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Guaranteed Rate Bowl

The Guaranteed Rate Bowl is an annual college football bowl game that has been played in the state of Arizona since 1989.

Guaranteed Rate Bowl
StadiumChase Field
LocationPhoenix, Arizona
Previous stadiumsArizona Stadium
(1989–1999)
Bank One Ballpark
(2000–2005)
Sun Devil Stadium
(2006–2015)
Previous locationsTucson, Arizona
(1989–1999)
Phoenix, Arizona
(2000–2005)
Tempe, Arizona
(2006–2015)
Operated1989–present
Conference tie-insBig 12, Big Ten
Previous conference tie-insWAC (1990–1997)
Big 12 (1998–2001)
Big East (1998–2005)
Pac-10 (2002–2005, 2013–2019)
Big 12 (2006–2013)
Big Ten (2006–2013)
PayoutUS$1,625,560 (2019)[1]
Sponsors
Former names
  • Copper Bowl (1989)
  • Domino's Pizza Copper Bowl (1990–1991)
  • Weiser Lock Copper Bowl (1992–1995)
  • Copper Bowl (1996)
  • Insight.com Bowl (1997–2001)
  • Insight Bowl (2002–2011)
  • Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl (2012–2013)
  • TicketCity Cactus Bowl (2015)
  • Motel 6 Cactus Bowl (2016, 2 games)
  • Cactus Bowl (2017)
  • Cheez-It Bowl (2018–2019)[a]
2022 matchup
Oklahoma State vs. Wisconsin
(Wisconsin 24–17)
2023 matchup
Kansas vs. UNLV (Kansas 49–36)

Played as the Copper Bowl from inception through 1996, it was known as the Insight.com Bowl from 1997 through 2001, then the Insight Bowl from 2002 through 2011, the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl for 2012 and 2013, and the Cactus Bowl for the 2014 through 2017 seasons. In 2018 and 2019, the game was known as the Cheez-It Bowl.[a] In 2020, Guaranteed Rate signed on as the title sponsor of the game, renaming it as the Guaranteed Rate Bowl.[2]

When the bowl was founded, it was played at Arizona Stadium in Tucson, on the campus of the University of Arizona. In 2000, the organizers moved the game from Tucson to Phoenix. There, it was played at what became known as Chase Field, the home of the Arizona Diamondbacks of Major League Baseball. For the 2006 season, the bowl moved a second time. After the annual Fiesta Bowl left Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe to play in University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, the bowl (then still known as the Insight Bowl) was relocated there as a permanent replacement. The bowl returned to its previous home at Chase Field in Phoenix for the January 2016 event, due to renovation work at Sun Devil Stadium that was expected to last at least three off-seasons.[3] The bowl has remained at Chase Field, making it one of four bowl games staged in baseball stadiums, the other three being the Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium, the Fenway Bowl at Fenway Park, and the Holiday Bowl at Petco Park.

The 2020 edition of the bowl was cancelled on December 20, 2020, due to an insufficient number of teams available to fill all 2020–21 bowl games, after a season impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.[4]

History edit

"Cactus Bowl" had been the originally planned name for what became the Copper Bowl in 1989.[5] The game was played under the Copper Bowl name through 1996, after which title sponsorship rights were assumed by Insight Enterprises, which self-titled the game from 1997 through 2011. In 2012, restaurant chain Buffalo Wild Wings became the sponsor and self-titled the game for two years.[6] Buffalo Wild Wings declined to renew sponsorship following the 2013 game,[7] at which time organizers opted to rename the game "Cactus Bowl" rather than reverting to the Copper Bowl name. There had been a Texas-based Cactus Bowl played in Division II, but that game was discontinued after 2011. For 2014, TicketCity sponsored the new Cactus Bowl,[8] and Motel 6 became the sponsor in 2015.[9] In 2018, Kellogg's became the sponsor and rebranded the bowl, naming it after its cheese cracker brand, Cheez-It.[10] In May 2020, the Cactus Bowl name returned, as Cheez-It sponsorship moved to what had been known as the Camping World Bowl played in Orlando, Florida.[11]

For the first ten years, the game was played at Arizona Stadium, on the campus of the University of Arizona in Tucson. In 2000, the bowl's organizers moved the game to Bank One Ballpark, a baseball-specific stadium, in downtown Phoenix. In 2006, the game moved to Sun Devil Stadium at Arizona State University in Tempe to replace the Fiesta Bowl, which had moved to University of Phoenix Stadium in the Phoenix suburb of Glendale. The 2006 game set a record (since tied in the 2016 Alamo Bowl) for the biggest comeback in NCAA Division I FBS bowl history,[12] as Texas Tech came back from a 38–7 third-quarter deficit to defeat Minnesota in overtime, 44–41.

For the first three playings of the Copper Bowl, TBS carried the game. Beginning in 1992 and continuing until the 2005 playing, the game aired on ESPN. After a four-year hiatus, during which NFL Network carried the game, ESPN regained the rights beginning in 2010.

Conference tie-ins edit

Before 2006, the game mainly featured teams from the Pac-10, Western Athletic Conference, Big 12, and old Big East conferences. From 2006 to 2013, it began featuring an annual matchup between teams from the Big Ten and the Big 12. Starting with the 2015 game, it featured a matchup between Pac-12 and Big 12 teams. Teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference and Mountain West Conference have also competed, along with teams from the now defunct Southwest Conference and Big Eight, and one independent school (Notre Dame in 2004). In July 2019, the bowl announced tie-ins with the Big Ten and Big 12 conferences, starting with the 2020–21 season and continuing through the 2025–26 season.[13]

Game results edit

All rankings are taken from the AP Poll prior to the game being played.

