College Football on CBS Sports | |
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![]() Current logo as part ofCBS Sports' new look launched in January 2021. | |
Also known as | SEC on CBS (until 2023) Mountain West on CBS (since 2021) Big Ten on CBS (since 2023) |
Genre | College football telecasts |
Presented by | Brad Nessler Gary Danielson Jenny Dell Adam Zucker Rick Neuheisel Brian Jones Aaron Taylor Gene Steratore |
Theme music composer | Lloyd Landesman[1] |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 210 minutes and until game ends |
Production company | CBS Sports |
Original release | |
Network | CBS CBSSN Paramount+ |
Release | 1950 (1950) |
College Football on CBS Sports is the blanket title used for broadcasts ofcollege football games that are produced byCBS Sports, forCBS andCBS Sports Network.
CBS first televised regular season college football games in 1950, airing them on a weekly basis during periods in the 1950s and 1960s. AfterABC won an exclusive contract with the NCAA in 1966, CBS then retained the rights to air a fewbowl games before returning to broadcast regular season games from the major conferences andmajor independents in 1982.
After being outbid by ABC, CBS's college football coverage between 1991 and 1995 was again reduced to only a handful of bowl games. In 1996, CBS signed a deal with theSoutheastern Conference (SEC) to carry a weekly slate of regular season games (billed as theSEC on CBS), as well as becoming the television partner for the annualArmy-Navy Game. In 2019, CBS declined to renew its rights to SEC football, with the package ultimately going toABC beginning in 2024. CBS subsequently reached a deal to televiseBig Ten football beginning in 2023, which replaced CBS's SEC package in its traditional 3:30 p.m. ET timeslot beginning in the 2024 season. As part of a title sponsorship byThe Home Depot, college football games on the main CBS network are currently billed asThe Home Depot Big Ten on CBS (orThe Home Depot College Football on CBS for non-Big Ten games).
CBS acquired the now-CBS Sports Network in 2006, which has since televised college football from theMid American Conference,Conference USA,Mountain West Conference andNortheast Conference, as well as home football games fromArmy,Navy, andUConn.
From 1946 through 1949,WCBS-TV airedColumbia Lions football home games locally. CBS began broadcasting games nationally in 1950, withRed Barber as the play-by-play commentator.[2]
CBS aired a weekly game during the1950 college football season, culminating in a broadcast of theArmy-Navy Game withConnie Desmond doing the play-by-play. Desmond served as play-by-play commentator for CBS's 4 broadcasts in 1951, including the first ever color telecast when #5 California played #19 Penn. However theNCAA began strictly limiting broadcasts that season and CBS would not show regular season games again until 1955.
In 1953, CBS began covering theOrange Bowl annually, broadcasting the bowl annually until losing rights to ABC in 1962. CBS would add annual coverage of theGator Bowl in 1954, broadcasting the bowl through 1963.
In 1955, CBS regular season coverage returned. CBS usedJoe Hasel,Bob Neal,Mal Stevens,Jack Drees, Francis Wallace,Tom Harmon, andGil Stratton as commentators. Drees was usually paired on commentary with Wallace onMidwest games, while Hasel and subsequently, Neal was paired with Stevens onEastern regional games, and Harmon was paired with Stratton in games taking place on theWest Coast. CBS would lose regular season rights to NBC the next year.
In 1958, CBS began annual coverage of theCotton Bowl Classic, a tradition that would continue through 1992.
By 1960, CBS showed four bowl games annually with the addition of theBluebonnet Bowl, which would air on CBS through 1963.
In 1962 and 1963, regular season coverage returned to CBS.Lindsey Nelson,Jim Simpson and former Notre Dame head coachTerry Brennan were the lead broadcasters.[3]
In 1966,ABC Sports gained exclusive rights to all regular season games and CBS was reduced to coverage of bowl games. The ABC exclusive contract would run through 1981.
CBS added theSun Bowl in 1968, which continues to air on CBS as of 2024 in the longest-running contract with a single bowl and network.
From 1974 to 1977, CBS also aired theFiesta Bowl, and from 1978 to 1986 it carried thePeach Bowl.
