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Citrus Bowl
Annual American college football postseason game
Annual American college football postseason game
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Citrus Bowl |
| full_name | Cheez-It Citrus Bowl |
| logo | Citrus Bowl Logo.png |
| logo_size | 210px |
| stadium | Camping World Stadium |
| location | Orlando, Florida |
| temporary_venue | Florida Field, Gainesville, Florida (1973) |
| years | 1947–present |
| website | |
| previous_tie-ins | {{ubl |
| conference_tie-ins | Big Ten, SEC |
| payout | 8,224,578 (2019 season) |
| sponsors | {{ubl |
| former_names | {{ubl |
| prev_matchup_year | 2025 |
| prev_matchup_season | 2025 |
| prev_matchup_teams | Texas vs. Michigan |
| prev_matchup_score | Texas 41–27 |
| next_matchup_year |
| previous_tie-ins = {{ubl |MAC (1968–1975) |SoCon (1968–1972) |ACC (1987–1991) | conference_tie-ins = Big Ten, SEC |Florida Citrus Growers Association (1983–2002) |CompUSA (1994–1999) |Ourhouse.com (2000) |Capital One (2001–2014) |Buffalo Wild Wings (2015–2017) |Overton's (2018) |Vrbo (2019–2022) |Kellogg's/Kellanova (2023–present) |through the Cheez-It brand |Tangerine Bowl (1947–1982) |Florida Citrus Bowl (1983–1993) |CompUSA Florida Citrus Bowl (1994–1999) |Ourhouse.com Florida Citrus Bowl (2000) |Capital One Florida Citrus Bowl (2001–2002) |Capital One Bowl (2003–2014) |Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl (2015–2017) |Citrus Bowl presented by Overton's (2018) |Vrbo Citrus Bowl (2019–2021)
The Citrus Bowl is an annual college football bowl game played at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida. The bowl is operated by Florida Citrus Sports, a non-profit group that also organizes the Pop-Tarts Bowl and Florida Classic. For sponsorship reasons, the game is officially known as the Cheez-It Citrus Bowl, named after the Cheez-It brand of cheese crackers produced by Kellanova, a subsidiary of Mars Inc.
Since the mid-1980s, the Citrus Bowl has drawn many high-ranked teams and is typically played at 1 p.m. EST on New Year's Day and broadcast nationally on ABC. When January 1 is a Sunday, the game has been played on January 2 or December 31, to avoid conflicting with the National Football League (NFL) schedule. , it had the largest payout of all bowls other than those that were part of the College Football Playoff (CFP), at $8.55 million per team. In nearly every year since 1985, the game has featured two teams ranked in the AP poll.
History
Naming and sponsorship
The game was first played as the Tangerine Bowl in 1947 before being renamed as the Florida Citrus Bowl in 1983. Capital One was the game's title sponsor between 2001 and 2014; the game was named the Capital One Bowl from 2003 to 2014. Since the 2015 edition, the game has been staged as the Citrus Bowl.
Sponsorship of the bowl has include CompUSA (1994–1999), Ourhouse.com (2000), Buffalo Wild Wings (2015–2017), Overton's (2018), and Vrbo (2019–2022). In November 2022, Kellogg's moved bowl sponsorship through its Cheez-It brand of cheese crackers from another bowl game played at Camping World Stadium to the Citrus Bowl. Since the January 2023 edition, the game has been officially named the Cheez-It Citrus Bowl. Ownership of the Cheez-It brand subsequently passed to Kellanova, formed in October 2023, which was acquired in late 2025 by Mars Inc.
Tangerine Bowl (1947–1982)
The game, which began play in 1947, is one of the oldest bowls outside of the New Year's Six, along with the Gator Bowl and Sun Bowl. By 1952, the game was dubbed the "Little Bowl with the Big Heart", because all the proceeds from the game went to charity.
From 1964 through 1967, it was one of the four regional finals in the College Division (which became Division II and Division III in 1973), along with the Pecan, Grantland Rice, and Camellia bowls. In this capacity, the Tangerine Bowl sought to match the two best non-major teams in a 17-state Eastern Region stretching from New England to Florida.
In 1968, the Boardwalk Bowl in Atlantic City took over as the College Division Eastern regional final, and the Tangerine Bowl became a major college bowl game, featuring teams from the University Division (which became Division I in 1973).
