Cheez-It Bowl


The Cheez-It Bowl is an annual college football bowl game that is played in Orlando, Florida, at Camping World Stadium. The bowl is operated by Florida Citrus Sports, a non-profit group which also organizes the Citrus Bowl and the Florida Classic. It was first played in 1990 in Miami Gardens, Florida, before moving to Orlando in 2001. Originally commissioned as the Sunshine Classic, it has undergone several name changes due to changes in sponsorship, which have included Blockbuster, Carquest, MicronPC, Florida Tourism, Mazda, Champs Sports, Russell Athletic, Camping World and Cheez-It. The game currently has tie-ins with the Atlantic Coast Conference and Big 12 Conference.

History

The bowl was founded in 1990 by Raycom and was originally played at Joe Robbie Stadium outside the city of Miami. It was formed under the name Sunshine Football Classic, but due to corporate title sponsorships, was never actually contested under this name, nor even referred to as such except during brief intervals between corporate sponsors. During its Miami existence, it successively went by the names Blockbuster Bowl, CarQuest Bowl, and the MicronPC Bowl.
In 2001, the bowl changed hands, and was relocated to Orlando. The bowl was known as the Tangerine Bowl, a historical moniker that was the original title of the game now known as the Citrus Bowl, for three playings. Foot Locker, the parent company of Champs Sports, purchased naming rights in 2004, naming it the Champs Sports Bowl, under which eight games were played. In early 2012, naming rights were agreed to by Russell Athletic; five games were played as the Russell Athletic Bowl. In early 2017, Camping World signed an agreement to be the title sponsor of the game through 2019; three editions were staged as the Camping World Bowl, concluding with the 30th playing of the bowl. In May 2020, Cheez-It signed on as the new title sponsor of the game in a multi-year agreement.

Miami

What is now the Cheez-It Bowl was sprung from a desire to hold a second bowl game in the Miami area. It would be an accompaniment to the long-established and well-known Orange Bowl, and would showcase the brand new stadium in the area that was built in 1987. The Orange Bowl game was still being played in the aging old stadium, whereas this new game would be played in the new stadium.
Miami Dolphins owner Wayne Huizenga quickly joined forces with bowl organizers and brought in Blockbuster Video, which he owned at the time, as title sponsor. The inaugural game, played on December 28, 1990, pitted Florida State and Penn State, and two legendary coaches, Bobby Bowden versus Joe Paterno in front of over 74,000 at Joe Robbie Stadium. Subsequent games, however, never matched the success of the first, even though the bowl was moved to the more prestigious New Year's Day slot starting in 1993.
In 1994, CarQuest Auto Parts became the title sponsor after Huizenga sold Blockbuster Video to Viacom. The New Year's Day experiment was short lived as the organizers of the more established Orange Bowl received permission to move their game into Joe Robbie Stadium beginning in 1996. That bumped the Carquest Bowl back to the less-desirable December date. After the 2000 playing, Florida Citrus Sports took over the game and moved it to Orlando.
Before gaining Blockbuster Entertainment as the corporate sponsor for the inaugural event, the game was tentatively referred to as the Sunshine Classic.

Orlando

From 2006 to 2010, the bowl matched teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Big Ten Conference. Under the terms of a television deal signed with ESPN in 2006, the bowl was to be held after Christmas Day from 2006 onward, and be shown on ESPN in prime time. The change was made to move the game from the less-desirable pre-Christmas date utilized from 2001 to 2004.
From 2005 to 2009, the stadium faced challenges in preparing the stadium for two bowl games in less than one week. This was also in part due to the Florida high school football championship games being held at the stadium shortly before the bowls. In 2009, rainy weather turned the stadium's grass field into a muddly, sloppy, quagmire for both bowl games. In 2010, the stadium switched to artificial turf, facilitating the quick turnaround necessary.
In 2009, the bowl announced that the Big East was to be one of the tie-in conferences for four years starting in 2010, with the bowl having the option of selecting Notre Dame once during the four years. In October 2009, the bowl announced that they had extended their agreement with the ACC for the same term. The game would match the third pick from the ACC against the second selection from the Big East. The previous agreement had matched the 4th pick from the ACC against the 4th or 5th pick from the Big Ten. ACC and Big East teams subsequently met in the 2010 through 2013 games, except for 2011 when Notre Dame was selected and in 2013 when the Louisville Cardinals of the American Athletic Conference were selected.
Since 2014, the game features the second pick from the ACC after the New Year's Six bowls make their picks—usually the losing team from the ACC Football Championship Game, or one of the division runners-up—against the third pick from the Big 12.

