Quick Lane Bowl

Quick Lane Bowl
Stadium Ford Field
Location Detroit, Michigan
Operated 2014–present
Conference tie-ins Big Ten & ACC
Payout US$1,200,000 [1]
Sponsors
Ford Motor Company (2014–present)
2014 matchup
Rutgers vs. North Carolina (Rutgers 40–21)
2015 matchup
Central Michigan vs. Minnesota (Minnesota 21-14)

The Quick Lane Bowl is a post-season college football bowl game certified by the NCAA that began play in the 2014 season. Backed by the Detroit Lions of the National Football League, the game features a bowl-eligible team from the Big Ten Conference competing against an opponent from the Atlantic Coast Conference.

The Quick Lane Bowl is played at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan as a de facto replacement for the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl, and inherited its traditional December 26 scheduling. Unlike its predecessor, which placed the 8th place team in the Big Ten against the Mid-American champion, the competing teams are selected by conference representatives and not based on final rankings.[2] The Ford Motor Company serves as title sponsor of the game through its auto shop brand Quick Lane.

The inaugural game between the Rutgers Scarlet Knights and North Carolina Tar Heels was played on December 26, 2014, marking the first time the two teams had ever played each other in a bowl game.[3]

History

Before its cancellation, Comerica Park was considered as a new site for the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl.

Since 2002, Detroit's Ford Field had played host to the Motor City Bowl—later known as the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl for sponsorship reasons; a bowl game between the 8th placed team in the Big Ten Conference and the champion of the Mid-American Conference which was first played in 1997 at the Pontiac Silverdome. In May 2013, ESPN reported that the Detroit Lions were planning to organize a new Big Ten bowl game at Ford Field against an Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) opponent—Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany had expressed a desire to revamp the conference's lineup of bowl games for the 2014 season to keep them "fresh".[4] In August 2013, the Lions officially confirmed the new, then-unnamed game, tentatively scheduled for December 30, 2014. The team had reached six-year deals with the Big Ten and ACC to provide tie-ins for the game; the teams playing in the bowl are to be picked by representatives from each participating conference.[2]

The announcement of the Lions' bowl game, and the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl's loss of Ford Field as a venue, left the fate of the game—which had a relatively lower-profile matchup—in jeopardy. Detroit Lions president Tom Lewand remarked that "very few" markets could adequately support hosting two major bowl games.[5][6] Organizers were open to the possibility of moving the game across the street to Comerica Park—home stadium of the Detroit Tigers, for 2014 as an outdoor game.[5] Comerica Park, the Tigers, and game sponsor Little Caesars are all owned by Ilitch Holdings.[5] However, these plans never came to fruition.[6][4]

In August 2014, the Lions announced that the Ford Motor Company had acquired title sponsorship rights to the new Detroit bowl, now known as the Quick Lane Bowl—named for its auto shop brand Quick Lane. It was also confirmed that the inaugural game would inherit the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl's traditional date of December 26, 2014, and be televised by ESPN. In a statement to Crain's Detroit Business, Motor City Bowl co-founder Ken Hoffman confirmed that "there is no Pizza Bowl for 2014. We will have to see about the future", implying that the game has been cancelled indefinitely.[6][7]

Game results

Date Winning Team Losing Team Attendance Notes
December 26, 2014 Rutgers 40 North Carolina 21 23,876 notes
December 28, 2015 Minnesota 21 Central Michigan 14 34,217 notes

MVPs

Year MVP Team Position
2014 Josh Hicks Rutgers RB
2015 Mitch Leidner Minnesota QB

Most appearances

Rank Team Appearances Record
T1 Minnesota 1 10
T1 Rutgers 1 10
T1 Central Michigan 1 01
T1 North Carolina 1 01

Wins by conference

Conference Wins Losses Pct.
Big Ten 2 0 1.000
ACC 0 1 .000
MAC 0 1 .000

Media Coverage

Television

Date Network Play-by-play announcers Color commentators Sideline reporters
2014 ESPN[8] Mark Neely Ray Bentley Niki Noto
2015 ESPN2 Dave Neal Matt Stinchcomb Kayce Smith

Radio

Date Network Play-by-play announcers Color commentators Sideline reporters
2014 Quick Lane Radio Network Doug Karsch Jon Jansen
2015 Quick Lane Radio Network Don Chiodo Brock Gutierrez Jim Costa

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 29, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.