The Tangerine Bowl name was used through the December 1982 game. The same name was re-used later, but for a bowl game with a different lineage.
Florida Citrus Bowl (1983–2002)
In March 1983, the name of the game was changed from Tangerine Bowl to Florida Citrus Bowl, via a $1.25 million agreement with the Florida Citrus Commission; the bowl's organizing committee also changed its name from Tangerine Sports Association to Florida Citrus Sports Association. A month earlier, organizers had rejected a proposal to rename the game to Grapefruit Bowl.
In 1986, it was one of the bowl games considered for the site of the "winner take all" national championship game between Penn State and Miami, before the Fiesta Bowl was eventually chosen.
The January 1991 game had national championship implications for the 1990 season; Georgia Tech won the Florida Citrus Bowl, finished 11–0–1, and was voted the 1990 UPI national champion. That occurrence marks a rare example of a non-New Year's Six bowl game featuring a team later named national champion.
The January 1, 1998, game, which featured nearby Florida beating Penn State, holds the game's attendance record at 72,940. The Gators returned to the bowl two years later, losing on a field goal on the final play to Michigan State.
Capital One Bowl (2003–2014)
Starting with the January 2003 edition, the bowl was renamed as the Capital One Bowl, with title sponsorship by Capital One.
In 2004, the bowl bid to become the fifth BCS game, but was not chosen, primarily due to the stadium's aging condition. In July 2007, the Orange County Commissioners voted in favor of spending $1.1 billion to build the Amway Center for the Orlando Magic, the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, and to upgrade the Citrus Bowl stadium.
Following the January 2014 game, Capital One ceased its sponsorship of the bowl, and moved its sponsorship to the Orange Bowl.
Citrus Bowl (2015–present)
Buffalo Wild Wings was announced as the new sponsor of the bowl game, which was renamed as the Citrus Bowl for the January 2015 edition. Buffalo Wild Wings had previously been the title sponsor of what had been the Insight Bowl. In the offseason of 2017, Buffalo Wild Wings ceased sponsoring the bowl. Following sponsorship by Overton's (2018) and Vrbo (2019–2022), Kellogg's became the title sponsor in November 2022, via its Cheez-It brand.
The 2016 season game was played on December 31, the first time in 30 years that the game was not played on January 1 or 2.
Conference tie-ins
From 1968 through 1975, the bowl featured the Mid-American Conference (MAC) champion against an opponent from the Southern Conference (1968–1971), the Southeastern Conference (SEC) (1973–1974), or an at-large opponent (1972, 1975). MAC teams were 6–2 during those games.
As the major football conferences relaxed restrictions on post-season play in the mid-1970s, the bowl went to a matchup between two at-large teams from major conferences, with one school typically (but not always) from the South.
From the 1987 season through the 1991 season, the bowl featured the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) champion against an at-large opponent. ACC teams were 3–2 during those games, including Georgia Tech's win vs. Nebraska following the 1990 season to clinch a share of the national championship.
From the 1992 season through the 2015 season, the bowl featured an SEC vs. Big Ten matchup – the SEC won 14 of those games, while the Big Ten won 10.
During the 1990s, the second-place finisher in the SEC typically went to this bowl. Florida coach Steve Spurrier, speaking to the fact that Tennessee occupied that spot three of four years as Florida finished first, famously quipped "You can't spell 'Citrus' without U-T!"
Currently, the bowl has tie-ins with the SEC and the Big Ten, holding the first selection after the CFP selection process for both conferences. Since the formation of the CFP, the Citrus Bowl has a chance to occasionally host an ACC team, replacing the Big Ten representative. This will happen the years in which the Orange Bowl is not a CFP semi-final game and selects a Big Ten team to match against their ACC team. This happened following the 2016 season, as the Orange Bowl was not a CFP semi-final and invited Michigan of the Big Ten to face Florida State of the ACC; the Citrus Bowl then invited Louisville of the ACC to face LSU of the SEC. The next year, Wisconsin was invited to the Orange Bowl, so the SEC's LSU was pitted against Notre Dame, who received an invite in lieu of an ACC team.
