Music City Bowl
Annual American college football postseason game
College football bowl game
The Music City Bowl is a post-season American college football bowl game certified by the NCAA that has been played in Nashville, Tennessee , since 1998 . Since 2020, it has been sponsored by TransPerfect and is officially known as the TransPerfect Music City Bowl . Previous title sponsors include American General Life & Accident (1998), HomePoint.com (1999), Gaylord Entertainment (2002–2003), both Gaylord Entertainment and Bridgestone (2004–2009), and Franklin American Mortgage Company (2010–2019). From 2014 through 2019, the bowl had tie-ins with the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), Big Ten Conference , and Southeastern Conference (SEC); for 2020 through 2025, the bowl has tie-ins with the Big Ten and SEC.
The 2020 edition, slated for December 30 between Missouri and Iowa , was cancelled on December 27 due to COVID-19 issues within Missouri's program.[ 2]
History
The first Music City Bowl was played at Vanderbilt Stadium in 1998. Beginning in 1999 , the game was moved to the just completed home stadium of the Tennessee Titans , now known as Nissan Stadium . American General Life & Accident (now a subsidiary of AIG ) sponsored the inaugural 1998 game, and the now-defunct "homepoint.com" sponsored the 1999 game. There was no sponsor in 2000 or 2001. In 2002, with title sponsorship from Nashville-based Gaylord Hotels , the game became known as the Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl . In 2003, Bridgestone became the presenting sponsor of the game, and its full title became the Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl presented by Bridgestone . Bridgestone dropped its presenting sponsorship following the 2007 game. Beginning with the 2010 game, Franklin American Mortgage served as title sponsor, with Gaylord continuing as a major sponsor of the event.[ 3] In December 2019, it was announced that TransPerfect , a New York City-based translation services company, would take over title sponsorship of the bowl for the 2020 through 2025 playings.[ 4]
Conference tie-ins
The game initially featured a matchup between representatives of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and the Big East Conference . The Big East was replaced by the Big Ten Conference in 2002. Beginning with the 2006 game, the Big Ten was replaced by the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). The ACC also took part in the 2005 game, when Virginia appeared because the SEC did not have enough bowl-eligible teams. For six seasons beginning in 2014, the Music City Bowl shared its tie in with the Gator Bowl (also known as the TaxSlayer Bowl for several playings), to match an SEC team with either an ACC or Big Ten team.[ 5] In June 2019, the Music City Bowl announced an extension to their agreement with the SEC, and an agreement for the Big Ten to provide teams for the 2020 through 2025 seasons.[ 6]
Game results
The 2009 Music City Bowl
The Music City Bowl has a history of upsets. The biggest underdog win was when Kentucky (+10) defeated Clemson 28–20 in 2006 . Other big upsets include Minnesota (+7) defeating Arkansas 29–14 in 2002 , and Virginia (+6) defeating Minnesota 34–31 in 2005 . Boston College was a four-point underdog when they defeated Georgia 20–16 in 2001 , West Virginia was a three-point underdog when they beat Ole Miss in 2000 , Syracuse was a three-point underdog when they defeated Kentucky in 1999 , and Minnesota was a one-point underdog when they beat Alabama in 2004 . In 2008 , four-point underdog Vanderbilt , making their first bowl appearance since 1982 , upset Boston College , 24th in the BCS rankings, 16–14.
All rankings are taken from the AP Poll prior to the game being played.
