College football postseason game
College football bowl game
The Myrtle Beach Bowl is an NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) college football bowl game first played in December 2020 in the Myrtle Beach metropolitan area . Coastal Carolina University hosts the game at its Brooks Stadium in Conway, South Carolina , which has a capacity of 20,000 seats following an expansion project completed prior to the 2019 season.[ 1] Owned by ESPN Events , the bowl has tie-ins with Conference USA , the Mid-American Conference and the Sun Belt Conference .[ 2] The affiliation contract with ESPN Events has each conference supplying a team four times in a six-year bowl cycle from 2020 to 2025.[ 3] The Myrtle Beach Bowl is one of three bowl games that have never released payout totals for the teams involved in the game (the Fenway Bowl and the LA Bowl are the others).
Background
In 2013, "Group of Five" conferences were looking to start bowl games for their leagues, as the Power Five conferences "prefer to play each other in bowl games".[ 4] The NCAA had a restriction on championship games, including bowl games, being held in South Carolina due to display of the Confederate flag on State House grounds, which was lifted in July 2015.[ 5] Organizers for the Medal of Honor Bowl , an all-star game, announced their intent to apply for NCAA sanctioning as a traditional postseason bowl game featuring FBS college teams, with a tentative game date of December 18, 2016.[ 6] However, in April 2016, the NCAA announced a three-year moratorium on new bowl games.[ 7]
History
In June 2018, the NCAA indicated that the Grand Strand area was approved for a bowl game.[ 5] The Myrtle Beach Bowl was subsequently announced on November 13, 2018, by ESPN Events,[ 8] with tie-ins to three conferences: the Sun Belt Conference , Conference USA (C-USA), and Mid-American Conference (MAC).[ 9] During 2017–18 bowl season , there had been three teams that were bowl eligible but did not go to a bowl, as all slots were filled: Western Michigan and Buffalo from the MAC, and UTSA from C-USA.[ 3]
The bowl made its debut as part of the 2020–21 bowl season , matching North Texas of C-USA and Appalachian State of the Sun Belt.[ 10]
Game results
Tulsa quarterback Davis Brin takes a knee to end the 2021 game
Date
Winning Team
Losing Team
Attendance
Notes
December 21, 2020
Appalachian State
56
North Texas
28
5,000
notes
December 20, 2021
Tulsa
30
Old Dominion
17
6,557
notes
December 19, 2022
Marshall
28
UConn
14
12,023
notes
December 16, 2023
Ohio
41
Georgia Southern
21
8,059
notes
December 23, 2024
UTSA
44
Coastal Carolina
15
8,164
notes
MVPs
Appearances by team
Updated through the December 2024 edition (5 games, 10 total appearances).
Appearances by conference
Updated through the December 2024 edition (5 games, 10 total appearances).
Conference
Record
Appearances by season
Games
W
L
Win pct.
Won
Lost
Sun Belt
4
2
2
.500
2020, 2022
2023, 2024
The American
2
2
0
1.000
2021, 2024
C-USA
2
0
2
.000
2020, 2021
MAC
1
1
0
1.000
2023
Independent
1
0
1
.000
2022
Independent appearances: UConn (2022)
The bowl has been televised by ESPN since its inception.
Game records
Updated through the December 2024 game.
