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SEC Program's Bowl Histories. Lets take a look.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:29 pm
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:29 pm
Started looking over bowl records and histories of our new conference mates trying to learn more of of the history of the programs that make up this fine collection of universities.
* Did not count BCSNCG under the respective bowl they took place in that year. Did Not include this years bowl appearances. Will correct if errors are found please post them
SEC WEST
Alabama 35-22-3
First Bowl Victory: 1926 Rose Bowl vs Washington
3 BCSNCG, 6 Rose, 13 Sugar, 8 Orange, 1 Fiesta, 6 Cotton
Ole Miss 22-12
First Bowl Victory: 1948 Delta vs TCU
8 Sugar, 1 Orange, 5 Cotton
Mississippi State 10-7
First Bowl Victory: 1941 Orange vs Georgetown
2 Orange, 1 Cotton
Auburn 22-13-2
First Bowl Victory: 1938 Orange vs Michigan State
1 BCSNCG, 5 Sugar, 2 Orange, 2 Cotton
LSU 23-21-1
First Bowl Victory: 1943 Orange Bowl vs Texas A&M
3 BCSNCG 12 Sugar, 4 Orange, 5 Cotton
Texas A&M 15-19
First Bowl Victory: 1921 Dixie vs Centre
2 Sugar, 1 Orange, 13 Cotton
Arkansas 13-23-3
First Bowl Victory: 1947 Dixie vs William and Mary
6 Sugar, 2 Orange, 1 Fiesta, 11 Cotton
SEC EAST
Georgia 27-18-3
First Bowl Victory: 1942 Orange Bowl vs TCU
Rose 1,Sugar 9, Orange 3,Cotton 3
Kentucky 8-6
First Bowl Victory: 1947 Great Lakes vs Villanova
1 Sugar,1 Orange, 1 Cotton
Tennessee 25-24
First Bowl Victory: 1939 Orange vs Oklahoma
1 BCSNCG, 2 Rose, 7 Sugar, 4 Orange, 2 Fiesta, 5 Cotton
Vanderbilt 3-2-1
First Bowl Victory: 1955 Gator vs Auburn
(No Major Bowl Appearances)
Florida 20-20
First Bowl Victory: 1952 Gator vs Tulsa
2 BCSNCG, 9 Sugar, 3 Orange 1 Fiesta
Missouri 13-16
First Bowl Victory: 1960 Orange vs Georgia
2 Sugar, 4 Orange, 1 Fiesta, 2 Cotton
South Carolina 6-12
First Bowl Victory: 1995 Car Quest vs West Virgina
(No Major Bowl Appearances)
This conference has a very cool and succesful history. Learned a little about some programs while looking around and researching.
Interesting Facts:
Appeared in all major bowls + BCSNCG: Alabama + Tennessee
Appeared in all major bowls: Alabama and Tennessee
SEC Programs have appeared in 9 BCS National Championship Games.
SEC Programs have appeared 185 times in the major bowls.
ETA: Adjusted Ole Miss Cotton bowls.
* Did not count BCSNCG under the respective bowl they took place in that year. Did Not include this years bowl appearances. Will correct if errors are found please post them
SEC WEST
Alabama 35-22-3
First Bowl Victory: 1926 Rose Bowl vs Washington
3 BCSNCG, 6 Rose, 13 Sugar, 8 Orange, 1 Fiesta, 6 Cotton
Ole Miss 22-12
First Bowl Victory: 1948 Delta vs TCU
8 Sugar, 1 Orange, 5 Cotton
Mississippi State 10-7
First Bowl Victory: 1941 Orange vs Georgetown
2 Orange, 1 Cotton
Auburn 22-13-2
First Bowl Victory: 1938 Orange vs Michigan State
1 BCSNCG, 5 Sugar, 2 Orange, 2 Cotton
LSU 23-21-1
First Bowl Victory: 1943 Orange Bowl vs Texas A&M
3 BCSNCG 12 Sugar, 4 Orange, 5 Cotton
Texas A&M 15-19
First Bowl Victory: 1921 Dixie vs Centre
2 Sugar, 1 Orange, 13 Cotton
Arkansas 13-23-3
First Bowl Victory: 1947 Dixie vs William and Mary
6 Sugar, 2 Orange, 1 Fiesta, 11 Cotton
SEC EAST
Georgia 27-18-3
First Bowl Victory: 1942 Orange Bowl vs TCU
Rose 1,Sugar 9, Orange 3,Cotton 3
Kentucky 8-6
First Bowl Victory: 1947 Great Lakes vs Villanova
1 Sugar,1 Orange, 1 Cotton
Tennessee 25-24
First Bowl Victory: 1939 Orange vs Oklahoma
1 BCSNCG, 2 Rose, 7 Sugar, 4 Orange, 2 Fiesta, 5 Cotton
Vanderbilt 3-2-1
First Bowl Victory: 1955 Gator vs Auburn
(No Major Bowl Appearances)
Florida 20-20
First Bowl Victory: 1952 Gator vs Tulsa
2 BCSNCG, 9 Sugar, 3 Orange 1 Fiesta
Missouri 13-16
First Bowl Victory: 1960 Orange vs Georgia
2 Sugar, 4 Orange, 1 Fiesta, 2 Cotton
South Carolina 6-12
First Bowl Victory: 1995 Car Quest vs West Virgina
(No Major Bowl Appearances)
This conference has a very cool and succesful history. Learned a little about some programs while looking around and researching.
Interesting Facts:
Appeared in all major bowls + BCSNCG: Alabama + Tennessee
Appeared in all major bowls: Alabama and Tennessee
SEC Programs have appeared in 9 BCS National Championship Games.
SEC Programs have appeared 185 times in the major bowls.

