Duke's Mayo Bowl

Last updated
Duke’s Mayo Bowl
Duke's Mayo Bowl logo.svg
Stadium Bank of America Stadium
Location Charlotte, North Carolina
Operated2002–present
Conference tie-ins ACC
Big Ten (even number years)
SEC (odd number years)
Previous conference tie-ins AAC
Payout US$4,780,461 (2019) [1]
Website dukesmayobowl.com
Sponsors
Continental Tire (2002–2004)
Meineke Car Care Center (2005–2010)
Belk (2011–2019)
Duke's Mayonnaise (2020–present)
Former names
Queen City Bowl (2002, working title)
Continental Tire Bowl (2002–2004)
Meineke Car Care Bowl (2005–2010)
Belk Bowl (2011–2019)
2023 matchup
North Carolina vs. West Virginia (West Virginia 30–10)
2024 season matchup
Virginia Tech vs. Minnesota (Minnesota 24–10)

The Duke's Mayo Bowl is an annual college football bowl game that has been played at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina, since 2002. Originally commissioned as the Queen City Bowl, it has undergone many name changes due to sponsorship rights. The game currently features a matchup between a team from the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) and a team from the Southeastern Conference (SEC), the Big Ten Conference or the Big 12 Conference.

Contents

History

A new college football bowl game in Charlotte, North Carolina, was established in 2002 by Raycom Sports (now a part of Gray Television). The game was certified by the NCAA as the Queen City Bowl, which became the Continental Tire Bowl (2002–2004), Meineke Car Care Bowl (2005–2010), and Belk Bowl (2011–2019) prior to its current name.

The game previously featured a matchup between the No. 5 selected Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) team and the No. 3 selected American Athletic Conference (AAC). Originally, the bowl selected a team from the Big East Conference, until that conference's breakup in 2013.

In 2011, Charlotte-based department store chain Belk acquired the title sponsorship for a three-year period through 2013. After the initial period, Belk extended its sponsorship for six years, through 2019. [2] As of 2014, the bowl featured the second pooled selection from the ACC paired against the second pooled selection from the Southeastern Conference (SEC), after selection of the College Football Playoff (CFP) teams.

On November 20, 2019, Belk informed bowl officials that the company would not be renewing its sponsorship after the 2019 season. [3] In June 2020, Duke's Mayonnaise was announced as the new title sponsor for the bowl. [4] As part of their sponsorship arrangement, in a take on the Gatorade shower, the head coach of the winning team gets a giant jar of mayonnaise dumped on his head.

In 2020, the ACC's opponent in the bowl is scheduled to begin alternating between the Big Ten Conference and SEC through 2025, with a Big Ten team playing in even-numbered years and an SEC team playing in odd-numbered years. [5] The conference not sending a team to this bowl will send a team to the Las Vegas Bowl. [6]

The 2020 game received notable social media coverage following the game as the quarterback of the winning team, Graham Mertz of Wisconsin, accidentally broke the glass trophy. [7]

Game results

Rankings are based on the AP poll prior to the game being played.

DateBowl nameWinning TeamLosing TeamAttnd. [8]
December 28, 2002 Continental Tire Bowl Virginia 48No. 15 West Virginia 2273,535
December 27, 2003 Continental Tire Bowl Virginia 23 Pittsburgh 1651,236
December 30, 2004 Continental Tire Bowl No. 25 Boston College 37 North Carolina 2473,258
December 31, 2005 Meineke Car Care Bowl NC State 14 USF 057,937
December 30, 2006 Meineke Car Care Bowl No. 23 Boston College 25 Navy 2452,303
December 29, 2007 Meineke Car Care Bowl Wake Forest 24 Connecticut 1053,126
December 27, 2008 Meineke Car Care Bowl West Virginia 31 North Carolina 3073,712
December 26, 2009 Meineke Car Care Bowl No. 17 Pittsburgh 19 North Carolina 1750,389
December 31, 2010 Meineke Car Care Bowl USF 31 Clemson 2641,122
December 27, 2011 Belk Bowl NC State 31 Louisville 2458,427
December 27, 2012 Belk Bowl Cincinnati 48 Duke 3448,128
December 28, 2013 Belk Bowl North Carolina 39 Cincinnati 1745,211
December 30, 2014 Belk Bowl No. 13 Georgia 37No. 20 Louisville 1445,671
December 30, 2015 Belk Bowl Mississippi State 51 NC State 2846,423
December 29, 2016 Belk Bowl No. 18 Virginia Tech 35 Arkansas 2446,902
December 29, 2017 Belk Bowl Wake Forest 55 Texas A&M 5232,784
December 29, 2018 Belk Bowl Virginia 28 South Carolina 048,263
December 31, 2019 Belk Bowl Kentucky 37 Virginia Tech 3044,138
December 30, 2020 Duke's Mayo Bowl Wisconsin 42 Wake Forest 28  1,500
December 30, 2021 Duke's Mayo Bowl South Carolina 38 North Carolina 2145,520
December 30, 2022 Duke's Mayo Bowl Maryland 16No. 25 NC State 1237,228
December 27, 2023 Duke's Mayo Bowl West Virginia 30 North Carolina 1042,925
January 3, 2025 Duke's Mayo Bowl Minnesota 24 Virginia Tech 1031,927