No. Date Bowl name Winning Team Losing Team Attendance
1 December 31, 1989 Copper Bowl Arizona 17 NC State 10 37,237
2 December 31, 1990 Copper Bowl California 17 Wyoming 15 36,340
3 December 31, 1991 Copper Bowl Indiana 24 Baylor 0 35,751
4 December 31, 1992 Copper Bowl No 18 Washington State 31 Utah 28 40,826
5 December 29, 1993 Copper Bowl No. 20 Kansas State 52 Wyoming 17 49,075
6 December 29, 1994 Copper Bowl No. 22 BYU 31 Oklahoma 6 45,122
7 December 27, 1995 Copper Bowl Texas Tech 55 Air Force 41 41,004
8 December 27, 1996 Copper Bowl Wisconsin 38 Utah 10 42,122
9 December 27, 1997 Insight.com Bowl Arizona 20 New Mexico 14 49,385
10 December 26, 1998 Insight.com Bowl No. 23 Missouri 34 West Virginia 31 36,147
11 December 31, 1999 Insight.com Bowl Colorado 62 No. 25 Boston College 28 35,762
12 December 28, 2000 Insight.com Bowl Iowa State 37 Pittsburgh 29 41,813
13 December 29, 2001 Insight.com Bowl No. 18 Syracuse 26 Kansas State 3 40,028
14 December 26, 2002 Insight Bowl No. 24 Pittsburgh 38 Oregon State 13 40,533
15 December 26, 2003 Insight Bowl California 52 Virginia Tech 49 42,364
16 December 28, 2004 Insight Bowl Oregon State 38 Notre Dame 21 45,917
17 December 27, 2005 Insight Bowl Arizona State 45 Rutgers 40 43,536
18 December 29, 2006 Insight Bowl Texas Tech 44 Minnesota 41 (OT) 48,391
19 December 31, 2007 Insight Bowl Oklahoma State 49 Indiana 33 48,892
20 December 31, 2008 Insight Bowl Kansas 42 Minnesota 21 49,103
21 December 31, 2009 Insight Bowl Iowa State 14 Minnesota 13 45,090
22 December 28, 2010 Insight Bowl Iowa 27 No. 14 Missouri 24 53,453
23 December 30, 2011 Insight Bowl No. 19 Oklahoma 31 Iowa 14 54,247
24 December 29, 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl Michigan State 17 TCU 16 44,617
25 December 28, 2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl Kansas State 31 Michigan 14 53,284
26 January 2, 2015 Cactus Bowl Oklahoma State 30 Washington 22 35,409
27 January 2, 2016 Cactus Bowl West Virginia 43 Arizona State 42 39,321
28 December 27, 2016 Cactus Bowl Baylor 31 Boise State 12 33,328
29 December 26, 2017 Cactus Bowl Kansas State 35 UCLA 17 32,859
30 December 26, 2018 Cheez-It Bowl TCU 10 California 7 (OT) 33,121
31 December 27, 2019 Cheez-It Bowl No. 24 Air Force 31 Washington State 21 34,105
December 26, 2020 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Canceled: insufficient number of teams available[14]
32 December 28, 2021 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Minnesota 18 West Virginia 6 21,220
33 December 27, 2022 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Wisconsin 24 Oklahoma State 17 23,187
34 December 26, 2023 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Kansas 49 UNLV 36 26,478

Source:[15]

Games  1–11 (copper) played in Tucson at Arizona Stadium
Games 12–17 (silver) played in Phoenix at Bank One Ballpark (now Chase Field)
Games 18–26 (yellow) played in Tempe at Sun Devil Stadium
Games 27–present (silver) played in Phoenix at Chase Field (formerly Bank One Ballpark)

MVPs edit

Two MVPs are selected for each game; one an offensive player, the other a defensive player.[16]

