The Pioneer Bowl was an annual college football postseason game held at Memorial Stadium in Wichita Falls, Texas, from 1971 through 1978 and again in 1981 and 1982. The game originated as an NCAA College Division regional final, then became a playoff game for Division II and Division I-AA.

Quick Facts (defunct), Stadium ...
Pioneer Bowl (defunct)
StadiumMemorial Stadium
LocationWichita Falls, Texas
Operated1971–1978, 1981–1982
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Thumb
Program cover for the 1971 game

History

The Pioneer Bowl originated as one of the four regional finals of the College Division, before it was subdivided into Division II and Division III in 1973. The game served as the championship for the Midwest Region in 1971 and 1972, at a time when there were no playoffs at any level of NCAA football. For the smaller colleges and universities, as for the major programs, the national champion was determined by polls conducted by the leading news wire services.

As Midwest Region final, the game succeeded the Pecan Bowl, which was played in Abilene, Texas from 1964 to 1967 and Arlington, Texas, from 1968 to 1970. At the time, the other three regional finals were the Boardwalk, Grantland Rice, and Camellia bowls.

The Wichita Falls Board of Commerce and Industry (BCI) secured the Pecan Bowl for the city in March 1971.[1] The game was renamed the Pioneer Bowl after a name-the-bowl contest, with the winning entry announced in May 1971.[2]

After the launch of Division II in 1973 and its full playoff system, the Pioneer Bowl became one of the two Division II semifinals (along with the Grantland Rice Bowl) for the first three years, and then became the championship game for two years. For the inaugural season of Division I-AA in 1978, the Pioneer Bowl became the new division's title game.[3] Wichita Falls then retained the rights to the Pioneer Bowl name during a two-year hiatus,[4] while the I-AA championship was decided in Florida in 1979, and in the Camellia Bowl in California in 1980. The Pioneer Bowl again hosted the I-AA title game in 1981 and 1982.

The game never quite sold out its 14,500-seat venue, though in most years the stadium was nearly full. If local press is any indication, the crowd of "only 11,257 fans" that attended the 1982 game was considered a disappointment.[5] The bowl folded after a group from Charleston, South Carolina, outbid the Wichita Falls BCI for the next contract to host the I-AA championship.[6]

"Pioneer Bowl" was used in 1993 as the name of a fictional bowl game played at the Alamodome in the television series Coach.[7]

Game results

More information Date played, Winning team ...
Date playedWinning teamLosing teamNotesNCAA playoff
December 11, 1971Louisiana Tech14Eastern Michigan3[8]College Division
Regional Final
December 9, 1972Tennessee State29Drake7[9]
December 8, 1973Louisiana Tech38Boise State34[10]Division II
semifinal
December 7, 1974Central Michigan35Louisiana Tech14[11]
December 6, 1975Northern Michigan28West Alabama26[12]
December 11, 1976Montana State24Akron13[13]Division II
championship
December 10, 1977Lehigh33Jacksonville State0[14]
December 16, 1978Florida A&M35Massachusetts28[15]Division I-AA
championship
December 19, 1981Idaho State34Eastern Kentucky23[16]
December 18, 1982Eastern Kentucky17Delaware14[17]
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The University of West Alabama was known as Livingston University until 1995

See also

References

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