Date Played
Winning Team
Losing Team
Attendance[ 7]
Notes
December 29, 1998
Virginia Tech
38
Alabama
7
41,248[ a]
notes
December 29, 1999
Syracuse
20
Kentucky
13
59,221
notes
December 28, 2000
West Virginia
49
Ole Miss
38
47,119
notes
December 28, 2001
Boston College
20
No. 16 Georgia
16
46,125
notes
December 30, 2002
Minnesota
29
No. 25 Arkansas
14
39,183
notes
December 31, 2003
Auburn
28
Wisconsin
14
55,109
notes
December 31, 2004
Minnesota
20
Alabama
16
66,089
notes
December 30, 2005
Virginia
34
Minnesota
31
40,519
notes
December 29, 2006
Kentucky
28
Clemson
20
68,024
notes
December 31, 2007
Kentucky
35
Florida State
28
68,661
notes
December 31, 2008
Vanderbilt
16
Boston College
14
54,250
notes
December 27, 2009
Clemson
21
Kentucky
13
57,280
notes
December 30, 2010
North Carolina
30
Tennessee
27 (2OT)
69,143
notes
December 30, 2011
Mississippi State
23
Wake Forest
17
55,208
notes
December 31, 2012
Vanderbilt
38
NC State
24
55,801
notes
December 30, 2013
Ole Miss
25
Georgia Tech
17
52,125
notes
December 30, 2014
Notre Dame
31
No. 22 LSU
28
60,419
notes
December 30, 2015
Louisville
27
Texas A&M
21
50,478
notes
December 30, 2016
Tennessee
38
No. 24 Nebraska
24
68,496
notes
December 29, 2017
No. 20 Northwestern
24
Kentucky
23
48,675
notes
December 28, 2018
Auburn
63
Purdue
14
59,024
notes
December 30, 2019
Louisville
38
Mississippi State
28
46,850
notes
December 30, 2020
Canceled due to COVID-19 issues [ b]
—
[ 8]
December 30, 2021
Purdue
48
Tennessee
45 (OT)
69,489
notes
December 31, 2022
Iowa
21
Kentucky
0
42,312
notes
December 30, 2023
Maryland
31
Auburn
13
50,088
notes
Source:[ 9]
Most Valuable Players
2009 MVP C. J. Spiller
Date played
MVP
Team
Position
December 29, 1998
Corey Moore
Virginia Tech
DE
December 29, 1999
James Mungro
Syracuse
RB
December 29, 2000
Brad Lewis
West Virginia
QB
December 28, 2001
William Green
Boston College
RB
December 30, 2002
Dan Nystrom
Minnesota
K
December 31, 2003
Jason Campbell
Auburn
QB
December 31, 2004
Marion Barber
Minnesota
RB
December 30, 2005
Marques Hagans
Virginia
QB
December 29, 2006
Andre' Woodson
Kentucky
QB
December 31, 2007
Andre' Woodson
Kentucky
QB
December 31, 2008
Brett Upson
Vanderbilt
P
December 27, 2009
C. J. Spiller
Clemson
RB
December 30, 2010
Shaun Draughn
North Carolina
RB
December 30, 2011
Vick Ballard
Mississippi State
RB
December 31, 2012
Zac Stacy
Vanderbilt
RB
December 30, 2013
Bo Wallace
Ole Miss
QB
December 30, 2014
Malik Zaire
Notre Dame
QB
December 30, 2015
Lamar Jackson
Louisville
QB
December 30, 2016
Joshua Dobbs
Tennessee
QB
December 29, 2017
Justin Jackson
Northwestern
RB
December 28, 2018
Jarrett Stidham
Auburn
QB
December 30, 2019
Malik Cunningham
Louisville
QB
December 30, 2021
Broc Thompson
Purdue
WR
December 31, 2022
Cooper DeJean
Iowa
DB
December 30, 2023
Billy Edwards Jr. [ 10]
Maryland
QB
Most appearances
Updated through the December 2023 edition (25 games, 50 total appearances).
Teams with multiple appearances
Teams with a single appearance
Won (9): Iowa , Maryland , North Carolina , Northwestern , Notre Dame , Syracuse , Virginia , Virginia Tech , West Virginia
Lost (10): Arkansas , Florida State , Georgia , Georgia Tech , LSU , NC State , Nebraska , Texas A&M , Wake Forest , Wisconsin
Appearances by conference
Updated through the December 2023 edition (25 games, 50 total appearances).
Conference
Record
Appearances by season
Games
W
L
Win pct.
Won
Lost
SEC
24
9
15
.375
2003, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2018
1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2009, 2010, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023
ACC
11
5
6
.455
2005, 2009, 2010, 2015, 2019
2006, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013
Big Ten
10
6
4
.600
2002, 2004, 2017, 2021, 2022, 2023
2003, 2005, 2016, 2018
Big East
4
4
0
1.000
1998, 1999, 2000, 2001
Independents
1
1
0
1.000
2014
Game records
The most lopsided game was Auburn's 63–14 win over Purdue in the 2018 edition. Auburn's 63 points (56 in the first half alone, a record for a half in any bowl game) is the bowl's high score, while Kentucky's 0 points in 2022 is the low score. The closest game was Vanderbilt's 16–14 win over Boston College in 2008. This also marked the lowest point total in the bowl's history. The 87 point total in the 2000 edition, when West Virginia defeated Ole Miss, 49–38, is a high for the bowl. A new attendance record for the bowl of 69,489 was set by the 2021 game, surpassing the prior record of 69,143 that had been set by the 2010 game.
