1986–87 NCAA football bowl games

The 1986–87 NCAA football bowl games were a series of post-season games played in December 1986 and January 1987 to end the 1986 NCAA Division I-A football season. A total of 18 team-competitive games,[1] and two all-star games, were played. The post-season began with the California Bowl on December 13, 1986, and concluded on January 17, 1987, with the season-ending Senior Bowl.

1986–87 NCAA football bowl games
Season1986
Number of bowls18
Bowl gamesDecember 13, 1986 –
January 2, 1987
National Championship1987 Fiesta Bowl
Location of ChampionshipSun Devil Stadium,
Tempe, Arizona
ChampionsPenn State Nittany Lions
Bowl record by conference
Conference Bowls Record Number of teams
in final AP poll
SEC 6 4–2 (0.667) 3
Pac-10 6 3–3 (0.500) 4
Independents 5 4–1 (0.800) 4
Big Ten 5 2–3 (0.400) 3
SWC 4 1–3 (0.250) 3
Big Eight 3 2–1 (0.667) 2
ACC 3 1–2 (0.333) 1
WAC 2 0–2 (0.000) 0
PCAA 1 1–0 (1.000) 0
MAC 1 0–1 (0.000) 0

Schedule

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Date Game Site Time
(US EST)
TV Matchup
(pre-game record)
AP
pre-game
rank
UPI (Coaches)
pre-game
rank
12/13 California Bowl Bulldog Stadium
Fresno, California
  ESPN San Jose State 37 (9–2) (PCAA Champion),
Miami 7 (8–3) (MAC Champion)
NR
NR
#19
NR
12/20 Independence Bowl Independence Stadium
Shreveport, Louisiana
  Mizlou Ole Miss 20 (7–3–1) (SEC),
Texas Tech 17 (7–4) (SWC)
NR
NR
NR
NR
12/23 Hall of Fame Bowl Tampa Stadium
Tampa, Florida
  Mizlou Boston College 27 (8–3) (Independent),
Georgia 24 (8–3) (SEC)
NR
NR
NR
#17
12/25 Sun Bowl Sun Bowl
El Paso, Texas
  CBS Alabama 28 (9–3) (SEC),
Washington 6 (8–2–1) (Pac-10)
#13
#12
#14
#11
12/27 Aloha Bowl Aloha Stadium
Honolulu, Hawaii
  ABC Arizona 30 (8–3) (Pac-10),
North Carolina 21 (7–3–1) (ACC)
#16
NR
#13
NR
12/27 Gator Bowl Gator Bowl Stadium
Jacksonville, Florida
  CBS Clemson 27 (7–2–2) (ACC Champion),
Stanford 21 (8–3) (Pac-10)
NR
#20
#18
#17
12/29 Liberty Bowl Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium
Memphis, Tennessee
  Raycom Sports Tennessee 21 (6–5) (SEC),
Minnesota 14 (6–5) (Big Ten)
NR
NR
NR
NR
12/30 Holiday Bowl[2] Jack Murphy Stadium
San Diego, California
  ESPN Iowa 39 (8–3) (Big Ten),
San Diego State 38 (8–3) (WAC Champion)
#19
NR
RV
NR
12/30 Freedom Bowl Anaheim Stadium
Anaheim, California
  Mizlou UCLA 31 (7–3–1) (Pac-10),
BYU 10 (8–4) (WAC)
#15
NR
#15
NR
12/31 Bluebonnet Bowl Rice Stadium
Houston, Texas
  Raycom Sports Baylor 21 (8–3) (SWC),
Colorado 9 (6–5) (Big Eight)
#14
NR
#16
NR
12/31 All-American Bowl Legion Field
Birmingham, Alabama
  TBS Florida State 27 (6–4–1) (Independent),
Indiana 13 (6–5) (Big Ten)
NR
NR
NR
NR
12/31 Peach Bowl Fulton County Stadium
Atlanta
  Mizlou Virginia Tech 25 (8–2–1) (Independent),
NC State 24 (8–2–1) (ACC)
NR
#18
NR
NR
1/1 Florida Citrus Bowl[3] Florida Citrus Bowl
Orlando, Florida
12:00 PM ABC Auburn 16 (9–2) (SEC),
USC 7 (7–4) (Pac-10)
#10
NR
#9
NR
1/1 Cotton Bowl Classic[4] Cotton Bowl
Dallas, Texas
1:30 PM CBS Ohio State 28 (9–3) (Big Ten co-Champion),
Texas A&M 12 (9–2) (SWC Champion)
#11
#8
#12
#7
1/1 Sugar Bowl[5] Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans, Louisiana
3:30 PM[6] ABC Nebraska 30 (9–2) (Big Eight),
LSU 15 (9–2) (SEC Champion)
#6
#5
#5
#6
1/1 Rose Bowl[7] Rose Bowl
Pasadena, California
4:30 PM NBC Arizona State 22 (9–1–1) (Pac-10 Champion),
Michigan 15 (10–1) (Big Ten co-Champion)
#7
#4
#8
#4
1/1 Orange Bowl[8] Miami Orange Bowl
Miami
8:00 PM NBC Oklahoma 42 (10–1) (Big Eight Champion),
Arkansas 8 (9–2) (SWC)
#3
#9
#3
#10
1/2 Fiesta Bowl[9] Sun Devil Stadium
Tempe, Arizona
8:00 PM NBC Penn State 14 (11–0) (Independent),
Miami (FL) 10 (11–0) (Independent)
#2
#1
#2
#1

References

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