Week 0 (or Week Zero) refers to the opening weekend of college football games in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), in which a small number of games are played to begin the regular season, a week before the vast majority of teams begin their season in "Week 1".[1][2][3] Although the FBS football season has traditionally begun on the first Saturday before Labor Day, the NCAA has sporadically awarded waivers for games to be played a week earlier in order to bring a game to a national television audience, or as part of the "Hawaii Rule" that grants teams that play a game in Hawaii, usually away games against the Rainbow Warriors, an extra regular season home game to offset travel costs. Games in Alaska, Puerto Rico and other outlying territories would nominally count towards the Hawaii Rule, but those locales do not field FBS programs or have venues that meet NCAA minimum attendance guidelines.

The first Week 0 game was the 1983 Kickoff Classic, in which No. 1 Nebraska defeated No. 4 Penn State, 44–6, at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.[4]

For the 2020 season, the NCAA issued a blanket waiver for Week 0 games by any team, in order to allow for scheduling flexibility amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[5] However, no Division I FBS members wound up playing in a Week 0 game in 2020.

Results

Week 0 games since 2002:

DateWinnerScoreLoserScoreLocation
August 26, 2023No. 13 Notre Dame42Navy3Aviva Stadium
Dublin, Ireland
(Aer Lingus College Football Classic)
August 26, 2023Jacksonville State17UTEP14JSU Stadium
Jacksonville, Alabama
August 26, 2023San Diego State20Ohio13Snapdragon Stadium
San Diego, California
August 26, 2023UMass41New Mexico State30Aggie Memorial Stadium
Las Cruces, New Mexico
August 26, 2023Vanderbilt35Hawaiʻi28FirstBank Stadium
Nashville, Tennessee
August 26, 2023No. 6 USC56San Jose State28Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
Los Angeles, California
August 26, 2023Louisiana Tech22FIU17Joe Aillet Stadium
Ruston, Louisiana
August 27, 2022Northwestern31Nebraska 28Aviva Stadium
Dublin, Ireland
(Aer Lingus College Football Classic)
August 27, 2022Western Kentucky38Austin Peay[lower-alpha 1] 27Houchens Industries–L. T. Smith Stadium
Bowling Green, Kentucky
August 27, 2022UNLV52Idaho State[lower-alpha 1]21Allegiant Stadium
Paradise, Nevada
August 27, 2022Utah State31UConn20Maverik Stadium
Logan, Utah
August 27, 2022Illinois38Wyoming6Memorial Stadium
Champaign, Illinois
August 27, 2022Florida State47Duquesne[lower-alpha 1]7Doak Campbell Stadium
Tallahassee, Florida
August 27, 2022Florida Atlantic43Charlotte13FAU Stadium
Boca Raton, Florida
August 27, 2022North Carolina56Florida A&M[lower-alpha 1]24Kenan Memorial Stadium
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
August 27, 2022North Texas31UTEP13Sun Bowl
El Paso, Texas
August 27, 2022Nevada23New Mexico State12Aggie Memorial Stadium
Las Cruces, New Mexico
August 27, 2022Vanderbilt63Hawaii10Ching Athletics Complex
Honolulu, Hawaii
August 28, 2021Illinois30Nebraska22Memorial Stadium
Champaign, Illinois
August 28, 2021Fresno State45UConn0Bulldog Stadium
Fresno, California
August 28, 2021UCLA44Hawaii10

Rose Bowl
Pasadena, California

August 28, 2021San Jose State45Southern Utah[lower-alpha 1]14CEFCU Stadium
San Jose, California
August 28, 2021UTEP30New Mexico State3Aggie Memorial Stadium
Las Cruces, New Mexico
(Battle of I-10)
August 24, 2019No. 8 Florida24Miami (FL)20Camping World Stadium
Orlando, Florida
(Camping World Kickoff)
August 24, 2019Hawaii45Arizona38Aloha Stadium
Honolulu, Hawaii
August 25, 2018Hawaii43Colorado State34Canvas Stadium
Fort Collins, Colorado
August 25, 2018UMass63Duquesne[lower-alpha 1]15Warren McGuirk Alumni Stadium
Amherst, Massachusetts
August 25, 2018Rice31Prairie View A&M[lower-alpha 1]28Rice Stadium
Houston, Texas
August 25, 2018Wyoming29New Mexico State7Aggie Memorial Stadium
Las Cruces, New Mexico
August 26, 2017BYU20Portland State[lower-alpha 1]6LaVell Edwards Stadium
Provo, Utah
August 26, 2017Colorado State58Oregon State27Canvas Stadium
Fort Collins, Colorado[lower-alpha 2]
August 26, 2017No. 19 South Florida42San Jose State22CEFCU Stadium
San Jose, California
August 26, 2017No. 14 Stanford62Rice7Sydney Football Stadium
Sydney, Australia
(Sydney Cup)
August 26, 2016California51Hawaii31Stadium Australia
Sydney, Australia
(Sydney Cup)
August 28, 2004Miami (OH)49Indiana State[lower-alpha 1]0Yager Stadium
Oxford, Ohio
August 28, 2004No. 1 USC24Virginia Tech13FedEx Field
Landover, Maryland
(BCA Classic)
August 23, 2003No. 7 Kansas State42California28KSU Stadium
Manhattan, Kansas
(BCA Classic)
August 23, 2003San Jose State29Grambling State[lower-alpha 1]0Spartan Stadium
San Jose, California
(Literacy Classic)
August 22, 2002Colorado35Virginia29Scott Stadium
Charlottesville, Virginia
(Jim Thorpe Classic)
August 23, 2002No. 25 Wisconsin23Fresno State21Camp Randall Stadium
Madison, Wisconsin
(John Thompson Foundation Classic)
August 24, 2002No. 3 Florida State38Iowa State31Arrowhead Stadium
Kansas City, Missouri
(Eddie Robinson Classic)
August 24, 2002NC State34New Mexico14Carter–Finley Stadium
Raleigh, North Carolina
(BCA Classic)
August 24, 2002No. 13 Ohio State45Texas Tech21Ohio Stadium
Columbus, Ohio
(Pigskin Classic)
August 25, 2002No. 16 Virginia Tech63Arkansas State7Lane Stadium
Blacksburg, Virginia
(Hispanic College Fund Football Classic)

Rankings reflect preseason AP Poll.

Notes
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 FCS/Div I-AA team.
  2. First game at Canvas Stadium.

See also

References

  1. Sherman, Rodger (August 27, 2019). "Why the "Week 0" College Football Game Is Here to Stay". The Ringer.
  2. Northam, Mitchell (September 1, 2019). "When does the 2019 college football season start?". NCAA.com.
  3. Godfrey, Steven (February 3, 2020). "Let's do the WEEK ZERO BIG GAME thing every year". Banner Society.
  4. "College Football Week 0: Money, Ratings, and the NCAA Football Schedule". Off Tackle Empire. August 23, 2019.
  5. "Reports: NCAA permits teams to schedule 'Week 0' games". AL.com. 2020-07-28. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
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