Game Offensive MVP Defensive MVP
Player Team Position Player Team Position
1989 Shane Montgomery North Carolina State QB Scott Geyer Arizona DB
1990 Mike Pawlawski California QB Robert Midgett Wyoming LB
1991 Vaughn Dunbar Indiana TB Mark Hagen Indiana LB
1992 Drew Bledsoe Washington State QB Kareem Leary Utah DB
1993 Andre Coleman Kansas State WR Kenny McEntyre Kansas State CB
1994 Jamal Willis BYU RB Broderick Simpson Oklahoma LB
1995 Zebbie Lethridge Texas Tech QB Mickey Dalton Air Force CB
1996 Ron Dayne Wisconsin RB Tarek Saleh Wisconsin LB
1997 Trung Canidate Arizona RB Jimmy Sprotte Arizona LB
1998 Marc Bulger West Virginia QB Jeff Marriott Missouri DT
1999 Cortlen Johnson Colorado RB Jashon Sykes Colorado LB
2000 Sage Rosenfels Iowa State QB Reggie Hayward Iowa State DE
2001 James Mungro Syracuse RB Clifton Smith Syracuse LB
2002 Brandon Miree Pittsburgh TB Claude Harriott Pittsburgh DL
2003 Aaron Rodgers California QB Ryan Gutierrez California FS
2004 Derek Anderson Oregon State QB Trent Bray Oregon State LB
2005 Rudy Carpenter Arizona State QB Jamar Williams Arizona State LB
2006 Graham Harrell Texas Tech QB Antonio Huffman Texas Tech CB
2007 Zac Robinson Oklahoma State QB Donovan Woods Oklahoma State S
2008 Dezmon Briscoe Kansas WR James Holt Kansas LB
2009 Alexander Robinson Iowa State RB Christopher Lyle Iowa State DE
2010 Marcus Coker Iowa RB Micah Hyde Iowa DB
2011 Blake Bell Oklahoma QB Jamell Fleming Oklahoma DB
2012 Le'Veon Bell Michigan State RB William Gholston Michigan State DE
2013 Tyler Lockett Kansas State WR Dante Barnett Kansas State DB
2015 Desmond Roland Oklahoma State RB Seth Jacobs Oklahoma State LB
2016 (Jan.) Skyler Howard West Virginia QB Shaq Petteway West Virginia LB
2016 (Dec.) KD Cannon Baylor WR Tyrone Hunt Baylor DE
2017 Alex Delton Kansas State QB Denzel Goolsby Kansas State S
2018 Sewo Olonilua TCU RB Jaylinn Hawkins California S
2019 Kadin Remsberg Air Force RB Grant Donaldson Air Force OLB
2021 Ky Thomas Minnesota RB Tyler Nubin Minnesota S
2022 Braelon Allen Wisconsin RB Jordan Turner Wisconsin LB
2023 Jason Bean Kansas QB Kenny Logan Kansas S

Source:[17][18][19]

Sportsmanship award edit

The bowl awarded a sportsmanship award for the 2001 through January 2016 games.[16]

Game Player Team Position
2001 Terry Pierce Kansas State LB
2002 Derek Anderson Oregon State QB
2003 Doug Easlick Virginia Tech FB
2004 Derek Curry Notre Dame LB
2005 Ryan Neill Rutgers DE
2006 Dominic Jones Minnesota DB
2007 Jonathan "Josh" Sandberg Indiana OG
2008 Jack Simmons Minnesota TE
2009 D.J. Burris Minnesota OG
2010 Tim Barnes Missouri C
2011 Tyler Nielsen Iowa LB
2012 Tayo Fabuluje TCU OT
2013 Devin Funchess Michigan WR
2015 Andrew Hudson Washington DE
2016 (Jan.) D. J. Foster Arizona State RB

Most appearances edit

Teams with a single appearance

Won (4): BYU, Colorado, Michigan State, Syracuse
Lost (11): Boise State, Boston College, Michigan, New Mexico, North Carolina State, Notre Dame, Rutgers, UCLA, UNLV, Virginia Tech, Washington

Appearances by conference edit

Updated through the December 2023 edition (34 games, 68 total appearances).

Conference Record Appearances by season
Games W L Win pct. Won Lost
Big 12 20 15 5 .750 1998, 1999, 2000, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011,
2013, 2014*, 2015*, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2023
2001, 2010, 2012, 2021, 2022
Pac-12 13 7 6 .538 1989, 1990, 1992, 1997, 2003, 2004, 2005 2002, 2014*, 2015*, 2017, 2018, 2019
Big Ten 12 6 6 .500 1991, 1996, 2010, 2012, 2021, 2022 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2013
Big East 7 2 5 .286 2001, 2002 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005
WAC 7 1 6 .143 1994 1990, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997
Mountain West 3 1 2 .333 2019 2016, 2023
Big Eight 2 1 1 .500 1993 1994
SWC 2 1 1 .500 1995 1991
ACC 1 0 1 .000   1989
Independents 1 0 1 .000   2004
  • Games marked with an asterisk (*) were played in January of the following calendar year.
  • Records reflect conference affiliations at the time each game was played.
  • The Pac-12's record includes appearances when the conference was the Pac-10. From 1989 through 2005, Pac-10 teams made eight appearances and were 7–1.
  • Big East teams made seven appearances and were 2–5; the American Athletic Conference (The American) retains the conference charter following the 2013 split of the original Big East along football lines.
  • Conferences that are defunct or no longer active in FBS are marked in italics.
  • Independent appearances: Notre Dame (2004)

Game records edit

Team Performance vs. opponent Year
Most points scored (one team) 62, Colorado vs. Boston College 1999
Most points scored (losing team) 49, Virginia Tech vs. California 2003
Most points scored (both teams) 101, California vs. Virginia Tech 2003
Fewest points allowed 0, Indiana vs. Baylor 1991
Largest margin of victory 35, Kansas State vs. Wyoming 1993
Total yards 679, Arizona State vs. Rutgers 2005
Rushing yards 431, Air Force vs. Texas Tech 1995
Passing yards 492, Washington State vs. Utah 1992
First downs 33, Arizona State vs. Rutgers 2005
Fewest yards allowed 130, North Carolina State vs. Arizona 1989
Fewest rushing yards allowed 8, Pittsburgh vs. Oregon State 2002
Fewest passing yards allowed 16, Utah vs. Wisconsin 1996
Individual Performance vs. opponent Year
All-purpose yards 498, Rudy Carpenter, Arizona State vs. Rutgers 2005
Rushing yards 260, Byron Hanspard, Texas Tech vs. Air Force 1995
Rushing touchdowns 4, Byron Hanspard, Texas Tech vs. Air Force 1995
Passing yards 532, Skyler Howard, West Virginia vs. Arizona State 2016*
Passing touchdowns 6, Jason Bean, Kansas vs UNLV 2023
Receiving yards 212, Phillip Bobo, Washington State vs. Utah 1992
Receiving touchdowns 3, shared by:
Dezmon Briscoe, Kansas vs. Minnesota
Luke Grimm, Kansas vs. UNLV
Lawrence Arnold, Kansas vs. UNLV

