When does lsu play their bowl game

The LSU Tigers football team represents Louisiana State University in the sport of American football. LSU has competed in 54 bowl games (with 53 being sanctioned by the NCAA) in its history, going 29–24–1 in NCAA sanctioned bowl games.[1] The Tigers have played in at least one bowl game in every season since 2000; their streak of 20 bowl seasons is the fourth-longest active streak in the NCAA and second-longest in the Southeastern Conference.[2]

Season Date Coach Bowl Opponent Result
1907 December 25, 1907 Edgar Wingard Bacardi Bowl [A 1] Havana W 56–0
1935 January 1, 1936 Bernie Moore Sugar Bowl TCU L 2–3
1936 January 1, 1937 Bernie Moore Sugar Bowl Santa Clara L 14–21
1937 January 1, 1938 Bernie Moore Sugar Bowl Santa Clara L 0–6
1943 January 1, 1944 Bernie Moore Orange Bowl Texas A&M W 19–14
1946 January 1, 1947 Bernie Moore Cotton Bowl Classic Arkansas T 0–0
1949 January 2, 1950 Gaynell Tinsley Sugar Bowl Oklahoma L 0–35
1958 January 1, 1959 Paul Dietzel Sugar Bowl Clemson W 7–0
1959 January 1, 1960 Paul Dietzel Sugar Bowl Ole Miss L 0–21
1961 January 1, 1962 Paul Dietzel Orange Bowl Colorado W 25–7
1962 January 1, 1963 Charles McClendon Cotton Bowl Classic Texas W 13–0
1963 December 21, 1963 Charles McClendon Bluebonnet Bowl Baylor L 7–14
1964 January 1, 1965 Charles McClendon Sugar Bowl Syracuse W 13–10
1965 January 1, 1966 Charles McClendon Cotton Bowl Classic Arkansas W 14–7
1967 January 1, 1967 Charles McClendon Sugar Bowl Wyoming W 20–13
1968 December 30, 1968 Charles McClendon Peach Bowl Florida State W 31–27
1970 January 1, 1971 Charles McClendon Orange Bowl Nebraska L 12–17
1971 December 18, 1971 Charles McClendon Sun Bowl Iowa State W 33–15
1972 December 30, 1972 Charles McClendon Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl Tennessee L 17–24
1973 January 1, 1974 Charles McClendon Orange Bowl Penn State L 9–16
1977 December 31, 1977 Charles McClendon Sun Bowl Stanford L 14–24
1978 December 23, 1978 Charles McClendon Liberty Bowl Missouri L 15–20
1979 December 22, 1979 Charles McClendon Tangerine Bowl Wake Forest W 34–10
1982 January 1, 1983 Jerry Stovall Orange Bowl Nebraska L 20–21
1984 January 1, 1985 Bill Arnsparger Sugar Bowl Nebraska L 10–28
1985 December 27, 1985 Bill Arnsparger Liberty Bowl Baylor L 7–21
1986 January 1, 1987 Bill Arnsparger Sugar Bowl Nebraska L 15–30
1987 December 31, 1987 Mike Archer Gator Bowl South Carolina W 30–13
1988 January 2, 1989 Mike Archer Hall of Fame Bowl Syracuse L 10–23
1995 December 29, 1995 Gerry DiNardo Independence Bowl Michigan State W 45–26
1996 December 28, 1996 Gerry DiNardo Peach Bowl Clemson W 10–7
1997 December 28, 1997 Gerry DiNardo Independence Bowl Notre Dame W 27–9
2000 December 29, 2000 Nick Saban Peach Bowl Georgia Tech W 28–14
2001 January 2, 2002 Nick Saban Sugar Bowl Illinois W 47–34
2002 January 1, 2003 Nick Saban Cotton Bowl Classic Texas L 20–35
2003 January 4, 2004 Nick Saban Sugar Bowl (BCS National Championship) Oklahoma W 21–14
2004 January 1, 2005 Nick Saban Capital One Bowl Iowa L 25–30
2005 December 30, 2005 Les Miles Peach Bowl Miami (FL) W 40–3
2006 January 3, 2007 Les Miles Sugar Bowl Notre Dame W 41–14
2007 January 7, 2008 Les Miles BCS National Championship Game Ohio State W 38–24
2008 December 31, 2008 Les Miles Chick-Fil-A Bowl Georgia Tech W 38–3
2009 January 1, 2010 Les Miles Capital One Bowl Penn State L 17–19
2010 January 7, 2011 Les Miles Cotton Bowl Classic Texas A&M W 41–24
2011 January 9, 2012 Les Miles BCS National Championship Game Alabama L 0–21
2012 December 31, 2012 Les Miles Chick-Fil-A Bowl Clemson L 24–25
2013 January 1, 2014 Les Miles Outback Bowl Iowa W 21–14
2014 December 30, 2014 Les Miles Music City Bowl Notre Dame L 28–31
2015 December 29, 2015 Les Miles Texas Bowl Texas Tech W 56–27
2016 December 31, 2016 Ed Orgeron Citrus Bowl Louisville W 29–9
2017 January 1, 2018 Ed Orgeron Citrus Bowl Notre Dame L 17–21
2018 January 1, 2019 Ed Orgeron Fiesta Bowl UCF W 40–32
2019 December 28, 2019 Ed Orgeron Peach Bowl – CFP Semifinal Oklahoma W 63–28
2019 January 13, 2020 Ed Orgeron CFP National Championship Clemson W 42–25
2021 January 4, 2022 Brad Davis Texas Bowl Kansas State L 21–42

  1. ^ LSU does not count the victory against the University of Havana in 1907 among its bowl games and bowl wins.[3]

  1. ^ "LSU Fighting Tigers Bowls". Sports Reference. Retrieved July 5, 2017.
  2. ^ "Longest Active Bowl Streaks in College Football". Scout.com. December 15, 2016. Retrieved July 5, 2017.
  3. ^ "LSU Bowl History" (PDF). lsusports.net. Retrieved December 8, 2016.

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LSU's 2021 season will officially have a postseason end as the Tigers were selected to participate in the Texas Bowl against Kansas State on Jan. 4, 2022, according to Brett McMurphy of Action Network.

The game, which will be located in Houston, is not the first time LSU has been to the Texas Bowl. The Tigers beat Patrick Mahomes and Texas Tech back in 2015 56-27 in the bowl game.

It's another month of practice for a team that could very well look extremely different on the field and on the sidelines as well. News of who coach Brian Kelly will be keeping or bringing in on staff has yet to really take off, leaving many in the dark about what the future of the program will look like. 

A few moves that have been made public are receivers coach Mickey Joseph heading back to his alma mater of Nebraska, cornerbacks coach Corey Raymond and running backs coach Kevin Faulk staying on staff as well as Kelly electing not to keep strength and conditioning coach Tommy Moffitt on staff.

Kelly said during his introductory press conference that one of the goals over the next few weeks will be to meet with and get a feel for most of the players on the roster and with a few extra weeks of practice preparing for the Wildcats, there will be no better time to do so. 

"There will have to be a lot more meetings that are substantive because we've got work to do," Kelly said. "I've got to make some decisions relative to staff, preparing this football team for a bowl game, recruiting, and all of those things."

Kansas State went 7-5 during the regular season and will be the second time the two programs face off. The first and only matchup between the two came in 1980, resulting in a 21-0 win for the purple and gold.

Getting these few weeks in will be critical for the future young players of the LSU program and an important step for Kelly to really evaluate the talent on the roster.