No. 24 UTSA (12-1) vs. San Diego St. (11-2), 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Wednesday, Dec. 22

Armed Forces Bowl

Fort Worth, Texas

Missouri (6-6) vs. Army (8-3), 8 p.m. (ESPN)

Thursday, Dec. 23

Frisco Football Classic

Miami (6-6) vs. North Texas (6-6), 3:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Gasparilla Bowl

Tampa, Fla.

UCF (8-4) vs. Florida (6-6), 7 p.m. (ESPN)

Friday, Dec. 24

Hawaii Bowl

Memphis (6-6) vs. Hawaii (6-7), 8 p.m. (ESPN)

Saturday, Dec. 25

Camellia Bowl

Montgomery, Ala.

Ball St. (6-6) vs. Georgia St. (7-5), 2:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Monday, Dec. 27

Quick Lane Bowl

Nevada (8-4) vs. W. Michigan (7-5), 11 a.m. (ESPN)

Military Bowl

Annapolis, Md.

Boston College (6-6) vs. East Carolina (7-5), 2:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Tuesday, Dec. 28

Birmingham Bowl

Birmingham, Ala.

No. 21 Houston (11-2) vs. Auburn (6-6), Noon (ESPN)

SERVPRO First Responder Bowl

Air Force (9-3) vs. Louisville (6-6), 3:15 p.m. (ESPN)

Liberty Bowl

Memphis, Tenn.

Mississippi St. (7-5) vs. Texas Tech (6-6), 6:45 p.m. (ESPN)

Holiday Bowl

UCLA (8-4) vs. NC State (9-3), 8 p.m. (FOX)

Guaranteed Rate Bowl

Minnesota (8-4) vs. West Virginia (6-6), 10:15 p.m. (ESPN)

Wednesday, Dec. 29

Fenway Bowl

Virginia (6-6) vs. SMU (8-4), 11 a.m. (ESPN)

Pinstripe Bowl

Virginia Tech (6-6) vs. Maryland (6-6), 2:15 p.m. (ESPN)

Cheez-It Bowl

No. 19 Clemson (9-3) vs. Iowa St. (7-5), 5:45 p.m. (ESPN)

San Antonio

No. 14 Oklahoma (10-2) vs. No. 15 Oregon (10-3), 9:15 a.m. (ESPN)

Thursday, Dec. 30

Duke's Mayo Bowl

Charlotte, N.C.

South Carolina (6-6) vs. North Carolina (6-6), 11:30 a.m. (ESPN)

Music City Bowl

Purdue (8-4) vs. Tennessee (7-5), 3 p.m. (ESPN)

No. 11 Michigan St. (10-2) vs. No. 13 Pittsburgh (11-2), 7 p.m. (ESPN)

Las Vegas Bowl

Wisconsin (8-4) vs. Arizona St. (8-4), 10:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Friday, Dec. 31

College Football Playoff Semifinal (Orange Bowl)

Miami Gardens, Fla.

No. 2 Michigan (12-1) vs. No. 3 Georgia (12-1), 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

College Football Playoff Semifinal (Cotton Bowl Classic)

Arlington, Texas

No. 1 Alabama (12-1) vs. No. 4 Cincinnati (13-0), 3:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Jacksonville, Fla.

No. 20 Wake Forest (10-3) vs. No. 23 Texas A&M (8-4), 10 a.m. (ESPN)

El Paso, Texas

Washington St. (7-5) vs. Miami (7-5), Noon (CBS)

Arizona Bowl

Tucson, Ariz.

Cent. Michigan (8-4) vs. Boise St. (7-5), 4:30 p.m. (TBD)

Saturday, Jan. 1

Outback Bowl

No. 22 Arkansas (8-4) vs. Penn St. (7-5), Noon (ESPN2)

Citrus Bowl

No. 17 Iowa (10-3) vs. No. 25 Kentucky (9-3), 1 p.m. (ABC)

Fiesta Bowl

Glendale, Ariz.

No. 5 Notre Dame (11-1) vs. No. 9 Oklahoma St. (11-2), 1 p.m. (ESPN)

Pasadena, Calif.

No. 7 Ohio St. (10-2) vs. No. 10 Utah (10-3), 5 p.m. (ESPN)

No. 6 Baylor (11-2) vs. No. 8 Mississippi (10-2), 8:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Tuesday, Jan. 4

LSU (6-6) vs. Kansas St. (7-5), 9 p.m. (ESPN)

Monday, Jan. 8

College Football Championship

Indianapolis

Semifinal winners, 8 p.m. (ESPN)

*The Associated Press contributed.