ETA: Adjusted Ole Miss Cotton bowls.
This post was edited on 12/10/13 at 11:23 am
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:33 pm to kilo
We were in the SEC last time I checked.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:34 pm to Tds & Beer
yea my bad, i got it. sorry.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:40 pm to lsunutinno
quote:
Quit trolling USCe
wat?
Im not trolling anyone.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:45 pm to kilo
I think you are forgetting about UT's 1998 BCS title.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:46 pm to kilo
Damn....Ole Miss' resume is impressive. A lot of bowls.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:46 pm to Tiger Live2
quote:
I think you are forgetting about UT's 1998 BCS title.
Yep, will edit. Thanks.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:53 pm to bayou2003
quote:
Damn....Ole Miss' resume is impressive. A lot of bowls.
That was one of the surprises to me as well.
It was neat to dig a little. Was looking at a couple of teams bowl histories to counter some smack talk and just kept going and decided to look at them all.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:53 pm to kilo

Figured they deserved the credit, so we could claim 8(9?) BCS titles.
Pretty amazing what the SEC did during the BCS era. 8 BCS titles, by 5 different teams. With 3 other teams still having a legit title shot till rivalry weekend(UGA, Mizzou, and Arkansas).
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:54 pm to bayou2003
quote:
Damn....Ole Miss' resume is impressive. A lot of bowls.
We're good at bowl games.

Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:55 pm to UMTigerRebel
quote:
We're good at bowl games.

Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:56 pm to Tiger Live2
quote:
Pretty amazing what the SEC did during the BCS era.
It really is. Great history in this conference.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 1:59 pm to kilo
quote:
South Carolina 6-12
First Bowl Victory: 1995 Car Quest vs West Virgina
Posted on 12/9/13 at 2:04 pm to UMTigerRebel
quote:
We're good at bowl games
We're not.
We have had a couple very impressive wins. In the 1978 Orange Bowl, Oklahoma was looking to go 3 out of the past 4 national championships. All-American guard Leotis Harris got hurt in practice, and Holtz suspended our top two RBs and best WR before the game. We still beat Okie 31-6