2008
2023
2023
Tackles 20 (total), Jahad Woods, Washington State vs. Air Force 2019
Interceptions 2, most recent:
Cameron Oliver, UNLV vs. Kansas

2023
Long Plays Performance vs. opponent Year
Touchdown run 71, Danta Johnson, Air Force vs. Texas Tech 1995
Touchdown pass 87, Phillip Bobo from Drew Bledsoe, Washington State vs. Utah 1992
Kickoff return 60, shared by:
Ricardo Rhodes, Missouri vs. West Virginia
Troy Stoudermire, Minnesota vs. Kansas

1998
2008
Punt return 88, Ben Kelly, Colorado vs. Boston College 1999
Interception return 78, George White, Boston College vs. Colorado 1999
Punt 67, shared by:
Travis Brown, Kansas State vs. Syracuse
Tress Way, Oklahoma vs. Iowa

2001
2011
Field goal 53, Jaden Oberkrom, TCU vs. Michigan State 2012

Games marked with an asterisk (*) were played in January of the noted calendar year.

Source:[20]

Media coverage edit

The bowl has been televised by three different networks: TBS (1989–1991), ESPN (1992–2005, 2010–present), and NFL Network (2006–2009).[21]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Not to be confused with the later Cheez-It Bowl (2020–2022).

References edit

  1. ^ "2019 Bowl Schedule". collegefootballpoll.com. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
  2. ^ "Guaranteed Rate Joins With Cactus Bowl As Title Partner For Newly-Named Guaranteed Rate Bowl". Retrieved October 22, 2020.
  3. ^ McMurphy, Brett (May 4, 2015). "Cactus Bowl moving to Chase Field for next three seasons". ESPN.com.
  4. ^ Graham, Pat (December 20, 2020). "'A long grind': Bowl Day marred by cancellations, opt outs". arklatexhomepage.com. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  5. ^ "New bowl game seeking sponsor, TV pact". The Tuscaloosa News. 1988-08-13. Retrieved 2014-12-30.
  6. ^ "Insight Bowl loses its title sponsor after 15 years". Sports Illustrated. Associated Press. 26 January 2012. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  7. ^ "Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl loses sponsorship". azcentral. 16 June 2014.
  8. ^ "TicketCity gets Cactus Bowl naming rights for Cactus Bowl in Tempe". Phoenix Business Journal. 2014-11-25. Retrieved 2014-12-30.
  9. ^ "Motel 6 inks naming rights deal for Cactus Bowl". Phoenix Business Journal. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
  10. ^ "CHEEZ-IT JOINS CACTUS BOWL AS NEW NAMING RIGHTS PARTNER". Retrieved August 20, 2018.
  11. ^ Metcalfe, Jeff (May 27, 2020). "Downtown Phoenix bowl game reverts to Cactus Bowl name". azcentral.com. Retrieved May 27, 2020.
  12. ^ "Down 31, Texas Tech rallies for biggest bowl comeback". Associated Press. December 29, 2006. from the original on 2 January 2007. Retrieved 30 December 2006 – via ESPN.
  13. ^ Fitzgerald, Katherine (June 4, 2019). "Cheez-It Bowl to feature Big Ten vs. Big 12 matchup starting in 2020". azcentral.com. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  14. ^ "Guaranteed Rate Bowl Game Update Statement". Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  15. ^ "Cheez-It Bowl" (PDF). Bowl/All Star Game Records. NCAA. 2020. p. 11. Retrieved January 3, 2021 – via NCAA.org.
  16. ^ a b "Game History". fiestabowl.org. Retrieved January 17, 2018.
  17. ^ "Players of the Game". Guaranteed Rate Bowl Official Program. University Sports Publications. 2023. p. 57. Retrieved December 27, 2023 – via publogix.com.
  18. ^ @RateBowl (December 27, 2023). "Congratulations to the Offensive MVP, with a new #GuaranteedRateBowl record of SIX passing touchdowns! We applaud you @jasonbean24" (Tweet). Retrieved December 27, 2023 – via Twitter.
  19. ^ @RateBowl (December 27, 2023). "#1 on defense and #1 in our hearts! Congratulations @Kennylogan23 on being the #GuaranteedRateBowl Defensive MVP!" (Tweet). Retrieved December 27, 2023 – via Twitter.
  20. ^ "Cheez-It Bowl Records". fiestabowl.org. Retrieved December 27, 2019.
  21. ^ Kelly, Doug (ed.). "2019–20 Football Bowl Association Media Guide" (PDF). footballbowlassociation.com. p. 94. Retrieved January 3, 2020.

