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{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{Infobox NCAA football yearly game
{{Infobox college football game
| Game Name = Champs Sports Bowl
| name =
| Optional Subheader = Bowl Game
| Title Sponsor =
| year_game_played = 2009
| Image = ‎[[Image:Champs sports bowl.jpg|200px]]
| game_name = Champs Sports Bowl
| Caption = Champs Sports Bowl logo
| caption = Champs Sports Bowl logo
| football_season = 2009
| Date Game Played = December 29
| visitor_name_short = Miami
| Year Game Played = 2009
| visitor_nickname = Hurricanes
| Football Season = 2009
| Stadium = [[Citrus Bowl]]
| visitor_school = University of Miami
| City = {{City-state|Orlando|Florida}}
| home_name_short = Wisconsin
| home_nickname = Badgers
| Visitor School = University of Wisconsin-Madison
| Visitor Name Short = Wisconsin
| home_school = University of Wisconsin-Madison
| visitor_record = 9–3
| Visitor Nickname = Badgers
| visitor_conference = [[Atlantic Coast Conference|ACC]]
| Visitor Record = 9-3
| Visitor AP = 24
| home_record = 9–3
| home_conference = [[Big Ten Conference|Big Ten]]
| Visitor Coaches = 22
| Visitor BCS = 25
| visitor_coach = [[Randy Shannon]]
| Visitor Coach = [[Bret Bielema]]
| home_coach = [[Bret Bielema]]
| Visitor1 =
| visitor_rank_AP = 14
| Visitor2 =
| visitor_rank_coaches = 15
| Visitor3 =
| visitor_rank_BCS = 15
| Visitor4 =
| home_rank_AP = 24
| Home School = University of Miami
| home_rank_coaches = 22
| Home Name Short = Miami
| home_rank_BCS = 25
| Home Nickname = Hurricanes
| visitor_1q = 7
| Home Record = 9-3
| visitor_2q = 0
| Home AP = 14
| visitor_3q = 0
| Home Coaches = 15
| visitor_4q = 7
| Home BCS = 15
| home_1q = 7
| Home Coach = [[Randy Shannon]]
| home_2q = 10
| Home1 =
| home_3q = 0
| Home2 =
| home_4q = 3
| Home3 =
| date_game_played = December 29
| Home4 =
| stadium = [[Florida Citrus Bowl]]
| MVP =
| city = [[Orlando, Florida]]
| Odds = Miami -3
| MVP = RB [[John Clay (running back)|John Clay]] (Wisconsin)
| Anthem =
| referee = Hubert Owens ([[Southeastern Conference|SEC]])
| Referee =
| attendance = 56,747
| Halftime =
| payout = 2,225,000 <small> per team</small>
| Attendance =
| us_network = [[ESPN]]
| Payout = 2,225,000 <small> per team
| us_announcers_link = List of announcers of major college bowl games
| us_announcers = [[Brad Nessler]] (Play by Play) <br> [[Todd Blackledge]] (Analyst) <br> [[Holly Rowe]] (Sideline)
| US Network = [[ESPN]]
| ratings = 3.9<ref>Jon Solomon, [http://media.al.com/solomon/photo/113bcstvjpg-3d3c3517c7fc3bf3.jpg 2009-10 Bowl TV Ratings], ''The Birmingham News'', January 13, 2010</ref>
| US Announcers =
| Ratings =
| Intl Network =
| Intl Announcers =
}}
}}


The '''2009 [[Champs Sports Bowl]]''' will be the 20th edition of the [[college football]] [[bowl game]], and will be played at the [[Citrus Bowl]] in [[Orlando, Florida]]. The game is scheduled to start at 8:00 PM [[North American Eastern Time Zone|US EST]] on Tuesday, December 29, [[2009 NCAA Division I FBS football season|2009]]. The game will be telecast on [[ESPN]] and will match the [[2009 Wisconsin Badgers football team|Wisconsin Badgers]] of the [[Big 10 Conference|Big 10]] and the [[2009 Miami Hurricanes football team|Miami Hurricanes]] of the [[2009 ACC football season|ACC]].
The '''2009 Champs Sports Bowl''' was a [[college football]] [[bowl game]] between the [[2009 Miami Hurricanes football team|Miami Hurricanes]] of the [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] and the [[2009 Wisconsin Badgers football team|Wisconsin Badgers]] of the [[Big Ten Conference]]. Played at the [[Citrus Bowl]] in [[Orlando, Florida]], the game started at 8:00&nbsp;p.m. [[North American Eastern Time Zone|US EST]] on Tuesday, December 29, [[2009 NCAA Division I FBS football season|2009]], and was televised by [[ESPN]]. Wisconsin won the game 20-14.