Source: [9]

MVPs

2005 MVP Stephen Tulloch Stephen Tulloch.JPG
2005 MVP Stephen Tulloch
GameMVPSchoolPosition
2002 Wali Lundy VirginiaTB
2003 Matt Schaub VirginiaQB
2004 Paul Peterson Boston CollegeQB
2005 Stephen Tulloch NC StateLB
2006 JoLonn Dunbar Boston CollegeLB
2007 Kenneth Moore Wake ForestWR
2008 Pat White West VirginiaQB
2009 Dion Lewis PittsburghRB
2010 B. J. Daniels South FloridaQB
2011 Mike Glennon NC StateQB
2012 Brendon Kay CincinnatiQB
2013 Ryan Switzer North CarolinaWR
2014 Nick Chubb GeorgiaRB
2015 Dak Prescott Mississippi StateQB
2016 Cam Phillips Virginia TechWR
2017 John Wolford Wake ForestQB
2018 Olamide Zaccheaus VirginiaWR
2019 Lynn Bowden KentuckyQB
2020 Jack Sanborn WisconsinLB
2021Dakereon JoynerSouth CarolinaWR/QB
2022 Jakorian Bennett MarylandDB
2023 Garrett Greene [10] West VirginiaQB
2024Elijah SpencerMinnesotaWR

Most appearances

Updated through the January 2025 edition (23 games, 46 total appearances).

Teams with multiple appearances
RankTeamAppearancesRecord
1 North Carolina 61–5
2 NC State 42–2
3 Virginia 33–0
Wake Forest 32–1
West Virginia 32–1
Virginia Tech 31–2
7 Boston College 22–0
Cincinnati 21–1
Pittsburgh 21–1
South Florida 21–1
South Carolina 21–1
Louisville 20–2
Teams with a single appearance

Won (6): Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi State, Wisconsin
Lost (6): Arkansas, Clemson, Connecticut, Duke, Navy, Texas A&M

Within the ACC's 17 football members, 10 have appeared in the game: Boston College, Clemson, Duke, Louisville, North Carolina, NC State, Pittsburgh, Virginia, Virginia Tech and Wake Forest. Members that have yet to appear include California, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Miami, SMU, Stanford and Syracuse. Both of Pittsburgh's appearances, and one appearance each by Boston College and Louisville, came while those schools were members of the Big East Conference.

Among former Big East Conference football members, Boston College, Cincinnati, Connecticut, Louisville, Pitt, South Florida, Virginia Tech and West Virginia have appeared in the game, while Miami, Rutgers, Syracuse and Temple have not. Virginia Tech's appearances came as a member of the ACC.

Appearances by conference

Updated through the January 2025 edition (23 games, 46 total appearances).