ESPN Press Room U.S.

ESPN Events Announces Matchups for 2021-22 Bowl Season

18 owned and operated college football bowl games, dec. 17 – jan. 4.

Photo of Bill Hofheimer

ESPN Events, a division of ESPN, has announced the matchups for its 18 owned and operated college football bowl games for the 2021-22 Bowl Season.

The Bahamas Bowl (noon ET, ESPN) and Tailgreeter Cure Bowl (6 p.m., ESPN2) kick off the schedule on Friday, Dec. 17. Sixteen of the ESPN Events bowl games will air on ESPN while the Tailgreeter Cure Bowl will air on ESPN2, and the Cricket Celebration Bowl on Saturday, Dec. 18 will air on ABC at noon. The schedule also includes the addition of the inaugural Wasabi Fenway Bowl in Boston on Wednesday, Dec. 29 (11 a.m., ESPN) and the new Frisco Football Classic, which will be played Thursday, Dec. 23 (5:30 p.m., ESPN2) in Frisco, Texas.

The entire 18-game ESPN Events bowl games in 2021-22:  

Bahamas Bowl

The Bahamas Bowl  will be played on Friday, Dec. 17 at noon on ESPN. Middle Tennessee (Conference USA) will face Toledo (Mid-American Conference) at Thomas A. Robinson National Stadium in Nassau, Bahamas. The Bahamas Bowl debuted in 2014 and is the longest-running international bowl game in college football history.

Tailgreeter Cure Bowl

The Tailgreeter Cure Bowl , which debuted in 2015, is set for Friday, Dec. 17 at 6 p.m. on ESPN2. Coastal Carolina (Sun Belt) will play Mid-American Conference champion Northern Illinois at Exploria Stadium in Orlando.  

RoofClaim.com Boca Raton Bowl

The eighth edition of the  RoofClaim.com Boca Raton Bowl  is scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 18 at 11 a.m. on ESPN and ESPN Radio. Appalachian State (Sun Belt) will face Western Kentucky (Conference USA) at FAU Stadium on the campus of Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, Fla.

Cricket Celebration Bowl

The Cricket Celebration Bowl will be contested Saturday, Dec. 18, at noon on ABC. The annual matchup of Historically Black College and University (HBCU) conference champions, which debuted in 2015, will feature South Carolina State (Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference) against Jackson State (Southwestern Athletic Conference) at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.  

PUBG Mobile New Mexico Bowl

The PUBG MOBILE New Mexico Bowl will be played Saturday, Dec. 18 at 2:15 p.m. on ESPN and ESPN Radio. The University of Texas-El Paso (Conference USA) and Fresno State University (Mountain West) will participate in the 16 th edition of the New Mexico Bowl at University Stadium in Albuquerque.

Myrtle Beach Bowl presented by TaxAct

The Myrtle Beach Bowl presented by TaxAct is set for Monday, Dec. 20 at 2:30 p.m. on ESPN. The second edition of this bowl matches Old Dominion (Conference USA) against Tulsa (American Athletic Conference) at Brooks Stadium on the campus of Coastal Carolina University in Conway, S.C.

Famous Idaho Potato Bowl

The 25th Famous Idaho Potato Bowl is slated for Tuesday, Dec. 21 at 3:30 p.m. on ESPN. The game will be played at Albertsons Stadium on the campus of Boise State University and will feature Wyoming (Mountain West Conference) and Kent State (Mid-American Conference).

Tropical Smoothie Cafe Frisco Bowl

The Tropical Smoothie Cafe Frisco Bowl will be played Tuesday, Dec. 21 at 7:30 p.m. on ESPN. The fourth installment of this bowl will match San Diego State (Mountain West Conference) against Conference USA champion UTSA at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas.

Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl

The Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl  will be played Wednesday, Dec. 22 at 8 p.m. on ESPN.

The 19th edition of the bowl will feature Army (Independent) against Missouri (SEC) at Amon G. Carter Stadium on the campus of TCU, in Fort Worth, Texas.

Frisco Football Classic

The new Frisco Football Classic will be played Thursday, Dec. 23 at 3:30 p.m. on ESPN. Miami (Ohio) (Mid-American Conference) and North Texas (Conference USA) will meet in this game at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas.