The 2009 game will mark the last time in the foreseeable future that the [[Big 10]] will be represented in the bowl game. A four year contract was signed so that starting in 2010 the [[Big East]] will send a team to the bowl instead.
The 2009 game marked the last time in the foreseeable future that the [[Big Ten Conference|Big 10]] was represented in the bowl game. A four-year contract was signed so that starting in 2010 the [[Big East Conference (1979–2013)|Big East]] will send a team to the bowl instead.


Miami will be making its third appearance in the bowl, they last played in the game in [[1998 MicronPC Bowl|1998]] where they easily defeated {{cfb link|year=1998|team=NC State Wolfpack|title=North Carolina State}} 46-23. The Canes' are perfect in their two previous appearances. Wisconsin will making its second appearance in as many years. They were defeated in the [[2008 Champs Sports Bowl|2008 game]] by [[2008 Florida State Seminoles football team|Florida State]] 42-13.
Miami made its third appearance in the bowl, they last played in the game in [[1998 MicronPC Bowl|1998]] where they easily defeated [[1998 NC State Wolfpack football team|North Carolina State]] 46–23. The Canes won their two previous appearances. Meanwhile, Wisconsin made its second appearance in as many years. They were defeated in the [[2008 Champs Sports Bowl|2008 game]] by [[2008 Florida State Seminoles football team|Florida State]] 42–13.


The bowl game marks the fourth time that the two schools have faced each other and the first time they will meet in the post-season. Miami holds a 2-1 series advantage with the last meeting being a 51-3 thrashing by the Hurricanes in opening game of the [[1989 NCAA Division I-A football season|1989 season]]. Miami would go on to win their 3rd [[National Championship]] that year.
The bowl game marked the fourth time that the two schools have faced each other and the first time in the post-season. Miami previously held a 2–1 series advantage (now 2-2) with the last meeting being a 51–3 thrashing by the Hurricanes in opening game of the [[1989 NCAA Division I-A football season|1989 season]]. Miami would go on to win their third [[national championship]] that year.

==Game summary==
Miami wore their away white jerseys, and Wisconsin wore their home red jerseys.

Wisconsin [[Sophomore year|sophomore]] [[Halfback (American football)|tailback]], [[John Clay (running back)|John Clay]] rushed for 121 yards and two touchdowns on his way to being named the bowl MVP. [[Quarterback]] [[Scott Tolzien]] threw for 260 yards, and [[Montee Ball]] added 61 yards rushing for the Badgers, who defeated their first ranked opponent of the season and also reached the 10 win plateau for the first time since 2006. Miami quarterback Jacory Harris struggled for much of the game being [[Quarterback sack|sacked]] 5 times and knocked down on several other plays. Harris did finally find the endzone with 1:22 left in the game and finished with 188 yards passing.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/recap?gameId=293630275|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091231141702/http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/recap?gameId=293630275|url-status=dead|archive-date=December 31, 2009|title = Miami vs. Wisconsin - Game Recap - December 29, 2009 - ESPN}}</ref>

The game displayed a sharp contrast in the locations of the two schools. Although played in the typical warm weather city of [[Orlando, Florida|Orlando]], the game time temperature was only about 40 degrees. Most Miami players wore long sleeves and would stand by heaters on the sidelines, however almost all Wisconsin players wore short sleeves and stated prior to the game that it felt like spring. The 56,747 fans in attendance was the highest total to ever watch a Champs Sports Bowl game since the game moved to Orlando in 2001. The attendance number also ranks second overall in bowl history as the only other game with more fans present was the [[1990 Blockbuster Bowl]] played between [[1990 Florida State Seminoles football team|Florida State]] and [[1990 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Penn State]] in [[Miami]].

===Scoring summary===
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Scoring Play
! Score
|-
|colspan="4" align="center"| '''1st Quarter'''
|-
|MIA — [[Graig Cooper]] 16-yard run ([[Matt Bosher]] kick), 14:37
|MIA 7–0
|-
|WIS — [[John Clay (running back)|John Clay]] 3-yard run (Philip Welch kick), 7:12
|TIE 7–7
|-
|colspan="4" align="center"| '''2nd Quarter'''
|-
|WIS — John Clay 3-yard run (Philip Welch kick), 8:07
|WIS 14–7
|-
|WIS — Philip Welch 37-yard field goal, 0:12
|WIS 17–7
|-
|colspan="4" align="center"| '''3rd Quarter'''
|-
|None
|
|-
|colspan="4" align="center"| '''4th Quarter'''
|-
|WIS — Philip Welch 28-yard field goal, 4:01
|WIS 20-7
|-
|MIA — Thearon Collier 14-yard pass from [[Jacory Harris]] (Matt Bosher kick), 1:22
|WIS 20-14
|-
|}
{{Clear}}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


{{2009 bowl game navbox}}
==External links==
{{Cheez-It Bowl navbox}}
*[http://www.champssportsbowl.com Official Website of the Champs Sports Bowl]
{{Miami Hurricanes bowl game navbox}}

