Peach Bowl
Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl
StadiumMercedes-Benz Stadium
LocationAtlanta, Georgia
Previous stadiumsGrant Field (1968–1970)
Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium (1971–1992)
Georgia Dome (1993–2016)
Operated1968–present
Championship affiliationCFP (2014–present)
Previous conference tie-insSEC, ACC
PayoutUS$3,967,500 (ACC) (As of 2011)[1]
US$2,932,500 (SEC) (As of 2011)[1]
Sponsors
Chick-fil-A (1997–present)
Former names
  • Peach Bowl (1968–1996)
  • Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl (1997–2005)
  • Chick-fil-A Bowl (2006–2013)
2022 matchup
Ohio State vs. Georgia (Georgia 42–41)
2023 matchup
Ole Miss vs. Penn State (Ole Miss 38–25)

The Peach Bowl is an annual college football bowl game played in Atlanta, Georgia, since December 1968. Since 1997, it has been sponsored by Chick-fil-A and is officially known as the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl. From 2006 to 2013, it was officially referred to as simply the Chick-fil-A Bowl. The winner of the bowl game is awarded the George P. Crumbley Trophy, named after the game's founder George Crumbley.

The first three Peach Bowls were played at Grant Field on the Georgia Tech campus in Atlanta. Between 1971 and 1992, Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium hosted the game. Between 1993 and 2016, the Georgia Dome played host. The bowl then moved to Mercedes-Benz Stadium starting in 2017. Since the 2014 season, the Peach Bowl has been part of the New Year's Six, featuring College Football Playoff matchups with the 2016, 2019, 2022, and 2025 games hosting a national semifinal.[2]

History

Seven of the first ten meetings (all but the 1968, 1971, and 1974 games) pitted an Atlantic Coast Conference team against an at-large opponent. The bowl had no automatic berths prior to 1993, but usually featured an ACC team or a team from the Southeastern Conference. From 1993 until 2013, the game matched an SEC team against one from the ACC. From 1993 to 2005, this matchup was the third selection from the ACC against the fourth from the SEC. In 2005, the bowl hosted its first-ever matchup of top 10 ranked teams.

The Peach Bowl was the first charity bowl, and is credited to being created by Lions Club member George Pierre Crumbley Jr., known as the "Father of the Peach Bowl", who shepherded it through NCAA certification.[3][4] The game was originally created as a fund-raiser by the Lions Clubs of Georgia in 1968, but after years of lackluster attendance and revenue, the game was taken over by the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce.[5]

Chick-fil-A, a fast food restaurant chain based in nearby College Park, has sponsored the game since 1997. From 2006 until 2013, Chick-fil-A's contract gave it full naming rights and the game was referred to as the Chick-fil-A Bowl as a result. The traditional "Peach Bowl" name was reinstated following the announcement that the bowl would be one of the six College Football Playoff bowls.[6][7][8]

The funds from the deal were used to increase payouts for the participating teams. In response, from 2006 to 2014 the ACC gave the committee the first pick of its teams after the BCS—usually the loser of the ACC Championship Game or one of the division runners-up. Also from 2006, the bowl got the fifth overall selection from the SEC (including the BCS). However, the BCS took two SEC schools in every season for the last nine years of its run, leaving the Chick-Fil-A with the sixth pick from the conference—usually one of the division runners-up. It ascended to major-bowl status when it was added to the "New Year's Six" bowls starting with the 2014 season, assuring that it would feature major conference champions and/or prestigious runners-up.

As of 2013, the bowl was sold out for 17 straight years, the second-longest streak behind only the Rose Bowl Game.[9] In 2007, the Chick-fil-A Bowl became the best-attended non-BCS bowl for the previous decade.

