< PreviousCARDS IN THE NFL Rafael Cooper 2002 Wilbur Summers 1977 Dewayne White 2007-09 n Green Bay Packers Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1962 14-196 Ernie Green, HB 1970 7-172 Cleo Walker, LB 1980 11-283 Ricky Skiles, LB 2003 7-245 Chris Johnson, DB 2006 3-75 Jason Spitz, G 2008 2-56 Brian Brohm, QB 2008 5-150 Breno Giacomini, T 2018 1-18 Jaire Alexander, CB All-Time Roster Jaire Alexander 2018- Mark Clayton 1993 Breno Giacomini 2008 Joe Johnson 2002-03 Jason Spitz 2006-10 Cleo Walker 1970 n Houston Texans Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 2003 3-88 Dave Ragone, QB 2003 7-217 Curry Burns, DB 2007 1-10 Amobi Okoye, DT All-Time Roster Curry Burns 2003 Brandon Dunn 2015-19 Breno Giacomini 2017 Amobi Okoye 2007-10 Dave Ragone 2003 n Indianapolis Colts Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1957 26-306 Joe Unitas, T 1958 1-11 Lenny Lyles, DB 1991 11-292 Jerry Crafts, T 1993 3-65 Ray Buchanan, DB 1997 5-156 Carl Powell, DE All-Time Roster Aaron Bailey 1994-98 Ray Buchanan 1993-96 Rico Clark 1997-98 Anthony Floyd 2003-04 Lenny Lyles 1958, 1961-69 Deiontrez Mount 2016 Browning Nagle 1994 Garin Patrick 1995 Carl Powell 1997 Howard Stevens 1975-77 Johnny Unitas 1956-72 n Jacksonville Jaguars Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 2015 4-104 James Sample, SS All-Time Roster Brock Bolen 2009-11 Deral Boykin 1995 Ernest Givins 1995 Colin Holba 2017 Frank Moreau 2001 Calvin Pryor 2017 James Sample 2015 Jason Spitz 2011-12 Montavious Stanley 2006, 2009 n Kansas City Chiefs Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1964 3-18 Ken Kortas, DT 2000 4-115 Frank Moreau, RB 2007 5-148 Kolby Smith, RB All-Time Roster Josh Bellamy 2012 Nate Harris 2007 Frank Moreau 2000 Kolby Smith 2007-09 n Los Angeles Chargers Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1966 8-72 Doug Buffone, LB 1970 17-431 Dave Sanks, G All-Time Roster Carwell Gardner 1997 Roman Oben 2004-07 Johnny Patrick 2013 Johnny Unitas 1973 n Los Angeles Rams Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1956 9-108 Maury Wolford, T 1975 13-332 A.J. Jacobs, DB 1993 6-149 Deral Boykin, DB 2015 3-72 Jamon Brown, T 2018 6-205 Trevon Young, LB All-Time Roster Richard Bishop 1983 Deral Boykin 1993 Jamon Brown 2015-17 Renardo Foster 2010 Chris Johnson 2005 Richard Owens 2007 Trevon Young 2018-19 n Miami Dolphins Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1972 4-91 Larry Ball, LB 1983 8-223 Mark Clayton, WR 1984 5-138 Dean May, QB 1985 6-167 Ron Davenport, RB 1997 2-44 Sam Madison, DB 2015 1-14 DeVante Parker, WR All-Time Roster Larry Ball 1972-74, 1977-78 Richard Bishop 1982 John Bock 1996-2000 Mark Clayton 1983-92 Ron Davenport 1985-89 Sam Madison 1997-2005 DeVante Parker 2015-19 Senorise Perry 2017-18 Mark Sander 1992 Klaus Wilmsmeyer 1998 n Minnesota Vikings Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1964 19-258 Dick Schott, E 1972 6-167 Amos Martin, LB 2014 1-32 Teddy Bridgewater, QB 2015 6-193 B.J. Dubose, DE All-Time Roster Teddy Bridgewater 2014-15, 2017 Lee Calland 1963-65 Laroni Gallishaw 2005 Amos Martin 1972-76 Kevin Miller 1978-80 Richard Owens 2004-06 n New England Patriots Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1962 30-238 John Finn, T 1987 1-23 Bruce Armstrong, T 2002 2-65 Deion Branch, WR 2009 5-170 George Bussey, T All-Time Roster Bruce Armstrong 1987-2000 Richard Bishop 1976-81 Deion Branch 2002-05, 2010-12 Rico Clark 1999 Ted Washington 2003 n New Orleans Saints Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1973 16-393 Howard Stevens, RB 1994 1-13 Joe Johnson, DE 2011 3-88 Johnny Patrick, DB 2016 1-12 Sheldon Rankins, DT All-Time Roster Teddy Bridgewater 2018 Ronnie Ghent 2007 Jim Hanna 1994 Joe Johnson 1994-2003 Johnny Patrick 2011-12 Sheldon Rankins 2016- Montavious Stanley 2008 Howard Stevens 1973-74 Klaus Wilmsmeyer 1995-96 2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL 228Historyn New York Giants Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1996 3-66 Roman Oben, T All-Time Roster Jamon Brown 2018 Curry Burns 2004 Jason Hilliard 2004 Colin Holba 2019- Sam Madison 2006-08 Roman Oben 1996-99 Joey Smith 1991-92 n New York Jets Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1991 