For the1982 season, CBS was made an additional partner in the NCAA contract, and regular season coverage returned to the network. CBS andABC would alternate the 12:00 and 3:30 p.m. slots from week to week during the seasons, carrying either a national game or several regional games in those frames, and also occasionally aired games in prime time, and onBlack Friday. CBS broadcast games from every major conference, as well as the games of the then majorindependents such asPenn State (now aBig Ten member),Notre Dame (a temporaryAtlantic Coast Conference (ACC) member in 2020 only) andMiami (now in the ACC).
Per the September 1, 1982, edition of theElyria (OH) Chronicle Telegram and the September 1, 1982, edition ofSports Illustrated, ABC and CBS officials met with NCAA representatives and flipped a coin to determine "control dates". This allowed the network with priority on a particular date to have first choice when selecting the game it wished to air and whether it wanted the 12:00 ET or 3:30ET timeslot. CBS won the first toss and thus earned first choice on seven dates: September 18, September 25, October 2, October 9, October 16, November 6, and November 20. ABC then got first pick on six dates, September 11, October 23, October 30, November 13, November 27, and December 4. ABC and CBS also had the right to take away a game fromWTBS as long as it did so no later than the Monday before the game. WTBS was only able to show teams that had not been on national TV in 1981 and a maximum of four teams that had been on regional TV on two occasions.
As required by the NCAA, the network also televised Division I-AA, II and III games to very small audiences, giving teams such asThe Citadel andClarion State some television exposure (during the 1982 season, because of a player strike in theNational Football League, these Division III contests aired nationwide). The pregame show was titledThe NCAA Today in the vein of its pro football counterpartThe NFL Today. Both shows were hosted byBrent Musburger. However, for the NCAA pregame show,Pat O'Brien andAra Parseghian were the analysts/feature reporters, althoughLesley Visser made occasional appearances on the show.Gary Bender was the lead play-by-play announcer for game coverage, working with analysts such asPat Haden andSteve Davis. Other CBS game commentators wereVerne Lundquist,Lindsey Nelson,Frank Herzog,Jack Snow andDennis Franklin. This arrangement was in place during the 1982 and 1983 seasons.
Also during the1982 NFL strike, CBS' NCAA football contract required the network to show fourDivision III games; the network initially intended to show those games on Saturday afternoons, with the broadcasts being received only in markets that were interested in carrying them. However, with no NFL games to show on October 3, 1982 (on what would have been Week 5 of the NFL season) due to the strike, CBS decided to show all of its NCAA Division III games on a single Sunday afternoon in front of a mass audience. CBS also used their regular NFL crews (Pat Summerall andJohn Madden atWittenberg–Baldwin–Wallace,Tom Brookshier andWayne Walker atWest Georgia–Millsaps,Tim Ryan andJohnny Morris atWisconsin–Oshkosh –Wisconsin–Stout, andDick Stockton andRoger Staubach atSan Diego–Occidental) and airedThe NFL Today instead of using their regular college football broadcasters.
CBS originally wanted to air someDivision I-Agames on Sunday. However, according toSports Illustrated, fellowNCAA football rights holdersABC andWTBS refused to sign off on the idea. Both networks demanded that CBS pay more in rights fees if it showed additional games. WTBS also objected to CBS moving games from Saturday to Sunday due to fears that such games would steal viewers from the NFLPA All-Star Games that WTBS planned to air. When the red tape made showing big time college football too difficult to pull off, CBS got the idea to run Division III games on that Sunday. It doesn't appear that CBS had plans to air any more games, however, since, Division III or not, it would have likely meant having to kick more money to the NCAA per ABC's and WTBS' demands.
In 1984, after theU.S. Supreme Court invalidated the NCAA contract inNCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, and the University of Georgia, theCollege Football Association was formed to handle affairs between television networks and college football programs, the result was an exclusive contract with ABC that granted the network rights to all CFA partner conference games and the games of most major independents. However, theBig Ten andPac-10 conferences were not included in this package, and signed their own agreement with CBS.Miami also reached an agreement for CBS to televise its most important home games, and in 1985, the Atlantic Coast Conference was added to CBS' list of college football properties. In 1985, Musburger took over the role of lead play-by-play voice, with Parseghian moving to the booth with him.Jim Nantz succeeded Musburger as studio host.