The 2007 game was played on December 31, 2007, featuring the second Peach Bowl matchup between #15 Clemson and #21 Auburn. It was the first time the Peach Bowl had ended regulation play with a tie, and with the rules in play since the early 1990s, required an overtime, which Auburn won, 23–20.[10][11] With a 5.09 share (4.92 million households), the 2007 game was the highest-rated ESPN-broadcast bowl game of the 2007–2008 season as well as the highest rated in the game's history.[12] The rating was also higher than two New Year's Day bowls, the Cotton and the Gator.[13] In October 2009, the bowl extended the Atlantic Coast Conference contract through 2013. According to Sports Illustrated, although the bowl generated $12.3 million in profit in 2007, only $5.9 million of that was paid out to the participating schools.[14] On December 31, 2012, the bowl set new records for viewership. The New Year's Eve telecast – a 25-24 Clemson victory over LSU – averaged 8.557 million viewers (a 5.6 household coverage rating), making it ESPN's most-viewed non-BCS bowl ever.[15][16]

The 2017 season matchup, played January 1, 2018, featured an undefeated UCF playing an Auburn team that had in the regular season defeated both national championship contenders Georgia and Alabama (the eventual 2018 College Football Playoff Champion). A 34–27 UCF victory resulted in UCF being the only undefeated FBS team for the 2017 season.[17] As such, UCF was selected as the 2017 national champions by one NCAA recognized selector and thus claims a share of the 2017 national championship.[18]

The Peach Bowl has donated more than $32 million to charity since 2016.[19]

Statistics

  • Ninth-oldest bowl game in college football history.[20]
  • A then-Georgia Dome attendance record of 75,406 set in 2006 (Georgia vs. Virginia Tech).[20]
  • 17 straight sellouts (19982013).[21]
  • Highest-attended non-BCS bowl game.[22]
  • More than $125 million in cumulative payout (through the 2013 season).[20]

Game results

All rankings are based on the AP Poll prior to the game being played. Italics denote a tie game.

Date played Bowl name Winning team Losing team Attendance[23] Venue
December 30, 1968Peach Bowl LSU3119 Florida State27 35,545 Grant Field
December 30, 1969Peach Bowl 19 West Virginia14South Carolina3 48,452
December 30, 1970Peach Bowl 8 Arizona State48North Carolina26 52,126
December 30, 1971Peach Bowl 17 Ole Miss41Georgia Tech18 36,771 Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
December 29, 1972Peach Bowl NC State4918 West Virginia13 52,671
December 28, 1973Peach Bowl Georgia1718 Maryland16 38,107
December 28, 1974Peach Bowl Texas Tech6Vanderbilt6 31,695
December 31, 1975Peach Bowl West Virginia13NC State10 45,134
December 31, 1976Peach Bowl Kentucky2119 North Carolina0 54,132
December 31, 1977Peach Bowl NC State24Iowa State14 36,733
