The 1991–92 NCAA football bowl games were a series of post-season games played in December 1991 and January 1992 to end the 1991 NCAA Division I-A football season. A total of 18 team-competitive games,[1] and two all-star games, were played. The post-season began with the California Bowl on December 14, 1991, and concluded on January 18, 1992, with the season-ending Senior Bowl.
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More information Date, Game ...
Date |
Game |
Site |
Time (US EST) |
TV[2] |
Matchup (pre-game record) |
AP pre-game rank |
UPI (Coaches) pre-game rank |
12/14 |
California Bowl |
Bulldog Stadium Fresno, California |
|
SportsChannel |
Bowling Green 28 (10–1) (MAC Champion), Fresno State 21 (10–1) (Big West Champion) |
NR NR |
NR NR |
12/25 |
Aloha Bowl |
Aloha Stadium Honolulu, Hawaii |
|
ABC |
Georgia Tech 18 (7–5) (ACC), Stanford 17 (8–3) (Pac-10) |
NR #17 |
NR #17 |
12/28 |
Blockbuster Bowl |
Joe Robbie Stadium Miami Gardens, Florida |
|
CBS |
Alabama 30 (10–1) (SEC), Colorado 25 (8–2–1) (Big Eight) |
#8 #15 |
#8 #15 |
12/29 |
Gator Bowl |
Gator Bowl Stadium Jacksonville, Florida |
|
TBS |
Oklahoma 48 (8–3) (Big Eight), Virginia 14 (8–2–1) (ACC) |
#20 #19 |
#20 #19 |
12/29 |
Independence Bowl |
Independence Stadium Shreveport, Louisiana |
|
ABC |
Georgia 24 (8–3) (SEC), Arkansas 15 (6–5) (SWC) |
#24 NR |
#24 NR |
12/29 |
Liberty Bowl[3] |
Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium Memphis, Tennessee |
|
ESPN |
Air Force 38 (9–3) (WAC), Mississippi State 15 (7–4) (SEC) |
NR NR |
NR NR |
12/30 |
Holiday Bowl[4] |
Jack Murphy Stadium San Diego, California |
|
ESPN |
Iowa 13 (10–1) (Big Ten), BYU 13 (8–3–1) (WAC Champion) |
#7 NR |
#7 NR |
12/30 |
Freedom Bowl |
Anaheim Stadium Anaheim, California |
|
Raycom |
Tulsa 28 (9–2) (Independent), San Diego State 17 (8–3–1) (WAC) |
#23 NR |
#25 NR |
12/31 |
John Hancock Bowl |
Sun Bowl Stadium El Paso, Texas |
|
CBS |
UCLA 6 (8–3) (Pac-10), Illinois 3 (6–5) (Big Ten) |
#22 NR |
#23 NR |
12/31 |
Copper Bowl |
Arizona Stadium Tucson, Arizona |
|
TBS |
Indiana 24 (6–4–1) (Big Ten), Baylor 0 (8–3) (SWC) |
NR NR |
NR NR |
1/1 |
Peach Bowl |
Fulton County Stadium Atlanta |
11:30 AM |
ESPN |
East Carolina 37 (10–1) (Independent), NC State 34 (9–2) (ACC) |
#12 #21 |
#13 #21 |
1/1 |
Hall of Fame Bowl |
Tampa Stadium Tampa, Florida |
1:00 PM |
NBC |
Syracuse 24 (9–2) (Independent), Ohio State 17 (8–3) (Big Ten) |
#16 #25 |
#16 #22 |
1/1 |
Florida Citrus Bowl[5] |
Florida Citrus Bowl Orlando, Florida |
1:30 PM |
ABC |
California 37 (9–2) (Pac-10), Clemson 13 (9–1–1) (ACC Champion) |
#14 #13 |
#14 #12 |
1/1 |
Cotton Bowl Classic[6] |
Cotton Bowl Dallas, Texas |
1:30 PM |
CBS |
Florida State 10 (10–2) (Independent), Texas A&M 2 (10–1) (SWC Champion) |
#5 #9 |
#6 #9 |
1/1 |
Fiesta Bowl[7] |
Sun Devil Stadium Tempe, Arizona |
4:30 PM |
NBC |
Penn State 42 (10–2) (Independent), Tennessee 17 (9–2) (SEC) |
#6 #10 |
#5 #10 |
1/1 |
Rose Bowl[8] |
Rose Bowl Pasadena, California |
5:00 PM |
ABC |
Washington 34 (11–0) (Pac-10 Champion), Michigan 14 (10–1) (Big Ten Champion) |
#2 #4 |
#1 #3 |
1/1 |
Sugar Bowl[9] |
Louisiana Superdome New Orleans, Louisiana |
8:30 PM |
ABC |
Notre Dame 39 (9–3) (Independent), Florida 28 (10–1) (SEC Champion) |
#18 #3 |
#18 #4 |
1/1 |
Orange Bowl[10] |
Miami Orange Bowl Miami |
8:00 PM |
NBC |
Miami (FL) 22 (11–0) (Independent), Nebraska 0 (9–1–1) (Big Eight Champion) |
#1 #11 |
#2 #11 |
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