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Orange Blossom Classic
StadiumHard Rock Stadium
LocationMiami Gardens, Florida
Previous stadiumsSeveral, including the Miami Orange Bowl and Tinker Field
Previous locationsMiami, Jacksonville, Orlando, Tallahassee, Tampa
Operated1933–1978; 2021–present
Sponsors
Denny's[1] (2021–present)
2023 matchup
Jackson State vs. Florida A&M
(Florida A&M 28–10)
2024 matchup
North Carolina Central vs. Alabama State

The Orange Blossom Classic is an American annual college football game first held between 1933 and 1978 and again since 2021.

History[edit]

In its first incarnation, the Classic featured two historically black colleges and universities (HBCU)—Florida A&M and another program. The game sometimes served as a de facto championship game,[2] depending on the record of the participating teams. The game was played late in the season, with Florida A&M inviting another top black team as its opponent.[2] The game could be seen as a mythical "Black National Championship" game.[3] For example, the December 5, 1942, Afro American newspaper refers to the 1942 game as a national title game, as does at least one source for the 1945 game.[4] From 1952 to 1962, 10 of the 11 teams that won the Classic were named national champions. However, there were also numerous seasons in which neither Florida A&M nor its Classic opponent were selected as national champions.

The Classic was discontinued after its 1978 playing. The name was sometimes applied to subsequent regular-season meetings between Florida A&M and the FIU Panthers.[2]

In its second incarnation, the Classic returned in 2021. That season, Florida A&M played Jackson State in a season opening game at Hard Rock Stadium in September.[5] The game has continued as an annual early-season contest between those two programs. The 2022 matchup had the most viewed HBCU football game with close to 958,000 viewers, trailing only the Celebration Bowl. In 2024 Florida A&M will no longer play in the game and the will find another team to play Jackson State.[6]

Game results[edit]

1933–1978[edit]

[7]

Year Site Winner Loser Ref. Attendance
1933 Jacksonville, Florida Florida A&M 9 Howard 6 [8]
1934 Jacksonville, Florida Florida A&M 13 Virginia State 12 [9]
1935 Jacksonville, Florida Kentucky State 19 Florida A&M 9 [10][11]
1936 Jacksonville, Florida Prairie View A&M 6 Florida A&M 0 [12]
1937 Orlando, Florida Florida A&M 25 Hampton 20 [13] 3,000
1938 Orlando, Florida Florida A&M 9 Kentucky State 7 [14]
1939 Orlando, Florida Florida A&M 42 Wiley 0 [15]
1940 Orlando, Florida Wilberforce 0–0 Florida A&M [16]
1941 Orlando, Florida Florida A&M 15 Tuskegee 7 [17] 8,200
1942 Jacksonville, Florida Florida A&M 12 Texas College 6 [18]
1943 Jacksonville, Florida Hampton 39 Florida A&M 0
1944 Jacksonville, Florida Virginia State 19 Florida A&M 6
1945 Jacksonville, Florida Wiley 32 Florida A&M 6 8,000
1946 Tampa, Florida #20 Lincoln (PA) 20 #8 Florida A&M 0 9,000
1947 Miami, Florida #3 Florida A&M 7 #4 Hampton 0 19,000
1948 Miami, Florida #10 Virginia Union 10 #5 Florida A&M 6 16,000
1949 Miami, Florida #6 North Carolina A&T 20 #5 Florida A&M 14
1950 Miami, Florida #12 Wilberforce State 13 #1 Florida A&M 6 19,317
1951 Miami, Florida #2 Florida A&M 67 #7 North Carolina College 6 23,446
1952 Miami, Florida #1 Florida A&M 29 #2 Virginia State 7 35,064
1953 Miami, Florida #1 Prairie View A&M 33 #2 Florida A&M 27 41,313
1954 Miami, Florida #2 Florida A&M 67 #6 Maryland State[a] 19 41,179
1955 Miami, Florida #1 Grambling 28 #3 Florida A&M 21 40,319
1956 Miami, Florida #1 Tennessee A&I 41 #2 Florida A&M 39 41,808
1957 Miami, Florida #1 Florida A&M 27 #4 Maryland State[a] 21 37,000
1958 Miami, Florida #1 Prairie View A&M 26 #3 Florida A&M 8 39,426
1959 Miami, Florida #1 Florida A&M 28 #4 Prairie View A&M 7 43,645
1960 Miami, Florida #2 Florida A&M 40 Langston 26 42,080
1961 Miami, Florida #1 Florida A&M 14 #2 Jackson State 8 47,791
1962 Miami, Florida #2 Jackson State 22 #1 Florida A&M 6 43,461
1963 Miami, Florida #4 Florida A&M 30 #3 Morgan State 7
1964 Miami, Florida #2 Florida A&M 42 #3 Grambling 15
1965 Miami, Florida #2 Morgan State 36 #3 Florida A&M 7
1966 Miami, Florida Florida A&M 43 Alabama A&M 26
1967 Miami, Florida #2 Grambling 28 #4 Florida A&M 25
1968 Miami, Florida #3 Alcorn A&M 36 #7 Florida A&M 9 37,398
1969 Tallahassee, Florida #3 Florida A&M 23 #5 Grambling 19 36,784
1970 Miami, Florida Jacksonville State 21 Florida A&M 7 31,184
1971 Miami, Florida Florida A&M 27 Kentucky State 9 26,161
1972 Miami, Florida Florida A&M 41 Maryland Eastern Shore[a] 21 21,606
1973 Miami, Florida Florida A&M 23 #11 South Carolina State 12 18,996
1974 Miami, Florida #20 Florida A&M 17 #6 Howard 13 20,166
1975 Miami, Florida #2 Florida A&M 40 #8 Kentucky State 13 27,875
1976 Miami, Florida #20 Florida A&M 26 #16 Central State 21 18,000
1977 Miami, Florida #1 Florida A&M 37 #8 Delaware State 15 29,493
1978 Miami, Florida #1 Florida A&M 31 #2 Grambling State 7 35,499

‡ Denotes a team selected as Black college football national champions for the season in question (in some seasons, different teams were named champions by different selectors).