Racial integration
The undefeated 1955 Hillsdale College football team refused an invitation to the January 1956 edition of the bowl when bowl officials insisted that Hillsdale's four African-American players would not be allowed to play in the game.
The University at Buffalo's first bowl bid was to the December 1958 edition. The Tangerine Bowl Commission hoped that the Orlando High School Athletic Association (OHSAA), which operated the stadium, would waive its rule that prohibited integrated sporting events. When it refused, the team unanimously voted to skip the bowl because its two black players (halfback Willie Evans and end Mike Wilson) would not have been allowed on the field. Buffalo did not become bowl-eligible for another 50 years. During the 2008 season, when the Bulls were on the verge of bowl eligibility, the 1958 team was profiled on ESPN's Outside the Lines. The 2008 team went on to win the Mid-American Conference title, and played in the International Bowl.
Eight years later, OHSAA's rule had been changed, and Morgan State of Baltimore, under head coach Earl Banks, became the first historically black college to play in (and win) a Tangerine Bowl.
Gainesville
In early 1973, construction improvements were planned for the then 17,000-seat Tangerine Bowl stadium to expand to over 51,000 seats. In early summer 1973, however, construction was stalled due to legal concerns, and the improvements were delayed. Late in the 1973 season, Tangerine Bowl President Will Gieger and other officials planned to invite the Miami Redskins and the East Carolina Pirates to Orlando for the game. On November 19, 1973, East Carolina withdrew from bowl consideration when no invitation arrived before Thanksgiving break, and the bowl was left with one at-large bid. In an unexpected and unprecedented move, game officials decided to invite the Florida Gators, and move the game to Florida Field in Gainesville, the Gators' home stadium. The larger stadium was needed to accommodate the large crowd expected. The move required special permission from the NCAA, and special accommodations were made. Both teams were headquartered in Orlando for the week, and spent most of their time there, including practices, and were bused up to Gainesville.
The participants were greeted with an unexpected event, a near-record low temperature of 25 F. Despite the home-field advantage, in the game nicknamed the "Transplant Bowl", Miami, who found the cold much more to its liking, defeated the Gators, 16–7. One of the players on the victorious Redskins squad was future Gators coach Ron Zook.
The one-time moving of the game, and the fears of a permanent relocation, rejuvenated the stalled stadium renovations in Orlando. The game returned to Orlando for 1974, and within a couple of years, the expansion project was complete.
Mascot Challenge
The "Capital One Mascot Challenge" (formerly known as the "Capital One National Mascot of the Year") was a contest where fans voted for their favorite college mascot. The contest began in 2002 with the winner being named during the halftime; the winning school was awarded $20,000 towards their mascot program. With the ending of Capital One's sponsorship of the Citrus Bowl, the challenge was moved in 2014 to the Orange Bowl with Capital One's sponsorship of that game. The 2014 season was also the last time that the contest was held.
| List of Capital One Mascot Challenge winners | Season | Mascot | University | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Montana | ||||||||||||||||
| University of South Carolina | ||||||||||||||||
| University of Montana | ||||||||||||||||
| Herbie Husker | University of Nebraska–Lincoln | |||||||||||||||
| Butch T. Cougar | Washington State University | |||||||||||||||
| University of Akron | ||||||||||||||||
| Cy the Cardinal | Iowa State University | |||||||||||||||
| University of Cincinnati | ||||||||||||||||
| Old Dominion University | ||||||||||||||||
| Wolfie Jr. | University of Nevada, Reno | |||||||||||||||
| Raider Red | Texas Tech University | |||||||||||||||
| Rocky the Bull | University of South Florida | |||||||||||||||
| Aubie | Auburn University |
Game results
Rankings are based on the AP poll prior to the game being played. Italics denote a tie game.