External links edit

  • Official website

guaranteed, rate, bowl, cactus, bowl, redirects, here, division, star, game, played, from, 2001, through, 2011, cactus, bowl, division, buffalo, wild, wings, bowl, redirects, here, confused, with, buffalo, wild, wings, citrus, bowl, annual, college, football, . Cactus Bowl redirects here For the Division II all star game played from 2001 through 2011 see Cactus Bowl Division II Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl redirects here Not to be confused with Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl The Guaranteed Rate Bowl is an annual college football bowl game that has been played in the state of Arizona since 1989 Guaranteed Rate BowlStadiumChase FieldLocationPhoenix ArizonaPrevious stadiumsArizona Stadium 1989 1999 Bank One Ballpark 2000 2005 Sun Devil Stadium 2006 2015 Previous locationsTucson Arizona 1989 1999 Phoenix Arizona 2000 2005 Tempe Arizona 2006 2015 Operated1989 presentConference tie insBig 12 Big TenPrevious conference tie insWAC 1990 1997 Big 12 1998 2001 Big East 1998 2005 Pac 10 2002 2005 2013 2019 Big 12 2006 2013 Big Ten 2006 2013 PayoutUS 1 625 560 2019 1 SponsorsDomino s Pizza 1990 1991 Weiser Lock 1992 1995 Insight Enterprises 1997 2011 Buffalo Wild Wings 2012 2013 TicketCity 2015 Motel 6 2016 2 games Kellogg s Cheez It 2018 2019 Guaranteed Rate 2020 present Former namesCopper Bowl 1989 Domino s Pizza Copper Bowl 1990 1991 Weiser Lock Copper Bowl 1992 1995 Copper Bowl 1996 Insight com Bowl 1997 2001 Insight Bowl 2002 2011 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl 2012 2013 TicketCity Cactus Bowl 2015 Motel 6 Cactus Bowl 2016 2 games Cactus Bowl 2017 Cheez It Bowl 2018 2019 a 2022 matchupOklahoma State vs Wisconsin Wisconsin 24 17 2023 matchupKansas vs UNLV Kansas 49 36 Played as the Copper Bowl from inception through 1996 it was known as the Insight com Bowl from 1997 through 2001 then the Insight Bowl from 2002 through 2011 the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl for 2012 and 2013 and the Cactus Bowl for the 2014 through 2017 seasons In 2018 and 2019 the game was known as the Cheez It Bowl a In 2020 Guaranteed Rate signed on as the title sponsor of the game renaming it as the Guaranteed Rate Bowl 2 When the bowl was founded it was played at Arizona Stadium in Tucson on the campus of the University of Arizona In 2000 the organizers moved the game from Tucson to Phoenix There it was played at what became known as Chase Field the home of the Arizona Diamondbacks of Major League Baseball For the 2006 season the bowl moved a second time After the annual Fiesta Bowl left Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe to play in University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale the bowl then still known as the Insight Bowl was relocated there as a permanent replacement The bowl returned to its previous home at Chase Field in Phoenix for the January 2016 event due to renovation work at Sun Devil Stadium that was expected to last at least three off seasons 3 The bowl has remained at Chase Field making it one of four bowl games staged in baseball stadiums the other three being the Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium the Fenway Bowl at Fenway Park and the Holiday Bowl at Petco Park The 2020 edition of the bowl was cancelled on December 20 2020 due to an insufficient number of teams available to fill all 2020 21 bowl games after a season impacted by the COVID 19 pandemic 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Conference tie ins 2 Game results 3 MVPs 4 Sportsmanship award 5 Most appearances 6 Appearances by conference 7 Game records 8 Media coverage 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksHistory edit Cactus Bowl had been the originally planned name for what became the Copper Bowl in 1989 5 The game was played under the Copper Bowl name through 1996 after which title sponsorship rights were assumed by Insight Enterprises which self titled the game from 1997 through 2011 In 2012 restaurant chain Buffalo Wild Wings became the sponsor and self titled the game for two years 6 Buffalo Wild Wings declined to renew sponsorship following the 2013 game 7 at which time organizers opted to rename the game Cactus Bowl rather than reverting to the Copper Bowl name There had been a Texas based Cactus Bowl played in Division II but that game was discontinued after 2011 For 2014 TicketCity sponsored the new Cactus Bowl 8 and Motel 6 became the sponsor in 2015 9 In 2018 Kellogg s became the sponsor and rebranded the bowl naming it after its cheese cracker brand Cheez It 10 In May 2020 the Cactus Bowl name returned as Cheez It sponsorship moved to what had been known as the Camping World Bowl played in Orlando Florida 11 For the first ten years the game was played at Arizona Stadium on the campus of the University of Arizona in Tucson In 2000 the bowl s