In 1987, CBS took over the CFA contract, which it would hold until 1990. CBS' tendency during this period was to air one marquee game each week, such as the legendary 1988 "Catholics vs Convicts" matchup between Notre Dame and Miami, though regional telecasts would occasionally be aired. For 1987 and 1988, Pat Haden joined Musburger in the booth, withJohn Dockery manning the sidelines. Nantz hosted what was now known as the "Prudential College Football Report", which was mostly a roundup of the day's scores and top headlines (including those in other sports), though sometimes key figures in the sport would be interviewed. Verne Lundquist,Tim Brant,Dick Stockton,Steve Zabriskie andBrad Nessler also called games for CBS during the CFA period. In 1989, Nantz became lead play-by-play announcer, but Haden remained the lead analyst for that year, being replaced by Brant in 1990.
After 1990, ABC obtained exclusive network coverage of regular season college football, as it won back the CFA and retained the Pac-10/Big Ten rights.
As the 1990s began, CBS' Division I-A college football coverage was reduced to its bowl game contracts, which it had with the then-John Hancock (reverted to Sun Bowl in 1994), Cotton and the then-Blockbuster bowls. However, it lost the rights to the Cotton Bowl toNBC after the 1992 game, leaving the network with just two bowl games to round out its college football coverage. CBS televisedMajor League Baseball from 1990 to 1993, so as a result the network was not without major sports coverage on Saturdays during the fall after the loss of college football. In 1994 and 1995, after losing the MLB contract and itsNFL contract, tryingbut failing tobuy NHL rights, and still unable to secure a college football contract, CBS did not have any major sports coverage in the fall. (In desperation, the network began talks with theCanadian Football League, but nothing came of them.)
For 1995, CBS re-acquired the rights to the Cotton Bowl Classic and also gained rights to theFiesta Bowl and theOrange Bowl from NBC. This was an important move for CBS as those two bowls would become part of theBowl Alliance with theSugar Bowl beginning that season; the goal was to try to guarantee an undisputed national champion in college football, something its predecessor theBowl Coalition had also tried but did not fully succeed in doing.
Under the terms of the contract, which ran from1995 through1997, the Bowl Alliance games would be scheduled for New Year's Eve, New Year's Night, and January 2 with the last of the three serving as the national championship game. CBS would thus be guaranteed two national championship game matchups, with the Sugar Bowl airing on ABC.
CBS was the first network to air a Bowl Alliance national championship game, asNebraska defeatedFlorida in the1996 Fiesta Bowl (on the same token, CBS also aired the last Bowl Alliance national championship game, where Nebraska defeatedTennessee in the1998 Orange Bowl to split that year's national championship vote asMichigan, which was No. 1 in both theAP andCoaches Polls going into the bowls, was obligated to play in that year'sRose Bowl). CBS also continued to air the Sun Bowl, but lost the rights to theCarquest Bowl after the game was moved from New Year's Day following the Orange Bowl's move to the home of the Carquest Bowl,Joe Robbie Stadium.
CBS resumed full-time college football coverage in 1996, as the network signed television contracts with theBig East Conference andSoutheastern Conference (SEC) to be the exclusive national television home of their in-conference schedules. The coverage was originally branded "College Football on CBS", sponsored initially byNASDAQ, a tag it retains for non-SEC games broadcast on the network.
CBS also televised games featuring non-Big East or SEC teams during this time. As part of the contract signed in 1996, CBS succeededABC Sports as the television home of theArmy-Navy Game.
On September 26, 1998, CBS planned to showUCLA @Miami at noon, butthis game was postponed due toHurricane Georges.Sean McDonough andTerry Donahue were the scheduled announcer; the game was rescheduled to the end of the regular season.
CBS lost the rights to three of its bowl games following the 1997 season, as ABC gained the rights to the Orange and Fiesta Bowls as the exclusive television home of the newly formed Bowl Championship Series andFox acquired the rights to the Cotton Bowl Classic.
Beginning in 2001, CBS became the home of theSEC Championship Game, the rights to which had been retained by ABC following the SEC's move. Following the 2000 season, the Big East decided not to renew its contract with CBS and instead signed with ABC, leading to the telecasts taking on theSEC on CBS branding.
Until 2023, CBS aired the top SEC weekly in-conference games as well as rivalry games with various other conferences when the SEC team is the home team. The network shared the rights to SEC conference games with the ESPN family of networks, which also airs the interconference rivalry games when the SEC team is not the home team (with the exception of Notre Dame), as well as all Pac-12/SEC regular season games.