{{Wisconsin Badgers bowl game navbox}}
{{2009 Bowl Games}}
{{Champs Sports Bowl}}
{{Miami bowl games}}
{{Wisconsin bowl games}}


[[Category:2009–10 NCAA football bowl games|Champs Sports Bowl]]
[[Category:2009–10 NCAA football bowl games|Champs Sports Bowl]]
[[Category:Champs Sports Bowl]]
[[Category:Pop-Tarts Bowl]]
[[Category:Miami Hurricanes football bowl games]]
[[Category:Miami Hurricanes football bowl games]]
[[Category:Wisconsin Badgers football bowl games]]
[[Category:Wisconsin Badgers football bowl games]]
[[Category:American football in Orlando, Florida]]

[[Category:December 2009 sports events in the United States]]

[[Category:2009 in sports in Florida|Champs Sports Bowl]]
{{collegefootball-bowl-stub}}
[[Category:2000s in Orlando, Florida]]

Latest revision as of 17:03, 15 November 2024

2009 Champs Sports Bowl
1234 Total
Miami 7007 14
Wisconsin 71003 20
DateDecember 29, 2009
Season2009
StadiumFlorida Citrus Bowl
LocationOrlando, Florida
MVPRB John Clay (Wisconsin)
RefereeHubert Owens (SEC)
Attendance56,747
PayoutUS$2,225,000 per team
United States TV coverage
NetworkESPN
AnnouncersBrad Nessler (Play by Play)
Todd Blackledge (Analyst)
Holly Rowe (Sideline)
Nielsen ratings3.9[1]
Champs Sports Bowl
 < 2008  2010

The 2009 Champs Sports Bowl was a college football bowl game between the Miami Hurricanes of the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Wisconsin Badgers of the Big Ten Conference. Played at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida, the game started at 8:00 p.m. US EST on Tuesday, December 29, 2009, and was televised by ESPN. Wisconsin won the game 20-14.

The 2009 game marked the last time in the foreseeable future that the Big 10 was represented in the bowl game. A four-year contract was signed so that starting in 2010 the Big East will send a team to the bowl instead.

Miami made its third appearance in the bowl, they last played in the game in 1998 where they easily defeated North Carolina State 46–23. The Canes won their two previous appearances. Meanwhile, Wisconsin made its second appearance in as many years. They were defeated in the 2008 game by Florida State 42–13.

The bowl game marked the fourth time that the two schools have faced each other and the first time in the post-season. Miami previously held a 2–1 series advantage (now 2-2) with the last meeting being a 51–3 thrashing by the Hurricanes in opening game of the 1989 season. Miami would go on to win their third national championship that year.

Game summary

[edit]

Miami wore their away white jerseys, and Wisconsin wore their home red jerseys.

Wisconsin sophomore tailback, John Clay rushed for 121 yards and two touchdowns on his way to being named the bowl MVP. Quarterback Scott Tolzien threw for 260 yards, and Montee Ball added 61 yards rushing for the Badgers, who defeated their first ranked opponent of the season and also reached the 10 win plateau for the first time since 2006. Miami quarterback Jacory Harris struggled for much of the game being sacked 5 times and knocked down on several other plays. Harris did finally find the endzone with 1:22 left in the game and finished with 188 yards passing.[2]

The game displayed a sharp contrast in the locations of the two schools. Although played in the typical warm weather city of Orlando, the game time temperature was only about 40 degrees. Most Miami players wore long sleeves and would stand by heaters on the sidelines, however almost all Wisconsin players wore short sleeves and stated prior to the game that it felt like spring. The 56,747 fans in attendance was the highest total to ever watch a Champs Sports Bowl game since the game moved to Orlando in 2001. The attendance number also ranks second overall in bowl history as the only other game with more fans present was the 1990 Blockbuster Bowl played between Florida State and Penn State in Miami.

Scoring summary

[edit]
Scoring Play Score
1st Quarter
MIA — Graig Cooper 16-yard run (Matt Bosher kick), 14:37 MIA 7–0
WIS — John Clay 3-yard run (Philip Welch kick), 7:12 TIE 7–7
2nd Quarter
WIS — John Clay 3-yard run (Philip Welch kick), 8:07 WIS 14–7
WIS — Philip Welch 37-yard field goal, 0:12 WIS 17–7
3rd Quarter
None
4th Quarter
WIS — Philip Welch 28-yard field goal, 4:01 WIS 20-7
MIA — Thearon Collier 14-yard pass from Jacory Harris (Matt Bosher kick), 1:22 WIS 20-14

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Jon Solomon, 2009-10 Bowl TV Ratings, The Birmingham News, January 13, 2010
  2. ^ "Miami vs. Wisconsin - Game Recap - December 29, 2009 - ESPN". Archived from the original on December 31, 2009.