ConferenceRecordAppearances by season
GamesWLWin pct.WonLost
ACC 231013.4352002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2011, 2013, 2016, 2017, 20182004, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024*
The American 1156.4552004, 2008, 2009, 2010, 20122002, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2011, 2013
SEC 743.5712014, 2015, 2019, 20212016, 2017, 2018
Big Ten 3301.0002020, 2022, 2024* 
Big 12 1101.0002023 
Independents 101.000 2006

Game records

TeamPerformance, Team vs. OpponentYear
Most points scored (one team)55, Wake Forest vs. Texas A&M2017
Most points scored (both teams)107, Wake Forest vs. Texas A&M2017
Most points scored (losing team)52, Texas A&M vs. Wake Forest2017
Fewest points allowed0, shared by:
NC State vs. USF
Virginia vs. South Carolina

2005
2018
Margin of victory28, Virginia vs. South Carolina2018
Total yards646, Wake Forest vs. Texas A&M2017
Rushing yards331, Kentucky vs. Virginia Tech2019
Passing yards499, Texas A&M vs. Wake Forest2017
First downs36, Duke vs. Cincinnati2012
Fewest yards allowed213, Wake Forest vs. UCONN2007
Fewest rushing yards allowed27, Maryland vs. NC State2022
Fewest passing yards allowed73, Virginia Tech vs. Kentucky2019
IndividualPlayer, Team vs. OpponentYear
All-purpose yards
Touchdowns (all-purpose)4, Wali Lundy (Virginia)2002
Rushing yards266, Nick Chubb (Georgia)2014
Rushing touchdowns2, most recently:
Graham Mertz (Wisconsin)

2020
Passing yards499, Nick Starkel (Texas A&M)2017
Passing touchdowns4, most recently:
John Wolford (Wake Forest)

2017
Receiving yards217, Hakeem Nicks (North Carolina)2008
Receiving touchdowns3, most recently:
Jaquarii Roberson (Wake Forest)

2020
Tackles
Sacks
Interceptions2, shared by:
David Amerson (NC State)
Dominick Sanders (Georgia)

2011
2014
Long PlaysPlayer, Record, Team vs. OpponentYear
Touchdown run63 yds., British Brooks (North Carolina)2021
Touchdown pass83 yds., Travis Kelce from Brendon Kay (Cincinnati)2012
Kickoff return78 yds., T. J. Logan (North Carolina)2013
Punt return86 yds., Ryan Switzer (North Carolina)2013
Interception return72 yds., Collin Wilder (Wisconsin)2020
Fumble return28 yds., Jordan Wright (Kentucky)2019
Punt79 yds., Will Monday (Duke)2012
Field goal60 yds., John Love (Virginia Tech)2025

Source: [11]

Media coverage

The bowl was televised by ESPN2 from 2002 through 2005; since 2006, the bowl has been televised by ESPN. [12]

References

  1. "2019 Bowl Schedule". collegefootballpoll.com. Retrieved December 13, 2019.
  2. "Belk bowl announces six-year extension of partnership with Atlantic coast conference". Belk Bowl Official Website. Charlotte Collegiate Football. Archived from the original on 2013-12-18. Retrieved 2013-12-05.
  3. Holcomb, Dave (November 20, 2019). "RIP Belk Bowl? SEC bowl game expected to lose current sponsorship". saturdaydownsouth.com.
  4. "Duke's Mayonnaise replaces Belk as sponsor of Charlotte bowl game". ESPN.com. AP. June 18, 2020. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  5. McMann, Aaron (June 4, 2019). "Big Ten to add three bowl games, drop Holiday, Gator in 2020". mlive.com. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
  6. Solari, Chris (June 4, 2019). "Big Ten adds Las Vegas, Charlotte, Phoenix to football bowl destinations for 2020". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
  7. "Duke's Mayo Bowl trophy shatters in Wisconsin locker room". ESPN. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  8. "Belk Bowl Media Guide" (PDF). belkbowl.com. 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 30, 2017. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
  9. "Belk Bowl" (PDF). Bowl/All Star Game Records. NCAA. 2020. p. 14. Retrieved January 3, 2021 via NCAA.org.
  10. @RyanDecker_ (December 27, 2023). "Mayo Bowl MVP Garrett Greene, plus Beanie Bishop & Lee Kpogba standing up front" (Tweet). Retrieved December 27, 2023 via Twitter.
  11. "BELK BOWL RECORDS THROUGH 2019" (PDF). dukesmayobowl.com. Retrieved June 19, 2020.
  12. Kelly, Doug (ed.). "2019–20 Football Bowl Association Media Guide" (PDF). footballbowlassociation.com. p. 130. Retrieved January 3, 2020.