1992–93 NCAA football bowl games
The 1992–93 NCAA football bowl games were a series of post-season games played in December 1992 and January 1993 to end the 1992 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 Las Vegas Bowl on December 18, 1992, and concluded on January 16, 1993, with the season-ending Senior Bowl .
Schedule
Date
Game
Site
Time(US EST )
TV
Matchup (pre-game record)
AP pre-game rank
UPI (Coaches) pre-game rank
12/18
Las Vegas Bowl
Sam Boyd Stadium Whitney, Nevada
ESPN
Bowling Green 35 (9–2) (MAC Champion),Nevada 34 (7–4) (Big West Champion)
NR NR
NR NR
12/25
Aloha Bowl
Aloha Stadium Honolulu, Hawaii
ABC
Kansas 23 (7–4) (Big Eight ),BYU 20 (8–4) (WAC co-Champion)
NR #25
NR #23
12/29
Freedom Bowl
Anaheim Stadium Anaheim, California
Raycom
Fresno State 24 (8–4) (WAC co-Champion),USC 7 (6–4–1) (Pac-10 )
NR #23
NR #25
12/29
Copper Bowl
Arizona Stadium Tucson, Arizona
ESPN
Washington State 31 (8–3) (Pac-10 ),Utah 28 (6–5) (WAC )
#18 NR
#18 NR
12/30
Holiday Bowl [ 2]
Jack Murphy Stadium San Diego, California
ESPN
Hawaii 27 (10–2) (WAC co-Champion),Illinois 17 (6–4–1) (Big Ten )
NR NR
#24 NR
12/31
John Hancock Bowl
Sun Bowl Stadium El Paso, Texas
CBS
Baylor 20 (6–5) (SWC ),Arizona 15 (6–4–1) (Pac-10 )
NR #22
NR #22
12/31
Gator Bowl
Gator Bowl Stadium Jacksonville, Florida
TBS
Florida 27 (8–4) (SEC ),NC State 10 (9–2–1) (ACC )
#14 #12
#15 #12
12/31
Liberty Bowl
Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium Memphis, Tennessee
ESPN
Ole Miss 13 (8–3) (SEC ),Air Force 0 (7–4) (WAC )
#20 NR
#19 NR
12/31
Independence Bowl
Independence Stadium Shreveport, Louisiana
ESPN
Wake Forest 39 (7–4) (ACC ),Oregon 35 (6–5) (Pac-10 )
NR NR
NR NR
1/1
Florida Citrus Bowl [ 3]
Florida Citrus Bowl Orlando, Florida
12:00 PM
ABC
Georgia 21 (9–2) (SEC ),Ohio State 14 (8–2–1) (Big Ten )
#8 #15
#8 #14
1/1
Hall of Fame Bowl
Tampa Stadium Tampa, Florida
ESPN
Tennessee 38 (8–3) (SEC ),Boston College 23 (8–2–1) (Big East )
#17 #16
#17 #16
1/1
Cotton Bowl Classic [ 4]
Cotton Bowl Dallas, Texas
1:30 PM
NBC
Notre Dame 28 (9–1–1) (Independent ),Texas A&M 3 (12–0) (SWC Champion)
#5 #4
#5 #3
1/1
Blockbuster Bowl
Joe Robbie Stadium Miami Gardens, Florida
CBS
Stanford 24 (9–3) (Pac-10 ),Penn State 3 (7–4) (Independent )
#13 #21
#13 #21
1/1
Fiesta Bowl [ 5]
Sun Devil Stadium Tempe, Arizona
NBC
Syracuse 26 (9–2) (Big East ),Colorado 22 (9–1–1) (Big Eight )
#6 #10
#9 #6
1/1
Rose Bowl [ 6]
Rose Bowl Pasadena, California
4:30 PM
ABC
Michigan 38 (8–0–3) (Big Ten Champion),Washington 14 (9–2) (Pac-10 co-Champion)
#7 #9
#7 #11
1/1
Sugar Bowl [ 7]
Louisiana Superdome New Orleans, Louisiana
7:00 PM
ABC
Alabama 34 (12–0) (SEC Champion),Miami (FL) 13 (11–0) (Big East Champion)
#2 #1
#2 #1
1/1
Orange Bowl [ 8]
Miami Orange Bowl Miami
8:00 PM
NBC
Florida State 27 (10–1) (ACC Champion),Nebraska 14 (9–2) (Big Eight Champion)
#3 #11
#4 #10
1/2
Peach Bowl
Georgia Dome Atlanta
ESPN
North Carolina 21 (8–3) (ACC ),Mississippi State 17 (7–4) (SEC )
#24 #19
NR #20
References
^ "1992 College Football Bowl Games" . Sports Reference . Retrieved December 23, 2018 .
^ "SIMS, HAWAII TURN BACK ILLINOIS IN HOLIDAY BOWL" . The Washington Post . December 31, 1992. Retrieved December 24, 2018 .
^ "Georgia runs over Ohio State CITRUS BOWL/ Georgia 21, Ohio state 14 QB Zeier excels; late TD decisive" . The Baltimore Sun . January 2, 1993. Retrieved December 24, 2018 .
^ "Irish rest case with 7-game win streak COTTON BOWL/ Notre Dame 28, Texas A&M; 3 Notre Dame hands Texas A&M; 1st loss" . The Baltimore Sun . January 2, 1993. Retrieved December 24, 2018 .
^ "Syracuse Leaves Colorado Kicking Self : Fiesta: Buffaloes' missed extra points, field goal combine with Dar Dar's long runback in a 26-22 victory by the Orangemen" . Los Angeles Times . January 2, 1993. Retrieved December 24, 2018 .
^ "ROSE BOWL" . The Washington Post . January 2, 1993. Retrieved December 24, 2018 .
^ "COLLEGE FOOTBALL; Roll Tide! Alabama Dethrones No. 1 Miami" . The New York Times . January 2, 1993. Retrieved December 24, 2018 .
^ "Florida State 27, Nebraska 14" . United Press International . January 1, 1993. Retrieved December 23, 2018 .