Rankings from The Pittsburgh Courier (1946-1958, 1961-1969), Associated Negro Press (1959-1960), and Jet (1973-1978)

2021–present[edit]

Year Site Winner Loser Ref.
2021 Miami Gardens, Florida Jackson State 7 Florida A&M 6 [19]
2022 Jackson State 59 Florida A&M 3 [20]
2023 Florida A&M 28 Jackson State 10 [21]

Appearances by school[edit]

No. School Record
48 Florida A&M 27–21–1
6 Grambling State 3–3
5 Jackson State 3–2
4 Kentucky State 1–3
4 Prairie View A&M 3–1
3 Central State 1–1–1
3 Hampton 1–2
3 Maryland Eastern Shore[a] 0–3
3 Virginia State 1–2
2 Howard 0–2
2 Morgan State 2–0
2 Wiley 1–1
1 Alabama A&M 0–1
1 Alcorn State 1–0
1 Delaware State 0–1
1 Jacksonville State 1–0
1 Langston 0–1
1 North Carolina A&T 1–0
1 North Carolina Central 0–1
1 South Carolina State 0–1
1 Tennessee State 1–0
1 Texas College 0–1
1 Tuskegee 0–1
1 Virginia Union 1–0

Source:[22]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d The University of Maryland Eastern Shore was known as Maryland State College until 1970.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Sponsors". orangeblossomclassic.com. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Super Bowl Catches Up to Orange Blossom Classic, The New York Times, February 3, 2007, retrieved February 7, 2009.
  3. ^ Tremene Triplett, Fans, coaches, athletes reminisce about the historic Orange Blossom Classic, South Florida Times, March 14, 2008, retrieved February 7, 2009.
  4. ^ "UW Athletics Black History: football assistant coach Les Ritcherson". media-newswire.com. February 17, 2011.
  5. ^ "HBCU Football: The Orange Blossom Classic returns after 43 years". Saturday Blitz. 18 May 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
  6. ^ "Florida A&M leave Orange Blossom Classic". yahoo.
  7. ^ http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2022/Bowls.pdf
  8. ^ "Florida A. & M. Upsets Howard, 9-6, In Thriller". Pittsburgh Courier. December 9, 1933. pp. 2–5. Retrieved August 20, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  9. ^ "Rattlers Nose Out Trojans, 13 To 12". Pittsburgh Courier. December 15, 1934. pp. 2–5. Retrieved August 20, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  10. ^ "Negro Football". Miami Herald. December 8, 1935. p. 1-C. Retrieved August 20, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  11. ^ "Rattlers Hold KY. In Hectic 2nd Half". Pittsburgh Courier. December 14, 1935. pp. 2–4. Retrieved August 20, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  12. ^ "5,000 See Prairie View Beat Florida, 6-0, In Orange Blossom Game". St. Louis Argus. December 11, 1936. p. 6. Retrieved August 20, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  13. ^ "Hampton Loses To A.&M. 25-20". The Sunday Sentinel-Star. December 5, 1937. p. 7 – via newspapers.com.
  14. ^ "Florida Rattlers Beat Kentucky, 9-7, For National Title". The Tallahassee Daily Democrat. December 4, 1938. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ Moorne, Halody (December 16, 1939). "Florida's Orange Blossom Classic Is Joke Of Season". The Black Dispatch. Oklahoma City. p. 8. Retrieved August 20, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  16. ^ Jones, "Melancholy" (December 14, 1940). "Terrific Defenses Feature 0-0 Tie At Orlando; 7,000 See 8th Classic". The Phoenix Index. p. 6. Retrieved August 20, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  17. ^ "Tuskegee Loses To Florida A. And M., Orange Blossom Tilt". The Birmingham News. Birmingham, Alabama. AP. December 7, 1941. p. Sports 8. Retrieved August 20, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  18. ^ "Florida Takes Over Negro College Title". Star-News. Wilmington, North Carolina. AP. December 13, 1942. p. 8. Retrieved August 20, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  19. ^ Jackson, Wilton (September 6, 2021). "Deion Sanders's Defense Seals Victory for Jackson State in Orange Blossom Classic vs. Florida A&M". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  20. ^ Becton, Stan (September 4, 2022). "How Jackson State dominated Florida A&M 59-3 to win 2022 Orange Blossom Classic". NCAA.com. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  21. ^ Kelley, Kevin (January 6, 2023). "Jackson State, Florida A&M to play in 2023 Orange Blossom Classic". fbschedules.com. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  22. ^ Official 2007 NCAA Division I Football Records Book, National Collegiate Athletic Association, p. 367–368.

External links[edit]

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