organizers moved the game to Bank One Ballpark a baseball specific stadium in downtown Phoenix In 2006 the game moved to Sun Devil Stadium at Arizona State University in Tempe to replace the Fiesta Bowl which had moved to University of Phoenix Stadium in the Phoenix suburb of Glendale The 2006 game set a record since tied in the 2016 Alamo Bowl for the biggest comeback in NCAA Division I FBS bowl history 12 as Texas Tech came back from a 38 7 third quarter deficit to defeat Minnesota in overtime 44 41 For the first three playings of the Copper Bowl TBS carried the game Beginning in 1992 and continuing until the 2005 playing the game aired on ESPN After a four year hiatus during which NFL Network carried the game ESPN regained the rights beginning in 2010 Conference tie ins edit Before 2006 the game mainly featured teams from the Pac 10 Western Athletic Conference Big 12 and old Big East conferences From 2006 to 2013 it began featuring an annual matchup between teams from the Big Ten and the Big 12 Starting with the 2015 game it featured a matchup between Pac 12 and Big 12 teams Teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference and Mountain West Conference have also competed along with teams from the now defunct Southwest Conference and Big Eight and one independent school Notre Dame in 2004 In July 2019 the bowl announced tie ins with the Big Ten and Big 12 conferences starting with the 2020 21 season and continuing through the 2025 26 season 13 Game results editAll rankings are taken from the AP Poll prior to the game being played No Date Bowl name Winning Team Losing Team Attendance 1 December 31 1989 Copper Bowl Arizona 17 NC State 10 37 237 2 December 31 1990 Copper Bowl California 17 Wyoming 15 36 340 3 December 31 1991 Copper Bowl Indiana 24 Baylor 0 35 751 4 December 31 1992 Copper Bowl No 18 Washington State 31 Utah 28 40 826 5 December 29 1993 Copper Bowl No 20 Kansas State 52 Wyoming 17 49 075 6 December 29 1994 Copper Bowl No 22 BYU 31 Oklahoma 6 45 122 7 December 27 1995 Copper Bowl Texas Tech 55 Air Force 41 41 004 8 December 27 1996 Copper Bowl Wisconsin 38 Utah 10 42 122 9 December 27 1997 Insight com Bowl Arizona 20 New Mexico 14 49 385 10 December 26 1998 Insight com Bowl No 23 Missouri 34 West Virginia 31 36 147 11 December 31 1999 Insight com Bowl Colorado 62 No 25 Boston College 28 35 762 12 December 28 2000 Insight com Bowl Iowa State 37 Pittsburgh 29 41 813 13 December 29 2001 Insight com Bowl No 18 Syracuse 26 Kansas State 3 40 028 14 December 26 2002 Insight Bowl No 24 Pittsburgh 38 Oregon State 13 40 533 15 December 26 2003 Insight Bowl California 52 Virginia Tech 49 42 364 16 December 28 2004 Insight Bowl Oregon State 38 Notre Dame 21 45 917 17 December 27 2005 Insight Bowl Arizona State 45 Rutgers 40 43 536 18 December 29 2006 Insight Bowl Texas Tech 44 Minnesota 41 OT 48 391 19 December 31 2007 Insight Bowl Oklahoma State 49 Indiana 33 48 892 20 December 31 2008 Insight Bowl Kansas 42 Minnesota 21 49 103 21 December 31 2009 Insight Bowl Iowa State 14 Minnesota 13 45 090 22 December 28 2010 Insight Bowl Iowa 27 No 14 Missouri 24 53 453 23 December 30 2011 Insight Bowl No 19 Oklahoma 31 Iowa 14 54 247 24 December 29 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl Michigan State 17 TCU 16 44 617 25 December 28 2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl Kansas State 31 Michigan 14 53 284 26 January 2 2015 Cactus Bowl Oklahoma State 30 Washington 22 35 409 27 January 2 2016 Cactus Bowl West Virginia 43 Arizona State 42 39 321 28 December 27 2016 Cactus Bowl Baylor 31 Boise State 12 33 328 29 December 26 2017 Cactus Bowl Kansas State 35 UCLA 17 32 859 30 December 26 2018 Cheez It Bowl TCU 10 California 7 OT 33 121 31 December 27 2019 Cheez It Bowl No 24 Air Force 31 Washington State 21 34 105 December 26 2020 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Canceled insufficient number of teams available 14 32 December 28 2021 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Minnesota 18 West Virginia 6 21 220 33 December 27 2022 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Wisconsin 24 Oklahoma State 17 23 187 34 December 26 2023 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Kansas 49 UNLV 36 26 478 Source 15 Games 1 11 copper played in Tucson at Arizona Stadium Games 12 17 silver played in Phoenix at Bank One Ballpark now Chase Field Games 18 26 yellow played in Tempe at Sun Devil Stadium Games 27 present silver played in Phoenix at Chase Field formerly Bank One Ballpark MVPs editTwo MVPs are selected for each game one an offensive player the other a defensive player 16 Game Offensive MVP Defensive MVP Player Team Position Player Team Position 1989 Shane Montgomery North Carolina State QB Scott Geyer Arizona DB 1990 Mike Pawlawski California QB Robert Midgett Wyoming LB 1991 Vaughn Dunbar Indiana TB Mark Hagen Indiana LB 1992 Drew Bledsoe