This table uses *** AP RANKINGS *** from 1960s to the present Please do not insert any other rankings (CFP didn't exist until the 2014 season)
Source:
MVPs
Multiple players were recognized in some games – detail, where known, is denoted with B (outstanding back), L (outstanding lineman), O (outstanding offensive player), D (outstanding defensive player), or M (overall MVP) per contemporary newspaper reports.
| Game | MVP(s) | Team | Pos. | Type | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan. 1949 | Dale McDaniel | Murray State | HB | ||
| Ted Scown | Sul Ross State | HB | |||
| Jan. 1950 | Don Henigin | St. Vincent | FB | ||
| Chick Davis | Emory & Henry | QB | |||
| Jan. 1951 | Pete Anania | Morris Harvey | QB | ||
| Charles Hubbard | E | ||||
| Jan. 1952 | Bill Johnson | Stetson | QB | ||
| Dave Laude | E | ||||
| Jan. 1953 | Marvin Brown | East Texas State | HB | ||
| Jan. 1954 | Bobby Spann | Arkansas State | QB | ||
| Jan. 1955 | Bill Englehardt | Omaha | HB | ||
| Jan. 1956 | Barry Drexler | Juniata | E | ||
| Jan. 1957 | Ron Mills | West Texas State | HB | ||
| Jan. 1958 | Norman Roberts | East Texas State | E | ||
| Dec. 1958 | Sam McCord | East Texas State | QB | ||
| Jan. 1960 | Bob Waters | Presbyterian | QB | ||
| Dec. 1960 | Jerry Nettles | Citadel | QB | ||
| Dec. 1961 | Ralph Stone | Lamar | HB | ||
| Dec. 1962 | Billy Roland | Houston | QB | ||
| Dec. 1963 | Sharon Miller | Western Kentucky | QB | ||
| Dec. 1964 | Bill Cline | East Carolina | TB | ||
| Dec. 1965 | Dave Alexander | East Carolina | FB | ||
| Dec. 1966 | Willie Lanier | Morgan State | LB | ||
| Dec. 1967 | Errol Hook | Tennessee–Martin | QB | O | |
| Gordon Lambert | Tennessee–Martin | DE | D | ||
| Dec. 1968 | Buster O'Brien | Richmond | QB | B | |
| Walker Gillette | Richmond | SE | L | ||
| Dec. 1969 | Chuck Ealey | Toledo | QB | B | |
| Dan Crockett | Toledo | WB | L | ||
| Dec. 1970 | Chuck Ealey | Toledo | QB | O | |
| Vince Hubler | William & Mary | LB | D | ||
| Dec. 1971 | Chuck Ealey | Toledo | QB | B | |
| Mel Long | Toledo | DT | L | ||
| Dec. 1972 | Freddie Solomon | Tampa | QB | B | |
| Jack Lambert | Kent State | LB | L | ||
| Dec. 1973 | Chuck Varner | Miami (OH) | FB | B | |
| Brad Cousino | Miami (OH) | MG | L | ||
| Dec. 1974 | Sherman Smith | Miami (OH) | QB | B | |
| Brad Cousino | Miami (OH) | MG | L | ||
| John Roudabush | Miami (OH) | LB | |||
| Dec. 1975 | Rob Carpenter | Miami (OH) | TB | O | |
| Jeff Kelly | Miami (OH) | MG | D | ||
| Dec. 1976 | Terry Miller | Oklahoma State | HB | M, O | |
| Phillip Dokes | Oklahoma State | DT | D | ||
| Dec. 1977 | Jimmy Jordan | Florida State | QB | M, O | |
| Willie Jones | Florida State | LB | D | ||
| Dec. 1978 | Ted Brown | North Carolina State | RB | M | |
| Nathan Ritter | North Carolina State | K | O | ||
| John Stanton | North Carolina State | MG | D | ||
| Dec. 1979 | David Woodley | LSU | QB | M | |
| Jerry Murphree | LSU | RB | O | ||
| Benjy Thibodeaux | LSU | DT | D |
| Game | MVP(s) | Team | Pos. | Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dec. 1980 | Cris Collinsworth | Florida | WR | M |
| Charlie Wysocki | Florida | RB | O | |
| David Galloway | Florida | DT | D | |
| Dec. 1981 | Jeff Gaylord | Missouri | LB | |
| Dec. 1982 | Randy Campbell | Auburn | QB | |
| Dec. 1983 | Johnnie Jones | Tennessee | RB | |
| Dec. 1984 | James Jackson | Georgia | QB | |
| Dec. 1985 | Larry Kolic | Ohio State | LB | |
| Jan. 1987 | Aundray Bruce | Auburn | LB | |
| Jan. 1988 | Rodney Williams | Clemson | QB | |
| Jan. 1989 | Terry Allen | Clemson | RB | |
| Jan. 1990 | Jeff George | Illinois | QB | |
| Jan. 1991 | Shawn Jones | Georgia Tech | QB | |