Union Home Mortgage Gasparilla Bowl

The Union Home Mortgage Gasparilla Bowl will be played Thursday, Dec. 23 at 7 p.m. on ESPN. The bowl, which debuted in 2008, will feature a matchup of Sunshine State programs when UCF (American Athletic Conference) faces Florida (SEC) at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Fla.

EasyPost Hawai’i Bowl

The EasyPost Hawai’i Bowl  will be played on Christmas Eve, Friday, Dec. 24, at 8 p.m. on ESPN. The 19 th edition of the bowl will match Memphis (American Athletic Conference) against host Hawai‘i (Mountain West) at the Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex on the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa campus.

TaxAct Camellia Bowl

The  TaxAct Camellia Bowl  will be played on Christmas Day, Saturday, Dec. 25, at 2:30 p.m. on ESPN. The bowl game, which debuted in 2014, will match Georgia State (Sun Belt) against Ball State (Mid-American Conference) at the historic Cramton Bowl in Montgomery, Ala.  

TicketSmarter Birmingham Bowl

The TicketSmarter Birmingham Bowl  will be played on Tuesday, Dec. 28 at noon on ESPN. The 15th installment of the Birmingham Bowl will pit Houston (American Athletic Conference) against Auburn (SEC) at the new Protective Stadium.

SERVPRO First Responder Bowl

The  SERVPRO First Responder Bowl is set for Tuesday, Dec. 28 at 3:15 p.m. on ESPN. In the 12th edition of the bowl game, Air Force (Mountain West) will play Louisville (ACC) at Gerald J. Ford Stadium on the SMU campus in Dallas.

Wasabi Fenway Bowl

The inaugural Wasabi Fenway Bowl will be played Wednesday, Dec. 29 at 11 a.m. on ESPN. The first college football bowl game to be played at Fenway Park, the historic home of the Boston Red Sox, and the first Division 1 FBS bowl game to be contested in New England, will match SMU (American Athletic Conference) against Virginia (ACC) in Boston, Mass.

SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl

The  SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl will be played Thursday, Dec. 30 at 10:30 p.m. on ESPN. In the 30th year of the bowl, Wisconsin (Big Ten) will face Arizona State (Pac-12) at the event’s new home at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada.

TaxAct Texas Bowl

The TaxAct Texas Bowl will be played Tuesday, Jan. 4 at 9 p.m. on ESPN. In the bowl’s 16th year, Kansas State (Big 12) will face LSU (SEC) at NRG Stadium in Houston, marking the eighth year both conferences are affiliated with the Texas Bowl.

About ESPN Events

ESPN Events , a division of ESPN, owns and operates a portfolio of 35 collegiate sporting events nationwide. The roster includes five early-season college football games, 17 college bowl games, 12 college basketball events, and a college softball event, which accounts for approximately 400 hours of live programming, reaches nearly 64 million viewers and attracts over 800,000 attendees each year. With satellite offices in more than 10 markets across the country, ESPN Events builds relationships with conferences, schools and local communities, as well as providing unique experiences for teams and fans.

For more information, visit the official  website ,  Facebook ,  Twitter  or  YouTube  pages.

2021-22 ESPN Events College Football Bowl Schedule:

* All times ET

Photo of Bill Hofheimer

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College football bowl game schedule likely eyeing expansion as revenue-sharing model would curb opt-out trend

S COTTSDALE, Ariz. — Get ready for more bowl games, not less, as college administrators continue to push for more postseason access in all sports.

That's what Bowl Season director Nick Carparelli believes is next after the College Football Playoff expands from four to 12 teams this fall -- and potentially 14 in 2026. Why? Expansion is the hot trend in all corners of college athletics, and the NCAA transformation committee has made it clear more postseason opportunities are desired in all sports.

"When I speak with head football coaches and athletic directors and conference commissioners, it's very encouraging. You know, I think it's more likely we add bowl games than subtract bowl games," Carparelli told 247Sports this week at the annual Fiesta Summit for leaders in college athletics.

The NCAA has no stake in the CFP or the 42 bowl games, which include the CFP, but leaders are attracted to the trend in other NCAA sports, such as the upcoming serious conversations to expand the men's NCAA Tournament in basketball to as many as 80 teams. 

"Twelve postseason opportunities is not enough for all of college football," Carparelli said. "There's so many great stories every year about growing programs emerging that have an opportunity to play in a bowl game and celebrate a great victory. It serves as a launching point and building a platform for their program moving forward. College football needs bowl games and bowl games are going to be the solution to college football's postseason, just like they have for the last 100 years."

Six of the 42 bowl games scheduled for 2024 are playoff games.