Washington State QB Kareem Leary Utah DB 1993 Andre Coleman Kansas State WR Kenny McEntyre Kansas State CB 1994 Jamal Willis BYU RB Broderick Simpson Oklahoma LB 1995 Zebbie Lethridge Texas Tech QB Mickey Dalton Air Force CB 1996 Ron Dayne Wisconsin RB Tarek Saleh Wisconsin LB 1997 Trung Canidate Arizona RB Jimmy Sprotte Arizona LB 1998 Marc Bulger West Virginia QB Jeff Marriott Missouri DT 1999 Cortlen Johnson Colorado RB Jashon Sykes Colorado LB 2000 Sage Rosenfels Iowa State QB Reggie Hayward Iowa State DE 2001 James Mungro Syracuse RB Clifton Smith Syracuse LB 2002 Brandon Miree Pittsburgh TB Claude Harriott Pittsburgh DL 2003 Aaron Rodgers California QB Ryan Gutierrez California FS 2004 Derek Anderson Oregon State QB Trent Bray Oregon State LB 2005 Rudy Carpenter Arizona State QB Jamar Williams Arizona State LB 2006 Graham Harrell Texas Tech QB Antonio Huffman Texas Tech CB 2007 Zac Robinson Oklahoma State QB Donovan Woods Oklahoma State S 2008 Dezmon Briscoe Kansas WR James Holt Kansas LB 2009 Alexander Robinson Iowa State RB Christopher Lyle Iowa State DE 2010 Marcus Coker Iowa RB Micah Hyde Iowa DB 2011 Blake Bell Oklahoma QB Jamell Fleming Oklahoma DB 2012 Le Veon Bell Michigan State RB William Gholston Michigan State DE 2013 Tyler Lockett Kansas State WR Dante Barnett Kansas State DB 2015 Desmond Roland Oklahoma State RB Seth Jacobs Oklahoma State LB 2016 Jan Skyler Howard West Virginia QB Shaq Petteway West Virginia LB 2016 Dec KD Cannon Baylor WR Tyrone Hunt Baylor DE 2017 Alex Delton Kansas State QB Denzel Goolsby Kansas State S 2018 Sewo Olonilua TCU RB Jaylinn Hawkins California S 2019 Kadin Remsberg Air Force RB Grant Donaldson Air Force OLB 2021 Ky Thomas Minnesota RB Tyler Nubin Minnesota S 2022 Braelon Allen Wisconsin RB Jordan Turner Wisconsin LB 2023 Jason Bean Kansas QB Kenny Logan Kansas S Source 17 18 19 Sportsmanship award editThe bowl awarded a sportsmanship award for the 2001 through January 2016 games 16 Game Player Team Position 2001 Terry Pierce Kansas State LB 2002 Derek Anderson Oregon State QB 2003 Doug Easlick Virginia Tech FB 2004 Derek Curry Notre Dame LB 2005 Ryan Neill Rutgers DE 2006 Dominic Jones Minnesota DB 2007 Jonathan Josh Sandberg Indiana OG 2008 Jack Simmons Minnesota TE 2009 D J Burris Minnesota OG 2010 Tim Barnes Missouri C 2011 Tyler Nielsen Iowa LB 2012 Tayo Fabuluje TCU OT 2013 Devin Funchess Michigan WR 2015 Andrew Hudson Washington DE 2016 Jan D J Foster Arizona State RBMost appearances editUpdated through the December 2023 edition 34 games 68 total appearances Teams with multiple appearances Rank Team Appearances Record 1 Kansas State 4 3 1 Minnesota 4 1 3 3 Oklahoma State 3 2 1 California 3 2 1 West Virginia 3 1 2 6 Arizona 2 2 0 Texas Tech 2 2 0 Iowa State 2 2 0 Wisconsin 2 2 0 Kansas 2 2 0 Air Force 2 1 1 Arizona State 2 1 1 Indiana 2 1 1 Missouri 2 1 1 Oregon State 2 1 1 Pittsburgh 2 1 1 Iowa 2 1 1 Oklahoma 2 1 1 Baylor 2 1 1 TCU 2 1 1 Washington State 2 1 1 Utah 2 0 2 Wyoming 2 0 2 nbsp Chase Field prior to the 2019 edition of the bowl As of 2023 update Cincinnati Houston Texas and UCF are the only current Big 12 schools that have not played in this bowl Seven of the current Big 12 schools have appeared multiple times Former Big 12 members Colorado and Missouri have appeared in the bowl but former Big 12 members Nebraska and Texas A amp M have not Teams with a single appearance Won 4 BYU Colorado Michigan State Syracuse Lost 11 Boise State Boston College Michigan New Mexico North Carolina State Notre Dame Rutgers UCLA UNLV Virginia Tech WashingtonAppearances by conference editUpdated through the December 2023 edition 34 games 68 total appearances Conference Record Appearances by season Games W L Win pct Won Lost Big 12 20 15 5 750 1998 1999 2000 2006 2007 2008 2009 2011 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2023 2001 2010 2012 2021 2022 Pac 12 13 7 6 538 1989 1990 1992 1997 2003 2004 2005 2002 2014 2015 2017 2018 2019 Big Ten 12 6 6 500 1991 1996 2010 2012 2021 2022 2006 2007 2008 2009 2011 2013 Big East 7 2 5 286 2001 2002 1998 1999 2000 2003 2005 WAC 7 1 6 143 1994 1990 1992 1993 1995 1996 1997 Mountain West 3 1 2 333 2019 2016 2023 Big Eight 2 1 1 500 1993 1994 SWC 2 1 1 500 1995 1991 ACC 1 0 1 000 1989 Independents 1 0 1 000 2004 Games marked with an asterisk were played in January of the following calendar year Records reflect conference affiliations at the time each game was played The Pac 12 s record includes appearances when the conference was the Pac 10 From 1989 through 2005 Pac 10 teams made eight appearances and were 7 1 Big East teams made seven appearances and were 2 5 the American Athletic Conference The American retains the conference charter following the 2013 split of the original Big East along football lines Conferences that are defunct or no longer active in FBS are marked in italics Independent appearances Notre Dame 2004 Game