In 2000, CBS installedVerne Lundquist on its No. 1 team following Sean McDonough's departure from CBS Sports.
Theevents of September 11, 2001, resulted in postponements for games scheduled the weekend of September 15. TheTennessee-Florida game was rescheduled to December 1, which pushed theSEC title game one week later to December 8.
In 2005,CBS Sports Network, then operating as College Sports Television, signed a multi-year agreement to air selectConference USA football games.[4] CBS Sports Network has aired theConference USA Football Championship Game since 2018.[5]
CBS aired theGator Bowl from 2007 to 2010, its biggest bowl acquisition since the Orange and Fiesta Bowls.
Until 2014, CBS maintained SEC exclusivity during its 3:30 p.m. Eastern Time window. As part of an extension to CBS's contract with the SEC through the 2023–24 season, CBS no longer has exclusivity during its afternoon window, but still has the first choice of games.[6] CBS was limited to airing five games featuring a particular team per season, and was allowed to air one game in primetime per season.[7] In 2014, theIron Bowl was given to ESPN in favor of theEgg Bowl, due to its potential effects onMississippi State's participation in theCollege Football Playoff).[8][9]
Before 2019, CBS had rights to three non-SEC regular season matchups, including the Army-Navy Game. CBS andNBC Sports split coverage of the annual matchup betweenNotre Dame and Navy, with CBS televising the game in years where Navy served as the host team. CBS also added theMountain West championship game to its coverage per a pre-existing contract that the network has with the conference (although most of the games air onCBS Sports Network); the game began in the last hour of primetime for the Eastern and Central time zones, meaning stations in those zones in most cases would not carry a late local newscast that evening. The Mountain West Championship Game was moved toESPN networks beginning in 2015.
In 2011, in addition to Army–Navy, CBS also broadcast the other two service academy games: Navy–Air Force on October 1 and Army–Air Force on November 5, 2011 (a game which opened up as a result of CBS using its 8:00 p.m. game assignment for LSU-Alabama). Air Force's annual games vs. Army and Navy continue to air on CBS orCBS Sports Network.
In 2015, CBS Sports acquired the rights to 12MAC football games through a sublicensing agreement withESPN.[10] In 2019, CBS Sports extended its contract with the MAC for four more years.[11]
Verne Lundquist retired from his role as lead play-by-play commentator for CBS after the2016 Army-Navy Game.Brad Nessler, formerly of ESPN, joined CBS as a secondary play-by-play announcer during the 2016 season, and officially replaced Lundquist on December 30, 2016, for CBS's coverage of the2016 Sun Bowl.[12]
After the 2020 season, CBS lost its alternating rights to the Navy–Notre Dame game toESPN. The rights were bought as part of a new media rights contract signed between the network and theAmerican Athletic Conference (AAC), which Navy has affiliated with for football since 2015.
On December 20, 2019, it was reported bySports Business Journal that after having offered $300 million per-season, CBS had exited negotiations to renew its SEC package beyond the 2023 season. CBS cited a need to "aggressively focus on other important strategic priorities moving forward".[13][14] On December 10, 2020, ESPN announced that it had acquired the top SEC rights under a 10-year deal beginning in 2024, valued at $3 billion over the length of the contract. The games are slated to air on ABC, thus centralizing the entirety of the SEC's media rights with The Walt Disney Company.[15]
On May 11, 2020, CBS Sports agreed to a multi-year deal through the 2023 season to become the home ofUConn Huskies home games, which will mostly air on CBS Sports Network.[16]