| Jan. 1992 | Mike Pawlawski | California | QB | |
| Jan. 1993 | Garrison Hearst | Georgia | RB | |
| Jan. 1994 | Bobby Engram | Penn State | WR | |
| Jan. 1995 | Sherman Williams | Alabama | RB | |
| Jan. 1996 | Jay Graham | Tennessee | RB | |
| Jan. 1997 | Peyton Manning | Tennessee | QB | |
| Jan. 1998 | Fred Taylor | Florida | RB | |
| Jan. 1999 | Anthony Thomas | Michigan | RB | |
| Jan. 2000 | Plaxico Burress | Michigan State | WR | |
| Jan. 2001 | Anthony Thomas | Michigan | RB | |
| Jan. 2002 | Casey Clausen | Tennessee | QB | |
| Jan. 2003 | Ronnie Brown | Auburn | RB | |
| Jan. 2004 | David Greene | Georgia | QB | |
| Jan. 2005 | Drew Tate | Iowa | QB | |
| Jan. 2006 | Brian Calhoun | Wisconsin | RB | |
| Jan. 2007 | John Stocco | Wisconsin | QB | |
| Jan. 2008 | Chad Henne | Michigan | QB | |
| Jan. 2009 | Matthew Stafford | Georgia | QB | |
| Jan. 2010 | Daryll Clark | Penn State | QB | |
| Jan. 2011 | Courtney Upshaw | Alabama | LB | |
| Jan. 2012 | Alshon Jeffery | South Carolina | WR | |
| Jan. 2013 | Aaron Murray | Georgia | QB | |
| Jan. 2014 | Connor Shaw | South Carolina | QB | |
| Jan. 2015 | Markus Golden | Missouri | DE | |
| Jan. 2016 | Jake Rudock | Michigan | QB | |
| Dec. 2016 | Derrius Guice | LSU | RB | |
| Jan. 2018 | Miles Boykin | Notre Dame | WR | |
| Jan. 2019 | Benny Snell | Kentucky | RB | |
| Jan. 2020 | Jerry Jeudy | Alabama | WR | |
| Jan. 2021 | Peyton Ramsey | Northwestern | QB | |
| Jan. 2022 | Wan'Dale Robinson | Kentucky | WR | |
| Jan. 2023 | Malik Nabers | LSU | WR | |
| Jan. 2024 | Nico Iamaleava | Tennessee | QB | |
| Dec. 2024 | Josh McCray | Illinois | RB | |
| Dec. 2025 | Arch Manning | Texas | QB |
Source:
Three players have been recognized in multiple games; Chuck Ealey of Toledo (1969, 1970, 1971), Brad Cousino of Miami (OH) (1973, 1974), and Anthony Thomas of Michigan (1999, 2001).
Most appearances
Note: this section reflects games played since 1968, when the bowl started hosting major college teams.
Tennessee has the most wins by a single team with 5. Florida and Penn State have the most losses by a single team with 4.
Updated through the December 2025 edition (58 games, 116 total appearances).
;Teams with multiple appearances
| Rank | Team | Appearances | Record | Win pct. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Michigan | 7 | 4–3 | |
| T2 | Tennessee | 6 | 5–1 | |
| T2 | Georgia | 6 | 4–1–1 | |
| T2 | Florida | 6 | 2–4 | |
| T2 | Penn State | 6 | 2–4 | |
| T2 | Auburn | 6 | 3–3 | |
| T2 | LSU | 6 | 3–3 | |
| T8 | South Carolina | 4 | 2–2 | |
| T8 | Ohio State | 4 | 1–3 | |
| T10 | Alabama | 3 | 3–0 | |
| T10 | Miami (OH) | 3 | 3–0 | |
| T10 | Toledo | 3 | 3–0 | |
| T10 | Clemson | 3 | 2–1 | |
| T10 | Wisconsin | 3 | 2–1 | |
| T10 | Iowa | 3 | 1–2 | |
| T10 | Michigan State | 3 | 1–2 | |
| T10 | Nebraska | 3 | 0–3 |
| Rank | Team | Appearances | Record | Win pct. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T18 | Missouri | 2 | 2–0 | |
| T18 | Kentucky | 2 | 2–0 | |
| T18 | Illinois | 2 | 2–0 | |
| T18 | Northwestern | 2 | 1–1 | |
| T18 | Richmond | 2 | 1–1 | |
| T18 | Florida State | 2 | 0–1–1 | |
| T18 | Purdue | 2 | 0–2 | |
| T18 | Arkansas | 2 | 0–2 | |
| T18 | BYU | 2 | 0–2 | |
| T18 | Maryland | 2 | 0–2 |
;Teams with a single appearance Won (7): California, Georgia Tech, NC State, Notre Dame, Oklahoma State, Tampa, Texas Lost (14): Boston College, Davidson, Kent State, Louisville, Minnesota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pittsburgh, Southern Miss, Texas Tech, USC, Virginia, Wake Forest, William & Mary
Appearances by conference
Note: this table reflects games played since 1968, when the bowl started hosting major college teams.