December 25, 1978Peach Bowl 17 Purdue41Georgia Tech21 20,277
December 31, 1979Peach Bowl 19 Baylor2418 Clemson18 57,371
January 2, 1981Peach Bowl 20 Miami (Florida)20Virginia Tech10 45,384
December 31, 1981Peach Bowl West Virginia26Florida6 37,582
December 31, 1982Peach Bowl Iowa28Tennessee22 50,134
December 30, 1983Peach Bowl Florida State28North Carolina3 25,648
December 31, 1984Peach Bowl Virginia27Purdue24 41,107
December 31, 1985Peach Bowl Army31Illinois29 29,857
December 31, 1986Peach Bowl Virginia Tech2518 NC State24 53,668
January 2, 1988Peach Bowl 17 Tennessee27Indiana22 58,737
December 31, 1988Peach Bowl NC State28Iowa23 44,635
December 30, 1989Peach Bowl Syracuse19Georgia18 44,991
December 29, 1990Peach Bowl Auburn27Indiana23 38,912
January 1, 1992Peach Bowl 12 East Carolina3721 NC State34 59,322
January 2, 1993Peach Bowl 19 North Carolina2124 Mississippi State17 69,125 Georgia Dome
December 31, 1993Peach Bowl 24 Clemson14Kentucky13 63,416
January 1, 1995Peach Bowl 23 NC State2816 Mississippi State24 64,902
December 30, 1995Peach Bowl 18 Virginia34Georgia27 70,825
December 28, 1996Peach Bowl 17 LSU10Clemson7 63,622
January 2, 1998Peach Bowl 13 Auburn21Clemson17 71,212
December 31, 1998Peach Bowl 19 Georgia3513 Virginia33 72,876
December 30, 1999Peach Bowl 15 Mississippi State17Clemson7 73,315
December 29, 2000Peach Bowl LSU2815 Georgia Tech14 73,614
December 31, 2001Peach Bowl North Carolina16Auburn10 71,827
December 31, 2002Peach Bowl 20 Maryland30Tennessee3 68,330
January 2, 2004Peach Bowl Clemson276 Tennessee14 75,125
December 31, 2004Peach Bowl 14 Miami (Florida)2720 Florida10 69,322
December 30, 2005Peach Bowl 10 LSU409 Miami (Florida)3 65,620
December 30, 2006Chick-fil-A Bowl Georgia3114 Virginia Tech24 75,406
December 31, 2007Chick-fil-A Bowl 22 Auburn2315 Clemson 20 74,413
December 31, 2008Chick-fil-A Bowl LSU3814 Georgia Tech3 71,423
December 31, 2009Chick-fil-A Bowl 12 Virginia Tech37Tennessee14 73,777
December 31, 2010Chick-fil-A Bowl 23 Florida State2619 South Carolina17 72,217
December 31, 2011Chick-fil-A Bowl Auburn43Virginia24 72,919
December 31, 2012Chick-fil-A Bowl 14 Clemson259 LSU24 68,027
December 31, 2013Chick-fil-A Bowl 20 Texas A&M5222 Duke48 67,946
December 31, 2014Peach Bowl 6 TCU429 Ole Miss3 65,706
December 31, 2015Peach Bowl 14 Houston389 Florida State24 71,007
December 31, 2016CFPPeach Bowl 1 Alabama244 Washington7 75,996
January 1, 2018Peach Bowl 10 UCF347 Auburn27 71,109 Mercedes-Benz Stadium
December 29, 2018Peach Bowl 10 Florida418 Michigan15 74,006
December 28, 2019CFPPeach Bowl 1 LSU634 Oklahoma28 78,347
January 1, 2021Peach Bowl 11 Georgia246 Cincinnati21 15,301
December 30, 2021Peach Bowl 11 Michigan State3113 Pittsburgh21 41,230
December 31, 2022CFPPeach Bowl 1 Georgia424 Ohio State41 79,330
December 30, 2023Peach Bowl 11 Ole Miss3810 Penn State25 71,230

