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Hawaii Bowl Wiki Information
The Hawaiʻi Bowl
is a post-season National Collegiate Athletic Association Football Bowl Subdivision college football bowl game that has been played annually at Aloha Stadium in ʻAiea, Hawaiʻi, a suburb of Honolulu on the island of Oʻahu since 2002. Typically played on either Christmas Day or Christmas Eve, the game matches teams from either Conference USA or the Pac-10 vs. WAC member schools. The bowl is one of six post-season contests run by ESPN Regional Television ("ESPN Plus"), a subsidiary of ESPN, which has carried the game since its outset.
In its first year, the Hawaiʻi Bowl was sponsored by ConAgra Foods. The following year, Sheraton Hotels and Resorts Hawaii assumed sponsorship which it continues to hold today; the game's full name was changed to the Sheraton Hawaiʻi Bowl
. The game succeeded the Aloha Bowl (played 1982–2000) and the Oʻahu Bowl (played 1998–2000) as bowl games played in Hawaiʻi; however, this bowl is a new event not affiliated with the previous games. While the Aloha Bowl tried to move to San Francisco, California and was decertified by the NCAA, the Oʻahu Bowl was moved to Seattle, Washington and was held for two years as the Seattle Bowl before losing certification on 2002.
As part of the agreement with the WAC, a "Hawaiʻi guarantee" allows the University of Hawaiʻi a bid in the Hawaiʻi Bowl regardless of its standings in the WAC, provided it is bowl eligible and doesn't qualify for the BCS (as it did in 2007).
The 2005 appearance of the University of Central Florida at the Hawaiʻi Bowl was the first ever bowl game in that school's history.
In 2006, the Pac-10 replaced C-USA as the WAC's opposition. If the Pac-10 was not able to provide a bowl-eligible team, C-USA would have supplied the team (assuming it had a sixth team that was bowl eligible). If neither conference had a bowl-eligible team, the spot would have been filled by an at-large team. In 2007, C-USA had a guaranteed spot in the Hawaiʻi Bowl, which was filled by the East Carolina Pirates. [1]
Since Christmas Eve fell on a Monday in 2007, the game was scheduled for the night prior (December 23) to avoid a conflict with Monday Night Football
(also on ESPN).
The 2008-09 bowl season marked the first time the Notre Dame Fighting Irish competed in the Hawai'i Bowl, winning against the Hawaii Warriors in a blowout victory.
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HAWAII BOWL TICKETS
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Previous results
| Season
| Date Played
| Home Team
| Visiting Team
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| 2002
| December 25, 2002
| Hawaiʻi
| 28
| Tulane
| 36
| notes
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| 2003
| December 25, 2003
| Hawaiʻi
| 54
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| 48*
| notes
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| 2004
| December 24, 2004
| Hawaiʻi
| 59
| UAB
| 40
| notes
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| 2005
| December 24, 2005
|
| 49
|
| 48*
| notes
|
| 2006
| December 24, 2006
| Hawaiʻi
| 41
| Arizona State
| 24
| notes
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| 2007
| December 23, 2007
| Boise State
| 38
| East Carolina
| 41
| notes
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| 2008
| December 24, 2008
| Notre Dame
| 49
| Hawai'i
| 21
| notes
|
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* Overtime game
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MVPs
| Date played
| MVP(s)
| School
| Position
|
| December 25, 2002
| Lynaris Elpheage
| Tulane
| CB
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| December 25, 2003
| Timmy Chang
| Hawaiʻi
| QB
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| December 24, 2004
| Chad Owens
| Hawaiʻi
| WR
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| Timmy Chang
| Hawaiʻi
| QB
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| December 24, 2005
| Brandon Marshall
| Central Florida
| WR
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| December 24, 2006
| Colt Brennan
| Hawaiʻi
| QB
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| Jason Rivers
| Hawaiʻi
| WR
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| December 23, 2007
| Chris Johnson
| East Carolina
| RB
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| December 24, 2008
| Jimmy Clausen
| Notre Dame
| QB
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| Golden Tate
| Notre Dame
| WR
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Most Appearances
| Rank
| Team
| Appearances
| Record
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| 1
| Hawaii
| 5
| 3-2
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| T2
| East Carolina
| 1
| 1-0
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| T2
| Nevada
| 1
| 1-0
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| T2
| Notre Dame
| 1
| 1-0
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| T2
| Tulane
| 1
| 1-0
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| T2
| Arizona State
| 1
| 0-1
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| T2
| Boise State
| 1
| 0-1
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| T2
| Central Florida
| 1
| 0-1
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| T2
| Houston
| 1
| 0-1
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| T2
| UAB
| 1
| 0-1
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See also
- Poi Bowl (1936–1939)
- Pineapple Bowl (1940–1952)
- Aloha Bowl (1982–2000)
- Oʻahu Bowl (1998–2000)
- Hula Bowl (since 1960)
- Hawai'i Bowl broadcasters
- List of college bowl games
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