Team
Record, Team vs. Opponent
Year
Most points scored (one team)
63 , Auburn vs. Purdue
2018
Most points scored (losing team)
45 , Tennessee vs. Purdue
2021
Most points scored (both teams)
93 , Purdue (48) vs. Tennessee (45)
2021
Fewest points allowed
0 , Iowa (21) v. Kentucky (0)
2022
Largest margin of victory
49 , Auburn (63) vs. Purdue (14)
2018
Total yards
666 , Tennessee vs. Purdue
2021
Rushing yards
333 , Northwestern vs. Kentucky
2017
Passing yards
534 , Purdue vs. Tennessee
2021
First downs
31 , Tennessee vs. Purdue
2021
Fewest yards
185 , Kentucky vs. Iowa
2022
Fewest rushing yards
21 , Alabama vs. Minnesota
2004
Fewest passing yards
71 , Virginia Tech vs. Alabama
1998
Individual
Record, Player, Team vs. Opponent
Year
All-purpose yards
284 , Tobias Palmer (NC State)
2012
Touchdowns (all-purpose)
3 , shared by:Joshua Dobbs (Tennessee)Darius Slayton (Auburn)Cedric Tillman (Tennessee)
2016 2018 2021
Rushing yards
226 , Lamar Jackson (Louisville)
2015
Rushing touchdowns
3 , Joshua Dobbs (Tennessee)
2016
Passing yards
534 , Aidan O'Connell (Purdue)
2021
Passing touchdowns
5 , shared by: Brad Lewis (West Virginia)Jarrett Stidham (Auburn)Hendon Hooker (Tennessee)Aidan O'Connell (Purdue)
2000 2018 2021 2021
Receptions
11 , shared by:Josh Reynolds (Texas A&M)Rondale Moore (Purdue)
2015 2018
Receiving yards
217 , Broc Thompson (Purdue)
2021
Receiving touchdowns
3 , shared by:Darius Slayton (Auburn) Cedric Tillman (Tennessee)
2018 2021
Tackles
20 , Jeremy Banks (Tennessee)
2021
Sacks
3.0 , Devonte Fields (Louisville)
2015
Interceptions
2 , Michael Lehan (Minnesota)
2002
Long Plays
Record, Team vs. Opponent
Year
Touchdown run
89 yds. , Leonard Fournette (LSU)
2014
Touchdown pass
75 yds. , shared by:Anthony Jennings to John Diarse (LSU)Aidan O'Connell to Broc Thompson (Purdue)
2014 2021
Kickoff return
100 yds. , Leonard Fournette (LSU)
2014
Punt return
47 yds. , Rafael Little (Kentucky)
2006
Interception return
65 yds. , Trey Wilson (Vanderbilt)
2012
Fumble return
31 yds. , Khane Pass (Louisville)
2019
Punt
68 yds. , Tyler Campbell (Ole Miss)
2013
Field goal
49 yds. , Jack Howes (Maryland)
2023
Miscellaneous
Record, Team vs. Opponent
Year
Bowl Attendance
69,489, Purdue vs. Tennessee
2021
The bowl has been televised by ESPN since its inception.
Notes
References
^ "2019 Bowl Schedule" . collegefootballpoll.com . Retrieved December 13, 2019 .
^ Cobb, David (December 27, 2020). "2020 Music City Bowl canceled as COVID-19 outbreak forces Missouri to pull out of game vs. Iowa" . CBS Sports . Retrieved December 29, 2020 .
^ "Franklin American Mortgage To Title Music City Bowl In 2010" .
^ Organ, Mike (December 18, 2019). "TransPerfect becomes title sponsor of the Music City Bowl" . tennessean.com . Retrieved December 19, 2019 .
^ "Selection Process" . musiccitybowl.com . Retrieved December 30, 2019 .
^ "Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl Announces New 2020-2025 Conference Agreements" . musiccitybowl.com (Press release). June 4, 2019. Retrieved December 30, 2019 .
^ "Bowl Recaps" . musiccitybowl.com . 2017. Retrieved December 29, 2017 .
^ "2020 TransPerfect Music City Bowl Cancelled" . Music City Bowl . 2020-12-27. Retrieved 2024-11-18 .
^ "Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl" (PDF) . Bowl/All Star Game Records . NCAA. 2020. p. 13. Retrieved January 3, 2021 – via NCAA.org.
^ @MDSportsblog (December 30, 2023). "Billy Edwards Jr. is the MVP of the Music City Bowl" (Tweet ). Retrieved December 30, 2023 – via Twitter .
External links
History & conference tie-ins Games