Source:[24]

^CFP Denotes College Football Playoff semifinal game

Future games

MVPs

An offensive and defensive MVP are selected for each game; from 1989 through 1998, selections were made for both teams.

Game Offensive MVP Defensive MVP
Player Team Position Player Team Position
1968Mike HillmanLSUQBBuddy MillicanLSUDE
1969Ed WilliamsWest VirginiaFBCarl CrennelWest VirginiaMG
1970Monroe EleyArizona StateHBJunior Ah YouArizona StateDE
1971Norris WeeseOle MissQBCrowell ArmstrongOle MissLB
1972Dave BuckeyNC StateQBGeorge BellNC StateDT
1973Louis CarterMarylandTBSylvester BolerGeorgiaLB
1974Larry IsaacTexas TechTBDennis HarrisonVanderbiltDB
1975Dan KendraWest VirginiaQBRay MarshallWest VirginiaLB
1976Rod StewartKentuckyTBMike MartinKentuckyLB
1977Johnny EvansNC StateQBRichard CarterNC StateDB
1978Mark HerrmannPurdueQBCalvin ClarkPurdueDT
1979Mike BrannanBaylorQBAndrew MelontreeBaylorDE
1981Jim KellyMiami (Florida)QBJim BurtMiami (Florida)MG
1981Mickey WalczakWest VirginiaRBDon StempleWest VirginiaDB
1982Chuck LongIowaQBClay UhlenhakeIowaDT
1983Eric ThomasFlorida StateQBAlphonso CarrekerFlorida StateDT
1984Howard PettyVirginiaTBRay DalyVirginiaCB
1985Rob HealyArmyQBPeel ChronisterArmyS
1986Erik KramerNC StateQBDerrick TaylorNC StateCB
1988Reggie CobbTennesseeTBVan WaitersIndianaLB
1988Shane MontgomeryNC StateQBMichael BrooksNC StateCB
1989Michael OwensSyracuseRBTerry WoodenSyracuseLB
Rodney HamptonGeorgiaRBMorris LewisGeorgiaLB
1990Stan WhiteAuburnQBDarrel CrawfordAuburnLB
Vaughn DunbarIndianaRBMike DumasIndianaFS
1992Jeff BlakeEast CarolinaQBRobert JonesEast CarolinaLB
Terry JordanNC StateQBBilly Ray HaynesNC StateDB
Jan. 1993Natrone MeansNorth CarolinaRBBracey WalkerNorth CarolinaDB
Greg PlumpMississippi StateQBMarc WoodardMississippi StateLB
Dec. 1993Emory SmithClemsonRBBrentson BucknerClemsonDE
Pookie JonesKentuckyQBZane BeehnKentuckyLB
Jan. 1995Tremayne StephensNC StateRBDamien Covington
Carl Reeves
NC StateILB
DT
Tim RogersMississippi StateKLarry WilliamsMississippi StateDL
Dec. 1995Tiki BarberVirginiaRBSkeet JonesVirginiaLB
Hines WardGeorgiaQBWhit MarshallGeorgiaLB
1996Herb TylerLSUQBAnthony McFarlandLSUDL
Raymond PriesterClemsonRBTrevor PryceClemsonLB
Jan. 1998Dameyune CraigAuburnQBTakeo SpikesAuburnLB
Raymond PriesterClemsonRBAnthony SimmonsClemsonLB
Dec. 1998Olandis GaryGeorgiaRBChamp BaileyGeorgiaDB
Aaron BrooksVirginiaQBWali RainerVirginiaLB
1999Wayne MadkinMississippi StateQBKeith AdamsClemsonLB
2000Rohan DaveyLSUQBBradie JamesLSULB
2001Ronald CurryNorth CarolinaQBRyan SimsNorth CarolinaDL
2002Scott McBrienMarylandQBE.J. HendersonMarylandLB
Jan. 2004Chad JasminClemsonRBLeroy HillClemsonLB
Dec. 2004Roscoe ParrishMiami (Florida)WRDevin HesterMiami (Florida)CB
2005Matt FlynnLSUQBJim MorrisMiami (Florida)DT
2006Matthew StaffordGeorgiaQBTony TaylorGeorgiaLB
2007C. J. SpillerClemsonRBPat SimsAuburnDT
2008Jordan JeffersonLSUQBPerry RileyLSULB
2009Ryan WilliamsVirginia TechRBCody GrimmVirginia TechLB
2010Chris ThompsonFlorida StateRBGreg ReidFlorida StateCB
2011Onterio McCalebbAuburnRBChris DavisAuburnCB
2012Tajh BoydClemsonQBKevin MinterLSULB
2013Johnny ManzielTexas A&MQBToney Hurd Jr.Texas A&MDB
2014Trevone BoykinTCUQBJames McFarlandTCUDE
2015Greg Ward, Jr.HoustonQBWilliam Jackson IIIHoustonCB
2016Bo ScarbroughAlabamaRBRyan AndersonAlabamaLB
Jan. 2018McKenzie MiltonUCFQBShaquem GriffinUCFLB
Dec. 2018Feleipe FranksFloridaQBChauncey Gardner-JohnsonFloridaDB
2019Joe BurrowLSUQBK'Lavon ChaissonLSULB
Jan. 2021Jack PodlesnyGeorgiaKAzeez OjulariGeorgiaLB
Dec. 2021Jayden ReedMichigan StateWRCal HaladayMichigan StateLB
2022Stetson BennettGeorgiaQBJavon BullardGeorgiaDB
2023[25]Caden PrieskornOle MissTEJared IveyOle MissDE

Most appearances

Updated through the December 2023 edition (56 games, 112 total appearances).

Teams with multiple appearances
Teams with a single appearance

Won (11): Alabama, Arizona State, Army, Baylor, East Carolina, Houston, Michigan State, Syracuse, TCU, Texas A&M, UCF
Lost (10): Cincinnati, Duke, Illinois, Iowa State, Michigan, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Washington
Tied (2): Texas Tech, Vanderbilt

Appearances by conference

Updated through the December 2023 edition (56 games, 112 total appearances).

