2014 in American football
Appearance
- December 21, 2013 – January 6, 2014: 2013–14 College Bowls[1]
- December 21, 2013: Famous Idaho Potato Bowl at Boise[2]
- San Diego State defeated Buffalo 49–24.
- December 21, 2013: Las Vegas Bowl[3]
- USC defeated Fresno State 45–20.
- December 21, 2013: New Mexico Bowl at Albuquerque[4]
- Colorado State defeated Washington State 48–45.
- December 21, 2013: New Orleans Bowl[5]
- LA-Lafayette defeated Tulane 24–21.
- December 23, 2013: Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl at St. Petersburg[6]
- East Carolina defeated Ohio 37–20.
- December 24, 2013: Hawaii Bowl at Honolulu[7]
- Oregon State defeated Boise State 38–23.
- December 26, 2013: Little Caesars Pizza Bowl at Detroit[8]
- Pittsburgh defeated Bowling Green 30–27.
- December 26, 2013: Poinsettia Bowl at San Diego[9]
- Utah State defeated Northern Illinois 21–14.
- December 27, 2013: Fight Hunger Bowl at San Francisco[10]
- Washington defeated BYU 31–16.
- December 27, 2013: Military Bowl at Annapolis, Maryland[11]
- December 27, 2013: Texas Bowl at Houston[12]
- December 28, 2013: Belk Bowl at Charlotte, North Carolina[13]
- North Carolina defeated Cincinnati 38–17.
- December 28, 2013: Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl at Tempe, Arizona[14]
- Kansas State defeated Michigan 31–14.
- December 28, 2013: Pinstripe Bowl at The Bronx (New York City)[15]
- Notre Dame defeated Rutgers 29–16.
- December 28, 2013: Russell Athletic Bowl at Orlando, Florida[16]
- Louisville defeated Miami (FL) 36–9.
- December 30, 2013: Alamo Bowl at San Antonio[17]
- December 30, 2013: Armed Forces Bowl at Fort Worth, Texas[18]
- Navy defeated Middle Tennessee 24–6.
- December 30, 2013: Holiday Bowl at San Diego[19]
- Texas Tech defeated Arizona State 37–23.
- December 30, 2013: Music City Bowl at Nashville, Tennessee[20]
- Ole Miss defeated Georgia Tech 25–17.
- December 31, 2013: AdvoCare V100 Bowl at Shreveport, Louisiana[21]
- Arizona defeated Boston College 42–19.
- December 31, 2013: Chick-fil-A Bowl at Atlanta[22]
- December 31, 2013: Liberty Bowl at Memphis, Tennessee[23]
- Mississippi State defeated Rice 44–7.
- December 31, 2013: Sun Bowl at El Paso, Texas[24]
- UCLA defeated Virginia Tech 42–12.
- January 1, 2014: Capital One Bowl at Orlando, Florida[25]
- South Carolina defeated Wisconsin 34–24.
- January 1, 2014: Fiesta Bowl at Glendale, Arizona[26]
- January 1, 2014: Gator Bowl at Jacksonville, Florida[27]
- January 1, 2014: Heart of Dallas Bowl[28]
- North Texas defeated UNLV 36–14.
- January 1, 2014: Outback Bowl at Tampa, Florida[29]
- January 1, 2014: Rose Bowl Game at Pasadena, California[30]
- Michigan State defeated Stanford 24–20.
- January 2, 2014: Sugar Bowl at New Orleans[31]
- January 3, 2014: Cotton Bowl at Dallas[32]
- Missouri defeated Oklahoma State 41–31.
- January 3, 2014: Orange Bowl at Miami Gardens, Florida[33]
- Clemson defeated Ohio State 40–35.
- January 4, 2014: BBVA Compass Bowl at Birmingham, Alabama[34]
- Vanderbilt defeated Houston 41–24.
- January 5, 2014: GoDaddy Bowl at Mobile, Alabama[35]
- Arkansas State defeated Ball State 23–20.
- January 6, 2014: BCS National Championship Game at Pasadena, California[36]
- #1 Florida State defeated #2 Auburn 34–31.
- December 21, 2013: Famous Idaho Potato Bowl at Boise[2]
- January 26: 2014 Pro Bowl in Halawa, Hawaii (outside of Honolulu) at Aloha Stadium
- February 2: The National Football League championship, Super Bowl XLVIII, at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey
- Seattle Seahawks defeated the Denver Broncos 43–8, to claim its first title.
- May 30 – June 7: 2014 EFAF European Championship in Austria (final stage takes place at the Ernst-Happel-Stadion in Vienna)
- July 5 – 17: 2014 IFAF U-19 World Championship in Kuwait City[37][38]
- The United States defeated Canada, 40–17, to claim its second IFAF junior title. Mexico took the bronze medal.
- July 11 – 13: 2014 IFAF Europe Champions League Final Four in Élancourt[39]
- Helsinki Roosters defeated SBB Vukovi Beograd, 36–29, to claim the debut ECL title.[40]
- July 19: 2014 EFAF Eurobowl in Berlin
- Berlin Adler defeated fellow German team, the New Yorker Lions, 20–17, to claim its second Eurobowl title.
- September 4 – December 28: 2014 NFL season
- American Football Conference season winner: New England Patriots
- National Football Conference season winner: Seattle Seahawks
- September 10 – 12: 2014 IFAF Flag Football World Championship in Grosseto[41][42]
- Note: This event was scheduled to take place in Jerusalem, from August 12 – 15. However, the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict gave the IFAF the go-ahead to move the event from there to alternate host nation of Italy, on July 28, 2014.
- Men -> Champions: United States; Second: Mexico; Third: Italy[43]
- Women -> Champions: Canada; Second: United States; Third: Austria[44]
- Class of 2014:
- Derrick Brooks, player
- Ray Guy, player
- Claude Humphrey, player
- Walter Jones, player
- Andre Reed, player
- Michael Strahan, player
- Aeneas Williams, player
References
[edit]- ^ ESPN's College Bowls Schedule and Results
- ^ ESPN 2013 Potato Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Las Vegas Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 New Mexico Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 New Orleans Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Hawaii Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Poinsettia Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Fight Hunger Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Military Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Texas Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Belk Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Pinstripe Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Russell Athletic Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Alamo Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Armed Forces Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Holiday Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Music City Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 AdvoCare V100 Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Chick-fil-A Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Liberty Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2013 Sun Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 Capital One Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 Fiesta Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 Gator Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 Heart of Dallas Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 Outback Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 Rose Bowl Game Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 Sugar Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 Cotton Bowl Classic Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 Orange Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 BBVA Compass Bowl Result
- ^ ESPN 2014 GoDaddy Bowl Result[dead link ]
- ^ ESPN 2014 BCS National Championship Game Result
- ^ KUWAIT NAMED HOST OF U-19 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP IN 2014[usurped]
- ^ 2014 IFAF U19 WC Schedule
- ^ IFAF EUROPE CHAMPIONS LEAGUE ANNOUNCE PLAYOFF FORMAT
- ^ "2014 IFAF Europe Champions League Schedule". Archived from the original on 2014-12-04. Retrieved 2016-11-26.
- ^ Women's Schedule
- ^ Men's Schedule
- ^ 2014 IFAF Flag Football Men's Playoff Bracket
- ^ 2014 IFAF Flag Football Women's Playoff Bracket