Game results

All rankings are taken from the AP Poll prior to the game being played.
Games 1–11 played in Miami Gardens, Florida.
Games 12–present played in Orlando, Florida.

MVPs

DateMVPSchoolPosition
December 28, 1990Amp LeeFlorida StateRB
December 28, 1991David PalmerAlabamaWR
January 1, 1993Darrien GordonStanfordCB
January 1, 1994Glenn FoleyBoston CollegeQB
January 2, 1995Steve TaneyhillSouth CarolinaQB
December 30, 1995Leon JohnsonNorth CarolinaRB
December 27, 1996Tremain MackMiamiSS
December 29, 1997Joe HamiltonGeorgia TechQB
December 29, 1998Scott CovingtonMiamiQB
December 30, 1999Kurt KittnerIllinoisQB
December 28, 2000Philip RiversNC StateQB
December 20, 2001Antonio BryantPittsburghWR
December 23, 2002Kliff KingsburyTexas TechQB
December 22, 2003Philip RiversNC StateQB
December 21, 2004Reggie BallGeorgia TechQB
December 27, 2005James DavisClemsonRB
December 29, 2006Sam HollenbachMarylandQB
December 28, 2007Jamie SilvaBoston CollegeFS
December 27, 2008Graham GanoFlorida StateK/P
December 29, 2009John ClayWisconsinRB
December 28, 2010Russell WilsonNC StateQB
December 29, 2011Rashad GreeneFlorida StateWR
December 28, 2012Antone ExumVirginia TechCB
December 28, 2013Teddy BridgewaterLouisvilleQB
December 29, 2014Cole StoudtClemsonQB
December 29, 2015Johnny JeffersonBaylorRB
December 28, 2016Brad KaayaMiamiQB
December 28, 2017Mason RudolphOklahoma StateQB
December 28, 2018Eric DungeySyracuseQB
December 28, 2019Chase ClaypoolNotre DameWR

Most appearances

Updated through the December 2019 edition.
;Teams with multiple appearances
;Teams with a single appearance
Won: Alabama, Baylor, Illinois, Louisville, Maryland, Oklahoma State, Pittsburgh, South Carolina, Stanford, Texas Tech
Lost: Arkansas, Iowa State, Kansas, Michigan State, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Purdue, Rutgers

Appearances by conference

Updated through the December 2019 edition.
TeamRecord, Team vs. OpponentYear
Most points scored 63, Illinois vs. Virginia1999
Most points scored 87, Baylor vs. North Carolina2015
Most points scored 38, North Carolina vs. Baylor2015
Fewest points allowed3, Stanford vs. Penn State1993
Largest margin of victory42, Illinois vs. Virginia1999
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
First downs
Fewest yards allowed
Fewest rushing yards allowed
Fewest passing yards allowed
IndividualRecord, Player, Team vs. OpponentYear
All-purpose yards
Touchdowns
Rushing yards
Rushing touchdowns
Passing yards
Passing touchdowns
Receiving yards
Receiving touchdowns
Tackles
Sacks
Interceptions
Long PlaysRecord, Player, Team vs. OpponentYear
Touchdown run
Touchdown pass
Kickoff return
Punt return
Interception return
Fumble return
Punt
Field goal
MiscellaneousRecord, TeamsYear
Largest attendance74,021, Florida State vs. Penn State1990

Source:

Media coverage

The bowl was televised by Raycom in its inaugural year, followed by CBS Sports, TBS, and ESPN since 2001.