Updated through the December 2025 edition (58 games, 116 total appearances).
| Conference | Record | Appearances by season | Games | W | L | T | Win pct. | Won | Lost | Tied |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEC | 42 | 1979, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1986, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2025 | 1973, 1974, 1993, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2015, 2017, 2020, 2024 | 1984 | ||||||
| Big Ten | 34 | 1985, 1989, 1993, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2015, 2020, 2024 | 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023*, 2025 | |||||||
| ACC | 10 | 1978, 1987, 1988, 1990* | 1979, 1980, 1983, 1989, 1991, 2016 | |||||||
| Independents | 9 | 1972, 1977, 2017* | 1975, 1978, 1981, 1982, 1987* | 1984 | ||||||
| MAC | 8 | 1969, 1970, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1975 | 1968, 1972 | |||||||
| Big Eight | 4 | 1976, 1981 | 1988, 1990 | |||||||
| SoCon | 4 | 1968 | 1969, 1970, 1971 | |||||||
| Pac-10 | 2 | 1991* | 1986* | |||||||
| WAC | 2 | 1976, 1985 | ||||||||
| SWC | 1 | 1977 |
- Games marked with an asterisk (*) were played in January of the following calendar year.
- Records are based on a team's conference affiliation at the time the game was played; for example, Penn State has appeared both as a Big Ten team and as an Independent team.
- Conferences that are defunct or not currently active in FBS are marked in italics.
- Independent appearances: Boston College (1982), Florida State (1977, 1984), Notre Dame (2017*), Penn State (1987*), Pittsburgh (1978), South Carolina (1975), Southern Miss (1981), and Tampa (1972).
Game records
| Team | Performance vs. Opponent | Year | Individual | Record, Player, Team | Year | Long Plays | Record, Player, Team | Year | Miscellaneous | Record, Team vs. Team | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Most points scored (one team) | 63, LSU vs. Purdue | 2023 | |||||||||
| Most points scored (both teams) | 91, Richmond (49) vs. Ohio (42) | 1968 | |||||||||
| Most points scored (losing team) | 42, Ohio vs. Richmond | 1968 | |||||||||
| Fewest points scored (winning team) | 7, most recently: | ||||||||||
| Omaha (7) vs. Eastern Kentucky (6) | |||||||||||
| 1955 | |||||||||||
| Fewest points scored (both teams) | 7, Catawba (7) vs. Marshall (0) | 1948 | |||||||||
| Fewest points allowed | 0, most recently: | ||||||||||
| Tennessee (35) vs. Iowa (0) | |||||||||||
| 2024 | |||||||||||
| Largest margin of victory | 56, LSU (63) vs. Purdue (7) | 2023 | |||||||||
| Total yards | 594, LSU vs. Purdue | 2023 | |||||||||
| Rushing yards | 375, Oklahoma State vs. BYU | 1976 | |||||||||
| Passing yards | 455, Florida State vs. Texas Tech | 1977 | |||||||||
| First downs | 32, Richmond vs. Ohio | 1968 | |||||||||
| Fewest yards allowed | |||||||||||
| Fewest rushing yards allowed | |||||||||||
| Fewest passing yards allowed | |||||||||||
| All-purpose yards | |||||||||||
| Touchdowns (overall) | |||||||||||
| Rushing yards | 234, Fred Taylor (Florida) | 1998 | |||||||||
| Rushing touchdowns | 4, Terry Miller (Oklahoma State) | 1976 | |||||||||
| Passing yards | 447, Buster O'Brien (Richmond) | 1968 | |||||||||
| Passing touchdowns | 5, Aaron Murray (Georgia) | 2013 | |||||||||
| Receiving yards | 242, Walker Gillette (Richmond) | 1968 | |||||||||