Conference Record Appearances by season
Games W L T Win pct. Won Lost Tied
SEC4023161.588 1968, 1971, 1973, 1976, 1987*, 1990, 1996, 1997*, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2013, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020*, 2022, 2023 1981, 1982, 1989, 1992*, 1993, 1994*, 1995, 2001, 2002, 2003*, 2004, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2017* 1974
ACC3715220.405 1972, 1977, 1984, 1988, 1992*, 1993, 1994*, 1995, 2001, 2002, 2003*, 2004, 2009, 2010, 2012 1969, 1970, 1973, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1983, 1986, 1991*, 1996, 1997*, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2021  
Independents14950.643 1969, 1975, 1980*, 1981, 1983, 1985, 1986, 1989, 1991* 1968, 1971, 1972, 1978, 1980*  
Big Ten11380.273 1978, 1982, 2021 1984, 1985, 1987*, 1988, 1990, 2018, 2022, 2023  
The American3210.667 2015, 2017* 2020*  
SWC2101.750 1979   1974
Big 122110.500 2014 2019  
WAC11001.000 1970    
Big Eight1010.000   1977  
Pac-121010.000   2016  
  • 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.
  • Conferences that are defunct or no longer active in FBS are marked in italics.
    • SWC and Big Eight appearances were prior to the 1996 merger of four Southwest Conference schools and eight Big Eight schools, which created the Big 12.
    • The WAC no longer sponsors FBS football.
  • Independent appearances: Army (1985), East Carolina (1991*), Florida State (1968, 1983), Georgia Tech (1971, 1978), Miami (FL) (1980*), Syracuse (1989), Virginia Tech (1980*, 1986), West Virginia (1969, 1972, 1975, 1981)
    • The game following the 1980 season, played in January 1981, was contested between two independent programs.

Game records

Team Record, Team vs. Opponent Year
Most points scored (both teams) 100, Texas A&M (52) vs. Duke (48) 2013
Most points scored (one team) 63, LSU (63) vs. Oklahoma (28) 2019
Most points scored (losing team) 48, Duke (48) vs. Texas A&M (52) 2013
Fewest points scored 12, Vanderbilt (6) vs. Texas Tech (6) 1974
Fewest points allowed 0, Kentucky (21) vs. North Carolina (0) 1976
Largest margin of victory 39, TCU (42) vs. Ole Miss (3) 2014
Total yards 693, LSU vs. Oklahoma 2019
Rushing yards 356, West Virginia vs. South Carolina 1969
Passing yards 493, LSU vs. Oklahoma 2019
First downs 32, Clemson vs. LSU 2012
Fewest yards allowed 105, West Virginia vs. Florida 1981
Fewest rushing yards allowed 5, Virginia Tech vs. Tennessee 2009
Fewest passing yards allowed 3, South Carolina vs. West Virginia 1969
Individual Record, Player, Team Year
All-purpose yards469, Hines Ward (Georgia)1995
Touchdowns (all-purpose)8, Joe Burrow (LSU)2019
Rushing yards208, Ed Williams (West Virginia)1969
Rushing touchdowns3, 7 playersmult.
Passing yards493, Joe Burrow (LSU)2019
Passing touchdowns7, Joe Burrow (LSU) 2019
Receiving yards227, Justin Jefferson (LSU)2019
Receiving touchdowns4, Justin Jefferson (LSU)2019
Tackles
Sacks
Interceptions3, Michael Brooks (NC State)1988
Long Plays Record, Player, Team Year
Touchdown run83 yds., C. J. Spiller (Clemson)2007
Touchdown pass82 yds., Mike Groh to Demetrius Allen (Virginia)1995
Kickoff return83 yds., Demetrius Allen (Virginia)1995
Punt return79 yds., Steve Suter (Maryland)2002
Interception return78 yds., Cal Haladay (Michigan State)2021
Fumble return10 yds., Jason Ferguson (Georgia)1995
Punt67 yds., Damon Duval (Auburn)2001
Field goal53 yds., shared by:
Colt David (LSU)
Jack Podlesny (Georgia)