In August 2022, it was reported that CBS Sports was nearing a deal for rights to Big Ten football under its next round of broadcast contracts, expanding upon its rights to cover Big Tenbasketball.[17][18][19][20]
On August 18, 2022, CBS reached a seven-year deal to broadcast Big Ten football and basketball beginning in the 2023 season. CBS will air up to 15 Big Ten football games per-season, including a Friday afternoon game onThanksgiving weekend, and theBig Ten Football Championship Game in 2024 and 2028. Big Ten games replaced the SEC in CBS's traditional 3:30 p.m. ET window beginning in the 2024 season; in a transitional arrangement, CBS carried seven Big Ten games in 2023 around its final season of SEC coverage, which were mostly part of doubleheaders and tripleheaders with SEC and/or Mountain West games.[19][21]
In 2023, CBS Sports Network began airing football games from theFCS levelNortheast Conference.[22]
In 2024, CBS announced a four year extension of their agreement with theSun Bowl. This will allow CBS to air the game through the 2030 season.[23]
The instrumental theme music for CBS's college football broadcasts was written by New York composerLloyd Landesman, and has been used since the1987 season. The theme music was originally used for CBS's broadcast ofSuper Bowl XXI on January 25, 1987, but it was later decided that the piece was better suited for college football than theNational Football League (NFL).[1] After CBS acquired the rights to air SEC games in 1996, the theme music became synonymous with that conference.[1][24] In August 2022, news of CBS's intention to continue using the theme music for its Big Ten games spawned outbursts from upset SEC fans onTwitter.[24][25][26]
Typically onlyBig Ten on CBS games, select Mountain West games, games involving theCommander-in-Chief's Trophy (Army-Navy, Army-Air Force, and Air Force-Navy) and theSun Bowl air onCBS, with all other games airing onCBS Sports Network. Under the Big Ten contract, CBS holds rights to 15 games per-season, with 14 on Saturdays (usually in a 3:30 p.m. ET window) and one on the Friday after Thanksgiving. The first pick of games between its three broadcast rightsholders (Fox, CBS, and NBC) is determined via draft selections of specific dates and other factors.[27][28] CBS will air theBig Ten Championship Game in 2024 and 2028.[19]
CBS Sports Network airs weekly games from theMid-American Conference,C-USA andMountain West, as well as allUConn home games and selectArmy andNavy home games. CBSSN also airs theConference USA Football Championship Game and theHula Bowl yearly.
The games aired as part of the SEC package were the premiere SEC matchups of the week. From 1996 to 2023, Alabama had the most appearances with 128 of their games broadcast by CBS, followed by Florida with 110, Georgia with 95, LSU with 82, and Tennessee with 77. TheESPN family of networks had the subsequent picks of games among the SEC's national television partners. From2001 to2023, theSEC Championship Game was televised by CBS. TheVanderbilt Commodores appeared on the CBS package only seven times, with a 2013 game against Georgia (a 31–27 victory) marking their first appearance since 2001, and the first Vanderbilt home game televised by the network since 1982. Before their remarkable 2014 season, when they appeared four times (including the firstEgg Bowl ever broadcast by CBS),Mississippi State had only seven CBS games as part of the package.
Traditional rivalries that were often aired by CBS includedFlorida–Tennessee (1996–2011, 2013, 2015–2017, 2020, and 2022),Florida–Georgia (all but 2002), Auburn–Alabama (theIron Bowl) (since 2000, except for 2003, 2007 and 2014),LSU–Alabama (except for 2021 and 2022),Florida–LSU (1999, 2001, 2003, 2005–2009, 2011–2013, and 2017–2018),LSU–Ole Miss (2003, 2007–2010, 2012, 2015, and 2021) andLSU–Arkansas (1996–2013, except 2009), which was traditionally aired the day afterThanksgiving.