Not enough bowl-eligible teams were available in each of the last three seasons, which led to three five-win teams accepting invitations: Rutgers in 2021, Rice in 2022 and Minnesota in 2023. 

The quality of play has also suffered with player opt-outs and the transfer portal . At least 78 players opted out of bowl games last season and 431 players entered the transfer portal before their postseason games, according to data compiled by The Action Network. Florida State was the poster child last season. Thirty-three players opted to not play in the Orange Bowl after the College Football Playoff Selection Committee did not select the Seminoles. Georgia demolished FSU, 63-3.

"If I go see the (Rolling) Stones and Mick Jagger is not playing, am I really seeing the Stones?" said Fiesta Bowl president Erik Moses. "People come to see the talent."

Carparelli believes he has a solution for opt-outs: the impending move to a revenue-sharing model for players. The NCAA may soon settle an antitrust lawsuit seeking back pay and revenue-sharing for players, with a price tag of more than $2.7 billion, which would also pave the way for future revenue-sharing with players, according to ESPN . 

"It seems as if these outside collectives are going to be controlled by the university's athletic department, moving forward," Carparelli said. "That's what everybody seems to want. What is sure to follow is some type of formal agreement between the student-athletes and the university: we're going to pay you X amount of money, and for that you're going to perform certain duties. For college football players, it's going to include 12 regular-season games, a bowl game and/or the CFP. I think we're gonna see one-, two- and three-year contracts between universities and student-athletes to do that. 

"And, you know, what? That's the way the world works. If you have a job, you're being paid to do it. If you don't do your job, you don't get paid. I don't see how anybody can argue that. I think once we get under a standardized system like that, that makes sense, I think it's gonna solve a lot of problems. You're gonna see student-athletes wanting to participate in bowl games in order to avoid a reduction in payment."

Meanwhile, the uncertainty in college athletics surrounding player pay, conference realignment and the Big Ten and SEC teaming up to demand larger paydays from the CFP (and further widen the financial gap between competitors) has motivated at least one private equity firm to pitch a playoff to Group of Five conferences. 

The pitchman is former Tennessee football coach Derek Dooley with financial backing from private equity , sources told CBS Sports' Dennis Dodd. A proposal has not been presented to commissioners in the AAC, Conference USA, MAC, Mountain West or Sun Belt, sources added this week. One athletic director who spoke to Dooley recently said the conversation was thin on details. The group has not yet formalized a format, though sources told Dodd last week one iteration includes eight divisions for 62 teams with divisional champions playing at the end of the regular season for a spot in the CFP. That iteration is separate from a potential Group of Five breakaway from the CFP.

The highest-ranked Group of Five champion is assured a playoff berth in the newest CFP agreement approved by FBS conferences and Notre Dame . The Group of Five is expected to be paid an average of $2 million per team, which is drastically less than the lowest-paid power conference team ($12.3 million in the Big 12). The deal expires after the 2031 season.

"I haven't yet seen a proposal that would entice the Mountain West to leave the CFP for something else," Mountain West commish Gloria Nevarez said. "Not to say that there might not be something out there, but I've just haven't seen it yet."

Carparelli has spoken to several commissioners and believes Dooley's pitch doesn't have legs.

"I don't sense any desire for that concept whatsoever," he said.

For now, the bowl season will remain at 42 games, but the hunger for more, more and more is apparent.

"We're at the right number but we will always keep an eye open and make sure we have enough opportunities to service the entire membership," Carparelli said.

College football bowl game schedule likely eyeing expansion as revenue-sharing model would curb opt-out trend

bowl games 2021 schedule

University of Idaho Athletics

2020-21 football schedule.

  • Choose A Location: All Games Home Games Away Games Neutral Games Go
  • Season 2025 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020-21 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1900 1899 1897 1895 1894 Go

Season Record

  • Overall 2-4
  • Neutral 0-0

All dates and opponents are subject to change.

Scheduled Games

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Moscow Bears softball is off to state tourney

May 10—The Moscow softball team downed the Lakeland Hawks of Rathdrum 7-1 in an Idaho Class 4A district championship game Thursday at the Moscow Community Playfields to cap off the best two-year stretch the team has had in a decade.

The win gives the Bears a berth to State, which begins May 16 at Lake City and Coeur d'Alene high schools.

The Moscow baseball and softball teams posed for a spontaneous photo-op with their respective district championship trophies after the game.