| Receiving touchdowns | 3, shared by: | ||||||||||
| Plaxico Burress (Michigan State) | |||||||||||
| Travis Taylor (Florida) | |||||||||||
| Todd Snyder (Ohio) | |||||||||||
| 2000 | |||||||||||
| 2000 | |||||||||||
| 1968 | |||||||||||
| Tackles | 17, shared by: | ||||||||||
| Te'von Coney (Notre Dame) | |||||||||||
| Eric Wilson (Maryland) | |||||||||||
| 2018 | |||||||||||
| 1983 | |||||||||||
| Sacks | |||||||||||
| Interceptions | 2, most recently: | ||||||||||
| Ty'Anthony Smith (Texas) | 2025 | ||||||||||
| Touchdown run | 78 yds., Russell Hansbrough (Missouri) | 2015 | |||||||||
| Touchdown pass | 87 yds., Aaron Murray to Chris Conley (Georgia) | 2013 | |||||||||
| Kickoff return | 102 yds., Dave Lowert (BYU) | 1976 | |||||||||
| Punt return | 78 yds., Renard Harmon (Kent State) | 1972 | |||||||||
| Interception return | 99 yds., Quad Wilson (LSU) | 2023 | |||||||||
| Fumble return | |||||||||||
| Punt | 71 yds., shared by: | ||||||||||
| Blake Gillikin (Penn State) | |||||||||||
| Jay Jones (Richmond) | |||||||||||
| 2019 | |||||||||||
| 1971 | |||||||||||
| Field goal | 57 yds., Quinn Nordin (Michigan) | 2020 | |||||||||
| Bowl attendance | 73,328, Georgia Tech vs. Nebraska | 1991 |
Source:
Media coverage
The bowl has been broadcast by Mizlou (1976–1983), NBC (1984–1985), and ABC since then, with the exception of ESPN for the 2011 and 2012 editions. Broadcast information for earlier editions of the bowl is lacking.
Notes
References
Additional sources
- Orlando Sentinel-Star (November 20, 1973); Various articles- Accessed via microfilm 01-03-2007.
References
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- "Cheez-It Signs on as Title Sponsor of Citrus Bowl".
- "Cheez-It Signs on as Title Sponsor of Citrus Bowl".
- (2023-10-02). "Kellogg Company splits business with launch of Kellanova to house global snacking brands".
- (December 8, 2025). "Mars Wins Unconditional EU Nod for $36 Billion Kellanova Deal".
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- Repchak, Matt. (21 October 2014). "Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl begins new era for Orlando's New Year's Day game". Florida Citrus Sports.
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- Fuhrmeister, Chris. (October 18, 2013). "The 14 best Steve Spurrier quotes of now and then".
- Whaley, Anson. (December 4, 2016). "Sorting out the ACC Bowl slotting mess, Pitt missed good chance to slide into elite bowl game".
- "1955 Football Team".
- Cramer, Dick. (December 2, 1955). "Better Kind Of Glory". [[The Michigan Daily]].
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- Schmuck, Peter. (December 25, 2015). "1966 Morgan State bowl team that broke barriers to be honored". [[The Baltimore Sun]].
- (November 20, 1973). "Pirates Nix Any Bowl Invitations". [[Times-News (Burlington, North Carolina).
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- (January 1, 2015). "Auburn Tigers' mascot Aubie wins Capital One Mascot Challenge 2014".
- (2020). "VRBO Citrus Bowl". NCAA.
- Huett, Wes. (December 31, 2024). "Citrus Bowl MVP: Illinois running back Josh McCray player of the game".
- (January 1, 2021). "Game Records". Florida Citrus Sports.
- Fappiano, Dan. (January 2, 2023). "LSU sets Citrus Bowl record with insane 63-point outburst vs. Purdue".
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