1996 through November 30, 2024 – does not include bowl games
Rank | Date | Matchup | Network | Viewers (millions) | TV ratings | Significance | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | November 9, 2019, 3:30 ET | #2 LSU | 46 | #3 Alabama | 41 | CBS | 16.64 | 9.7 | Alabama-LSU football rivalry |
2 | November 25, 2017, 3:30 ET | #1 Alabama | 14 | #6 Auburn | 26 | 13.66 | 7.6 | Iron Bowl | |
3 | November 5, 2022, 3:30 ET | #1 Tennessee | 13 | #3 Georgia | 27 | 13.06 | 6.7 | College GameDay,Rivalry | |
4 | October 15, 2022, 3:30 ET | #3 Alabama | 49 | #6 Tennessee | 52 | 11.56 | 6.1 | Third Saturday in October | |
5 | November 3, 2018, 8:00 ET | #1 Alabama | 29 | #3 LSU | 0 | 11.54 | 6.6 | Alabama-LSU football rivalry | |
6 | November 30, 2019, 3:30 ET | #5 Alabama | 45 | #15 Auburn | 48 | 11.43 | 6.3 | Iron Bowl | |
7 | November 7, 2015, 8:00 ET | #2 LSU | 16 | #4 Alabama | 30 | 11.06 | 6.4 | Alabama-LSU football rivalry | |
8 | November 5, 2016, 8:00 ET | #1 Alabama | 10 | #13 LSU | 0 | 10.38 | 5.8 | ||
9 | November 27, 2021, 3:30 ET | #3 Alabama | 24 | Auburn | 22 | 10.37 | 5.3 | Iron Bowl | |
10 | October 17, 2020, 8:00 ET | #3 Georgia | 24 | #2 Alabama | 41 | 9.61 | 5.3 | Alabama-Georgia football rivalry |
Year | Conference | Matchup | Network | Viewers (millions) | TV ratings | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | SEC | #18 Florida | 15 | #2 Alabama | 29 | CBS | 12.8 | 7.8 |
2016 | SEC | #1 Alabama | 54 | #18 Florida | 16 | 11.09 | 6.6 | |
2017 | SEC | #6 Georgia | 28 | #2 Auburn | 7 | 13.47 | 8.0 | |
2018 | SEC | #1 Alabama | 35 | #4 Georgia | 28 | 17.5 | 10.1 | |
C-USA | UAB | 27 | Middle Tennessee | 25 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2019 | SEC | #4 Georgia | 10 | #2 LSU | 37 | CBS | 13.70 | 7.9 |
C-USA | UAB | 6 | Florida Atlantic | 49 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2020 | SEC | #1 Alabama | 52 | #7 Florida | 46 | CBS | 8.92 | 4.9 |
C-USA | UAB | 22 | Marshall | 13 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2021 (Spring) | Patriot League | Holy Cross | 33 | Bucknell | 10 | n.a | n.a | |
2021 | SEC | #1 Georgia | 24 | #3 Alabama | 41 | CBS | 15.27 | 8.2 |
C-USA | WKU | 41 | UTSA | 49 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2022 | SEC | #14 LSU | 30 | #1 Georgia | 50 | CBS | 10.89 | 5.6 |
C-USA | North Texas | 27 | UTSA | 48 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2023 | SEC | #1 Georgia | 24 | #8 Alabama | 27 | CBS | 17.52 | 8.9 |
C-USA | New Mexico State | 35 | #24 Liberty | 49 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a |
Year | Bowl game | Matchup | Network | Viewers (millions) | TV ratings | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | Sun Bowl | Miami | 14 | Washington State | 20 | CBS | 4.7 | 2.9 |
Cure Bowl | San Jose State | 27 | Georgia State | 16 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2016 | Sun Bowl | #18 Stanford | 25 | North Carolina | 23 | CBS | 3.0 | 1.7 |
Cure Bowl | Arkansas State | 31 | UCF Knights | 13 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2017 | Sun Bowl | #24 NC State | 52 | Arizona State | 31 | CBS | 2.2 | 1.5 |
Cure Bowl | Western Kentucky | 17 | Georgia State | 27 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
Arizona Bowl | New Mexico State | 26 | Utah State | 20 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2018 | Sun Bowl | Stanford | 14 | Pitt | 13 | CBS | 2.6 | 1.8 |
Cure Bowl | Tulane | 41 | Louisiana | 24 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
Arizona Bowl | Arkansas State | 13 | Nevada | 16 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2019 | Sun Bowl | Florida State | 14 | Arizona State | 20 | CBS | 3.2 | 2.1 |
Cure Bowl | Liberty | 23 | Georgia Southern | 16 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
Arizona Bowl | Wyoming | 38 | Georgia State | 17 | CBSSN | n.a | n.a | |
2020 | Arizona Bowl | Ball State | 34 | #22 San Jose State | 13 | CBS | 1.8 | 1.1 |
Sun Bowl | Game canceled due toCOVID-19 pandemic | |||||||
2021 | Sun Bowl | Washington State | 21 | Central Michigan | 24 | CBS | 2.9 | 1.8 |
2022 | Sun Bowl | Pitt | 37 | #18 UCLA | 35 | 2.8 | 1.5 | |
2023 | Sun Bowl | #19 Oregon State | 8 | #16 Notre Dame | 40 | 3.2 | 1.8 |