2008
2021
Miscellaneous Record, Team vs. Team Year
Game Attendance79,330, Georgia vs. Ohio State2022

Source:[26]

Battle for Bowl Week

Battle for Bowl Week has the teams compete in events during the week leading up to the game. Events in 2021 included a basketball challenge and go-kart racing. From 2011 to 2023, the winner of the Battle for Bowl Week won the game eight of thirteen times.[27]

Year Winner
2010Florida State
2011Auburn Tigers
2012Clemson Tigers
2013Texas A&M
2014TCU
2015Houston
2016Washington
2017Auburn
2018Michigan
2019Oklahoma
2021Michigan State
2022Ohio State
2023Ole Miss

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Stites, Adam (December 6, 2015). "2015 Peach Bowl, Florida State vs. Houston: Date, time, location and more". SB Nation. Retrieved December 11, 2015.
  2. "Auburn-Clemson Match-up Gives Chick-fil-A Bowl 11th Straight Sellout". Auburn University. 2007-12-04. Archived from the original on 2007-12-07. Retrieved 2007-12-11.
  3. "George Crumbley Jr. Obituary". Legacy.com. September 2009.
  4. Georgia Lions Lighthouse Foundation (21 December 2015). "Georgia Lions Lighthouse Foundation Celebrates 47-Year Partnership with Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl".
  5. "History". Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl. 2015-08-12. Retrieved 2018-12-15.
  6. Tim Tucker (April 18, 2014). "Chick-fil-A Bowl will restore 'Peach' to its name". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved April 20, 2014.
  7. "Chick-Fil-A Bowl adds 'Peach' back to name after playoff inclusion". CBSSports.com.
  8. "Bowl complies with new playoff". ESPN.com.
  9. "Chick-fil-A Bowl Achieves Earliest Sellout in its History". 15 February 2014. Archived from the original on 15 February 2014. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
  10. "Auburn uses new spread offense, defeats Clemson for bowl win". ESPN. 2007-12-31. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
  11. Matthew Zemek (2008-01-01). "Burns shows how bright future is for Tigers". Fox Sports. Archived from the original on 2008-01-02. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
  12. "Chick-fil-A Bowl a ratings success as game sets records". Atlanta Business Chronicle. 2008-01-08. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
  13. Thamel, Pete (2008-01-02). "Marquee Mismatches: Blame the System". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
  14. Murphy, Austin, and Dan Wetzel, "Does It Matter?", Sports Illustrated, 15 November 2010, p. 45.
  15. "Viewership Increases for ESPN Bowl Games". ESPN.com. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  16. "NCAA Bowls: Clemson/LSU Hits Record-High on ESPN; Music City, Liberty Bowls Down". Sports Media Watch. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  17. "Peach Bowl score: Perfection achieved as UCF upsets Auburn, completes 13-0 season". CBSSports.com. Retrieved 2018-12-15.
  18. Romero, Iliana Limón (August 25, 2018). "UCF officially listed among national champions in 2018 NCAA record book". Orlando Sentinel.
  19. Hobson, Will. "He runs one amateur football game per year. He makes more than $1 million - NY Daily News". nydailynews.com. Retrieved 2018-12-30.
  20. 1 2 3 "Did You Know/General FAQ". Cvent. 2015-12-31.
  21. "No sellout, no problem for Peach Bowl". AJC. 2014-12-31.
  22. Smith, Michael (December 3, 2007). "Company not chicken about bowl spending". Sportsbusinessdaily.com.
  23. "Bowl/All Star Game Records" (PDF). fs.ncaa.org. 2015. Retrieved 2018-12-15.
  24. "Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl" (PDF). Bowl/All Star Game Records. NCAA. 2020. pp. 8–9. Retrieved January 3, 2021 via NCAA.org.
  25. @JaredERedding (December 30, 2023). "Jared Ivey named Defensive MVP Caden Prieskorn named Offensive MVP" (Tweet). Retrieved December 30, 2023 via Twitter.
  26. "Record Book". Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl. 2015-08-12. Retrieved 2019-12-27.
  27. "Battle for Bowl Week". Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl. Retrieved October 14, 2022.
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