records editTeam Performance vs opponent Year Most points scored one team 62 Colorado vs Boston College 1999 Most points scored losing team 49 Virginia Tech vs California 2003 Most points scored both teams 101 California vs Virginia Tech 2003 Fewest points allowed 0 Indiana vs Baylor 1991 Largest margin of victory 35 Kansas State vs Wyoming 1993 Total yards 679 Arizona State vs Rutgers 2005 Rushing yards 431 Air Force vs Texas Tech 1995 Passing yards 492 Washington State vs Utah 1992 First downs 33 Arizona State vs Rutgers 2005 Fewest yards allowed 130 North Carolina State vs Arizona 1989 Fewest rushing yards allowed 8 Pittsburgh vs Oregon State 2002 Fewest passing yards allowed 16 Utah vs Wisconsin 1996 Individual Performance vs opponent Year All purpose yards 498 Rudy Carpenter Arizona State vs Rutgers 2005 Rushing yards 260 Byron Hanspard Texas Tech vs Air Force 1995 Rushing touchdowns 4 Byron Hanspard Texas Tech vs Air Force 1995 Passing yards 532 Skyler Howard West Virginia vs Arizona State 2016 Passing touchdowns 6 Jason Bean Kansas vs UNLV 2023 Receiving yards 212 Phillip Bobo Washington State vs Utah 1992 Receiving touchdowns 3 shared by Dezmon Briscoe Kansas vs MinnesotaLuke Grimm Kansas vs UNLVLawrence Arnold Kansas vs UNLV 200820232023 Tackles 20 total Jahad Woods Washington State vs Air Force 2019 Interceptions 2 most recent Cameron Oliver UNLV vs Kansas 2023 Long Plays Performance vs opponent Year Touchdown run 71 Danta Johnson Air Force vs Texas Tech 1995 Touchdown pass 87 Phillip Bobo from Drew Bledsoe Washington State vs Utah 1992 Kickoff return 60 shared by Ricardo Rhodes Missouri vs West VirginiaTroy Stoudermire Minnesota vs Kansas 19982008 Punt return 88 Ben Kelly Colorado vs Boston College 1999 Interception return 78 George White Boston College vs Colorado 1999 Punt 67 shared by Travis Brown Kansas State vs SyracuseTress Way Oklahoma vs Iowa 20012011 Field goal 53 Jaden Oberkrom TCU vs Michigan State 2012 Games marked with an asterisk were played in January of the noted calendar year Source 20 Media coverage editThe bowl has been televised by three different networks TBS 1989 1991 ESPN 1992 2005 2010 present and NFL Network 2006 2009 21 Notes edit a b Not to be confused with the later Cheez It Bowl 2020 2022 References edit 2019 Bowl Schedule collegefootballpoll com Retrieved December 13 2019 Guaranteed Rate Joins With Cactus Bowl As Title Partner For Newly Named Guaranteed Rate Bowl Retrieved October 22 2020 McMurphy Brett May 4 2015 Cactus Bowl moving to Chase Field for next three seasons ESPN com Graham Pat December 20 2020 A long grind Bowl Day marred by cancellations opt outs arklatexhomepage com Retrieved December 20 2020 New bowl game seeking sponsor TV pact The Tuscaloosa News 1988 08 13 Retrieved 2014 12 30 Insight Bowl loses its title sponsor after 15 years Sports Illustrated Associated Press 26 January 2012 Retrieved 26 January 2012 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl loses sponsorship azcentral 16 June 2014 TicketCity gets Cactus Bowl naming rights for Cactus Bowl in Tempe Phoenix Business Journal 2014 11 25 Retrieved 2014 12 30 Motel 6 inks naming rights deal for Cactus Bowl Phoenix Business Journal Retrieved 24 November 2015 CHEEZ IT JOINS CACTUS BOWL AS NEW NAMING RIGHTS PARTNER Retrieved August 20 2018 Metcalfe Jeff May 27 2020 Downtown Phoenix bowl game reverts to Cactus Bowl name azcentral com Retrieved May 27 2020 Down 31 Texas Tech rallies for biggest bowl comeback Associated Press December 29 2006 Archived from the original on 2 January 2007 Retrieved 30 December 2006 via ESPN Fitzgerald Katherine June 4 2019 Cheez It Bowl to feature Big Ten vs Big 12 matchup starting in 2020 azcentral com Retrieved December 16 2019 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Game Update Statement Retrieved December 20 2020 Cheez It Bowl PDF Bowl All Star Game Records NCAA 2020 p 11 Retrieved January 3 2021 via NCAA org a b Game History fiestabowl org Retrieved January 17 2018 Players of the Game Guaranteed Rate Bowl Official Program University Sports Publications 2023 p 57 Retrieved December 27 2023 via publogix com RateBowl December 27 2023 Congratulations to the Offensive MVP with a new GuaranteedRateBowl record of SIX passing touchdowns We applaud you jasonbean24 Tweet Retrieved December 27 2023 via Twitter RateBowl December 27 2023 1 on defense and 1 in our hearts Congratulations Kennylogan23 on being the GuaranteedRateBowl Defensive MVP Tweet Retrieved December 27 2023 via Twitter Cheez It Bowl Records fiestabowl org Retrieved December 27 2019 Kelly Doug ed 2019 20 Football Bowl Association Media Guide PDF footballbowlassociation com p 94 Retrieved January 3 2020 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guaranteed Rate Bowl amp oldid 1197855170, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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