"We knew Lakeland wasn't going to roll over," Moscow coach Eric Kiblen said. "They're a good hitting team and we knew they were going to come out swinging the bats. They were hitting the ball hard right at people. But our defense stepped up today and bailed us out."

The Bears held the lead for most of the game, but the team had to display some patience before running away with the score at the end.

Moscow bounces back

Moscow (16-10) came into the game with the expectation that Lakeland (10-14) would be strong at the plate.

The Hawks proved the Bears right — especially in the beginning.

Lakeland had no problem getting players on the base, but bringing them home was another story.

The visitors left 10 runners stranded over the course of the game. The Hawks' lone run was in the first inning courtesy of an RBI single from Ada Blakemore. Lakeland ended up leaving three more potential scores on base in the first.

The Bears immediately responded in their half of the frame. Junior Kaci Kiblen scored after a throwing error and senior catcher Megan Highfill had one of her four RBI for the game to bring Moscow up 2-1 through the first inning.

"I think everyone was just so excited to come out and play at the beginning," Highfill said. "And it took us those first few innings to settle down a little bit and realize, 'Hey, you got time in your count. You got time at the plate.' So we just relaxed a bit and saw those good pitches. Lakeland's a good team. You can't just hit the ball right to them."

Stodick sticks the Hawks

Highfill knocked in her second and third RBI with a two-run single in the fifth to bolster the Bears' lead to 4-1.

Moscow's ace, senior pitcher Kelly Stodick, held the Hawks' in check after the first inning. Stodick walked four batters and let up five hits for the game. She struck out four and didn't allow another run after the opening inning.

Stodick's win on Thursday gave her a record of 7-0 on the year.

Bears secure the hardware

The two players who started off the scoring for the Bears also capped it off. Kaci Kiblen and Highfill had an RBI single apiece in the bottom of the sixth inning to bring Moscow's advantage to the eventual final margin.

Ella McCallie scored before her teammates courtesy of an RBI sacrifice grounder from Sadie Newlan.

Moscow's district title win added another accolade to the best two-year stretch the team has had in over a decade.

"I think it's special to see both the softball and baseball programs playing well and competing," Eric Kiblen said. "It's been a lot of years since we had some winning programs. So it's good that we're putting the programs on the map."

Last year was the breakthrough year for the team — a winning season, district championship and state tournament berth.

This year, those accolades weren't breakthroughs for the Bears. They were expectations.

Another expectation is to go down there and win some games.

Moscow has gone 5-3 in the regular season against southern Idaho opponents the last two years. It's not a question of whether the team can win against bigger-city teams, it's simply a matter of doing it when it counts in the state tournament.

"I think last year we were just super, super nervous and didn't know what to expect when we went to state," Highfill said. "And I think now, having a little bit of experience and knowing what's going to be there, we won't have as much nerves. And if we do have those nerves, we've practiced how to calm them down. Our coaches have been great with addressing pregame routines and really just calming yourself before stepping onto the field and into the box and I think that'll help us."

Lakeland 100 000 0—1 5 3

Moscow 200 023 x—7 9 1

Abigial Helmholz, Mia Kesner (6) and Payton Sterling; Kelly Stodick and Megan Highfill.

Lakeland hits — Delilah Zimmerman 2, Sterling, Kiersten Drake, Ada Blakemore.

Moscow hits — Highfill 2, Hannah Robertson 2, Kaci Kiblen 2, Stodick, Addi Branen, Ella McCallie.

Kowatsch can be contacted at 208-848-2268, [email protected] or on Twitter @Teren_Kowatsch.

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Hold a mirror up to life…..are there layers you can see, the summer olympics 1980- the moscow games- open this date in 1980- the games america never saw.

Image result for 1980 summer olympics opening ceremonies images lenin

On this day in 1980 the Games of the XXII Olympiad opened in Moscow. It is most noted in America as being the games the United States- President Jimmy Carter boycotted due to the Soviet invasion into Afghanistan. All told 66 countries were in the boycott. The games were not shown of course on American television.

I thought Carter- as with most of his decisions was wrong in boycotting the Olympics. I am glad of one thing that the Soviets did during their decades in power though- Carter announced the boycott in January of 1980 before the Winter Olympics in Lake Placid. The Soviets could have boycotted those games but they didn’t. If they had- the greatest sporting event in American sports history wouldn’t have happened- The Miracle On Ice.

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One response to “ the summer olympics 1980- the moscow games- open this date in 1980- the games america never saw ”.

The Russians are still invading other countries today yet our President doesn’t see it that way.

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IMAGES

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