Posted on 12/9/13 at 2:05 pm to kilo
Ole Miss has a legit SEC history. Even spent some time among the nation elite. IIRC till the 2000's they had more SEC titles than Auburn.
I would love to see what type of rivalry we could have if we were both good to great teams(50's/60's)
I would love to see what type of rivalry we could have if we were both good to great teams(50's/60's)
Posted on 12/9/13 at 2:09 pm to Tiger Live2
I fully admit that Im a bit biased about programs coming in based on recent history. Just wasnt as familiar with the SEC as I was with the former Big 12.
When I was paging through the bowl histories of some of the programs it was very humbling. Really cool stuff.
When I was paging through the bowl histories of some of the programs it was very humbling. Really cool stuff.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 2:10 pm to kilo
LSU's first bowl victory was the inaugural Bacardi Bowl in Havana Cuba in 1907.
LSU beat the University of Havana 56-0:
Looking back, it is difficult to imagine how LSU's precedent-setting game against Havana University on Christmas Day, in 1907, failed to touch off a second war with Spain. The appearance of the first American college team on foreign soil came at a time when the Cuban situation remained touchy in the wake of the Spanish-American war. "Remember the Maine!" had not yet died away. U.S. Army garrisons were still stationed at Camp Columbia, and U.S. Navy vessels rode at anchor in the harbor where the hull of the sunken battleship was visible above the water.
To make matters more explosive, Havana was football mad, the university team having run roughshod over every service team- Army, Navy, or other- in the area. With no more fields to conquer, Cuban officials turned to the United States in search of a prestige opponent. They found a willing one in LSU, and the invitation extended to Wingard was readily accepted, although it meant keeping his club in training for an extra month.
The international match caught the fancy of Tiger fans in Baton Rouge who quickly raised $2,000 for Wingard and company to take with them to Havana to wager. Upon arrival, LSU quickly discovered that Cuba was looking forward to the Christmas Day game as a sort of crusade. Americans residing there told Wingard that Havana officials were scouring the island for the biggest and meanest physical specimens they could find, operating on the theory that football was a game entirely of brute force. Wingard's biggest problem was not in bringing his 13-man squad to an emotional peak- that was easy- but in protecting the members of the team from homesick Americans who showered them with hospitality. It was said that whenever two Americans met in Cuba the custom was to have a friendly drink, ordinarily a daiquiri, and something to eat, usually arroz con polio (a rich concoction of stewed chicken and saffron rice), neither of which was an ideal training table item.
It was the large cheering section of American servicemen- and their inflammatory yell- which made the occasion a possible powder keg. Before the game the chant began:
"Lick the Spicks, Kill the Spicks Rah! Rah! Rah! Louisiana!" [Ed.: STTDB! All class, all the time...]
When Wingard's 13-man "light brigade" ran onto the field for pre-game warmups, they noticed an odd sight on the Cuban bench- a number of large glass demijohns filled with wine. Every now and then one of the Cuban players, who were as large as advertised, would run over and take a swig of wine. Center of attention was a 300-pounder named A. C. Infante-Garcia who, it was reported, had been brought in especially to handle W. M. Lyles, the 200-pound LSU guard. Just before the opening whistle, Fenton gave Lyles a tip. "Hit that guy in the stomach with your head," Doc told him, "and he's done for."
The crowd of 10,000- the speculators inherited a goldmine- had hardly been seated comfortably when, on the first play from scrimmage, Lyles rammed his shoulder into the midriff of Infante-Garcia. Fenton chuckled when he told what happened. "The big guy spouted wine like an artesian well," he said. "I give you my word. We nearly had to swim to get out of there." No one was more surprised than Lyles, whose confidence skyrocketed. "Well, I'll be damned," he said. "Let's go to work." The sight of the supine 300-pounder touched off a 56-0 rout- ten touchdowns at five points each and six conversions. The home team never threatened.
George Ellwood "Doc" Fenton:
More
LSU beat the University of Havana 56-0:
Looking back, it is difficult to imagine how LSU's precedent-setting game against Havana University on Christmas Day, in 1907, failed to touch off a second war with Spain. The appearance of the first American college team on foreign soil came at a time when the Cuban situation remained touchy in the wake of the Spanish-American war. "Remember the Maine!" had not yet died away. U.S. Army garrisons were still stationed at Camp Columbia, and U.S. Navy vessels rode at anchor in the harbor where the hull of the sunken battleship was visible above the water.
To make matters more explosive, Havana was football mad, the university team having run roughshod over every service team- Army, Navy, or other- in the area. With no more fields to conquer, Cuban officials turned to the United States in search of a prestige opponent. They found a willing one in LSU, and the invitation extended to Wingard was readily accepted, although it meant keeping his club in training for an extra month.
The international match caught the fancy of Tiger fans in Baton Rouge who quickly raised $2,000 for Wingard and company to take with them to Havana to wager. Upon arrival, LSU quickly discovered that Cuba was looking forward to the Christmas Day game as a sort of crusade. Americans residing there told Wingard that Havana officials were scouring the island for the biggest and meanest physical specimens they could find, operating on the theory that football was a game entirely of brute force. Wingard's biggest problem was not in bringing his 13-man squad to an emotional peak- that was easy- but in protecting the members of the team from homesick Americans who showered them with hospitality. It was said that whenever two Americans met in Cuba the custom was to have a friendly drink, ordinarily a daiquiri, and something to eat, usually arroz con polio (a rich concoction of stewed chicken and saffron rice), neither of which was an ideal training table item.
It was the large cheering section of American servicemen- and their inflammatory yell- which made the occasion a possible powder keg. Before the game the chant began:
"Lick the Spicks, Kill the Spicks Rah! Rah! Rah! Louisiana!" [Ed.: STTDB! All class, all the time...]
When Wingard's 13-man "light brigade" ran onto the field for pre-game warmups, they noticed an odd sight on the Cuban bench- a number of large glass demijohns filled with wine. Every now and then one of the Cuban players, who were as large as advertised, would run over and take a swig of wine. Center of attention was a 300-pounder named A. C. Infante-Garcia who, it was reported, had been brought in especially to handle W. M. Lyles, the 200-pound LSU guard. Just before the opening whistle, Fenton gave Lyles a tip. "Hit that guy in the stomach with your head," Doc told him, "and he's done for."
The crowd of 10,000- the speculators inherited a goldmine- had hardly been seated comfortably when, on the first play from scrimmage, Lyles rammed his shoulder into the midriff of Infante-Garcia. Fenton chuckled when he told what happened. "The big guy spouted wine like an artesian well," he said. "I give you my word. We nearly had to swim to get out of there." No one was more surprised than Lyles, whose confidence skyrocketed. "Well, I'll be damned," he said. "Let's go to work." The sight of the supine 300-pounder touched off a 56-0 rout- ten touchdowns at five points each and six conversions. The home team never threatened.
George Ellwood "Doc" Fenton:
More
Posted on 12/9/13 at 2:10 pm to kilo
As HJJ pointed out in another thread, we've only lost 2 in the last 25 years.
Posted on 12/9/13 at 2:11 pm to Tiger Live2
Sadly we will probably never know
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