Team
Performance vs. Opponent
Year
Most points scored
56 , Appalachian State vs. North Texas
2020
Fewest points allowed
14 , Marshall vs. UConn
2022
Margin of victory
29 , UTSA vs. Coastal Carolina
2024
First downs
35 , Tulsa vs. Old Dominion
2021
Total yards
638 , Appalachian State vs. North Texas
2020
Rushing yards
502 , Appalachian State vs. North Texas
2020
Passing yards
350 , Georgia Southern vs. Ohio
2023
Most points scored (losing team)
28 , North Texas vs. Appalachian State
2020
Most points scored (both teams)
84 , Appalachian State vs. North Texas
2020
Fewest yards allowed
247 , Old Dominion vs. Tulsa
2021
Fewest rushing yards allowed
33 , Ohio vs. Georgia Southern
2023
Fewest passing yards allowed
93 , Marshall vs. UConn
2022
Individual
Player (Team)
Year
Points scored
30 , shared by: Camerun Peoples (Appalachian State) Rickey Hunt (Ohio)
2020 2023
All-Purpose yards
317 , Camerun Peoples (Appalachian State)
2020
Rushing yards
317 , Camerun Peoples (Appalachian State)
2020
Passing yards
350 , Davis Brin (Georgia Southern)
2023
Receiving yards
131 , Austin Ogunmakin (North Texas)
2020
Touchdowns (all-purpose)
5 , shared by: Camerun Peoples (Appalachian State) Rickey Hunt (Ohio)
2020 2023
Passing touchdowns
2 , shared by: Jason Bean (North Texas) Davis Brin (Tulsa) Cam Fancher (Marshall) Davis Brin (Georgia Southern) Tad Hudson (Coastal Carolina)
2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
Rushing touchdowns
5 , Camerun Peoples (Appalachian State)
2020
Receiving touchdowns
2 , shared by: Henry Pearson (Appalachian State) Loronzo Thompson (North Texas)
2020
Receptions
8 , Josh Johnson (Tulsa)
2021
Tackles
13 , shared by: Kaiden Smith (Appalachian State) Jason Henderson (Old Dominion) R'Tarriun Johnson (Old Dominion)
2020 2021 2021
Tackles for loss
3 , shared by: Nick Hampton (Appalachian State) Jordan Young (Old Dominion) Bradley Weaver (Ohio) Martavius French (UTSA)
2020 2021 2023 2024
Sacks
2.0 , shared by: Vonnie Watkins (Ohio) Bradley Weaver (Ohio) Brandon Brown (UTSA)
2023 2023 2024
Interceptions
1 , shared by multiple people; most recent: Jakevian Rodgers (UTSA) Shane Bruce (Coastal Carolina)
2024 2024
Long Plays
Record, Player, Team
Year
Touchdown run
70 yds., Marcus Williams Jr. (Appalachian State)
2020
Touchdown pass
65 yds ., Davis Brin (Georgia Southern)
2023
Kickoff return
100 yds. , LaMareon James (Old Dominion)
2021
Punt return
15 yds. , Keegan Wilburn (Georgia Southern)
2023
Interception return
63 yds. , Steven Jones (Appalachian State)
2020
Fumble return
30 yds. , Roman Parodie (Ohio)
2023
Punt
56 yds. , Caile Hogan (UTSA)
2024
Field goal
38 yds. , Tate Sandell (UTSA)
2024
References
^ Blondin, Alan (August 8, 2019). "Expansion of Brooks Stadium is complete. What the new capacity and features mean for CCU" . Myrtle Beach Sun News . Retrieved March 26, 2020 .
^ "New FBS postseason game, Myrtle Beach Bowl, to start in 2020" . AP News . November 13, 2018. Retrieved November 14, 2018 .
^ a b Nothaft, Patrick (November 13, 2018). "New college football bowl game to feature MAC, Sun Belt and C-USA teams" . Kalamazoo Gazette . MLive Media Group. Retrieved November 14, 2018 .
^ McMurphy, Brett (June 11, 2013). " 'Group of Five' look to add bowls" . ESPN . Retrieved June 11, 2013 .
^ a b Asberry, Derrek (November 13, 2018). "Myrtle Beach Bowl to become first college football bowl game played in South Carolina" . Post and Courier . Retrieved November 14, 2018 .
^ Hartsell, Jeff (August 26, 2015). "Medal of Honor Bowl now a 'traditional' bowl game" . The Post and Courier . Charleston, South Carolina . Retrieved August 29, 2015 .
^ McMurphy, Brett (April 11, 2016). "NCAA approves three-year halt to new bowl games" . ESPN.com . Retrieved May 21, 2017 .
^ Taylor, John (November 13, 2018). "ESPN-owned Myrtle Beach Bowl to debut in 2020" . CollegeFootballTalk . NBC Sports. Retrieved November 14, 2018 .
^ "ESPN Events Announces Creation of Myrtle Beach Bowl Beginning in 2020" . myrtlebeachbowlgame.com . November 13, 2018. Retrieved December 21, 2020 .
^ "Myrtle Beach Bowl Preview: App State vs. North Texas" . App State Athletics . 20 December 2020. Retrieved December 20, 2020 .
^ "App State's Peoples has historic day in Inaugural Myrtle Beach Bowl" . WCSC-TV . AP . December 21, 2020. Retrieved December 22, 2020 .
^ IACOBELLI, PETE (21 December 2021). "Brin, Tulsa take Myrtle Beach Bowl 30-17 over Old Dominion" . Chron . Retrieved 21 December 2021 .
^ @LukeCreasy (December 19, 2022). "Rasheen Ali is the 2022 Myrtle Beach Bowl MVP" (Tweet ). Retrieved December 19, 2022 – via Twitter .
^
^ @4thandsaturday (December 23, 2024). "Myrtle Beach Bowl MVP Owen McCown" (Tweet ). Retrieved December 23, 2024 – via Twitter .
External links