2-34 Browning Nagle, QB 2005 4-123 Kerry Rhodes, DB 2011 4-126 Bilal Powell, RB 2014 1-18 Calvin Pryor, DB 2015 3-82 Lorenzo Mauldin, OLB 2020 1-11 Mekhi Becton, OL All-Time Roster Josh Bellamy 2019- John Bock 1995 James Burgess 2019- Breno Giacomini 2014-16 Lorenzo Mauldin 2015-16 Pete McCartney 1987 Browning Nagle 1991-93 John Neidert 1968-69 Bilal Powell 2011-18 Calvin Pryor 2014-16 Steve Reese 1974-75 Kerry Rhodes 2005-09 Matt Simms 2013-14 n Las Vegas Raiders Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1960 — Howard Turley, E 1971 12-305 Horace Jones, DE 2007 4-100 Michael Bush, RB All-Time Roster Ray Buchanan 2004 Michael Bush 2008-11 Chris Johnson 2007-11 Horace Jones 1971-75 Ted Washington 2004-05 Otis Wilson 1989 n Philadelphia Eagles Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1952 28-329 John Brewer, FB 1967 13-334 Bill Downs, DT 1970 3-59 Lee Bouggess, RB 1991 11-298 Mike Flores, DE 2014 1-26 Marcus Smith, LB All-Time Roster David Akers 1999-2010 Matt Battaglia 1987 Lee Bouggess 1970-73 Deral Boykin 1996 John Brewer 1952-53 Jerry Crafts 1997-98 Mike Flores 1991-94 Dean May 1984 Marcus Smith 2014-16 n Pittsburgh Steelers Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1942 14-121 Clure Mosher, C 1953 19-222 Jim Williams, B 1955 9-102 Johnny Unitas, QB 1960 19-222 Howard Turley, E 1975 15-390 Marty Smith, DT 1979 6-161 Dwayne Woodruff, DB 2007 5-170 William Gay, DB 2015 7-239 Gerod Holliman, FS 2017 6-213 Colin Holba, LS All-Time Roster Lee Calland 1969-72 William Gay 2007-11, 2013-17 Brandon Johnson 2012 Ken Kortas 1965-68 Clure Mosher 1942 Eli Rogers 2016-18 Dwayne Woodruff 1979-90 n San Francisco 49ers Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1959 26-306 Ed Young, E 1966 6-91 Charlie Johnson, DT 1967 2-39 Tom Holzer, DE 1967 15-379 Clarence Spencer, FL 1968 15-395 Clarence Spencer, FL 1991 1-25 Ted Washington, NT 2001 6-179 Rashad Holman, DB All-Time Roster David Akers 2011-12 Jeff Brohm 1996-97 Elvis Dumervil 2017 Cole Hikutini 2017 Colin Holba 2018 Rashad Holman 2001-03 Lenny Lyles 1959-60 Ted Washington 1991-93 Klaus Wilmsmeyer 1992-94 n Seattle Seahawks Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 2012 7-232 Greg Scruggs, DE All-Time Roster Tom Andrews 1987 Deion Branch 2006-10 Breno Giacomini 2011-13 Horace Jones 1977 Amos Martin 1977 Greg Scruggs 2012, 2014 Marcus Smith 2017 n Tampa Bay Buccaneers Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1992 12-311 Klaus Wilmsmeyer, P 2003 2-64 Dewayne White, DE 2005 7-253 J.R. Russell, WR All-Time Roster Larry Ball 1976 Lionel Gates 2007 Roman Oben 2002-03 Steve Reese 1976 Dewayne White 2003-06 n Tennessee Titans Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1960 — Larry Cadwell, T 1982 12-314 Donnie Craft, RB 1986 2-34 Ernest Givins, WR 2011 6-175 Byron Stingily, T 2015 6-177 Deiontrez Mount, OLB All-Time Roster Donnie Craft 1982-84 Harry Douglas 2015-17 Ernest Givins 1986-94 Deiontrez Mount 2015 Byron Stingily 2012-14 n Washington Redskins Draft Choices Yr. Rd.-Pk. Name, Pos. 1961 16-213 Ron Petty, T 1995 5-137 Jamie Asher, TE 2005 5-154 Robert McCune, LB 2017 7-230 Josh Harvey-Clemons, S 2018 3-74 Geron Christian, OT All-Time Roster David Akers 1998 Jamie Asher 1995-98 Josh Bellamy 2013 Deral Boykin 1994 Michael Brown 2004 Curry Burns 2006 Geron Christian 2018- Anthony Copeland 1987 Mike Flores 1995 Josh Harvey-Clemons 2018- Joe Jacoby 1981-93 Robert McCune 2005 Carl Powell 2002 Ed Rubbert 1987 Marcus Smith 2018 2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL 229gocards.com CARDS IN THE NFLCARDINALS IN THE NFL DRAFT Year Rd Pick Player Pos Age Team 2020 1 11 Mekhi Becton OT 21 New York Jets 2018 1 18 Jaire Alexander CB 21 Green Bay Packers 2018 1 32 Lamar Jackson QB 21 Baltimore Ravens 2018 3 74 Geron Christian OT 22 Washington Redskins 2018 6 205 Trevon Young DE 23 Los Angeles Rams 2017 6 213 Colin Holba LS 23 Pittsburgh Steelers 2017 7 230 Josh Harvey-Clemons S 23 Washington Redskins 2016 1 12 Sheldon Rankins DT 22 New Orleans Saints 2015 1 14 DeVante Parker WR 22 Miami Dolphins 2015 3 72 Jamon Brown T 22 St. Louis Rams 2015 3 81 John Miller G 22 Buffalo Bills 2015 3 82 Lorenzo Mauldin OLB 22 New York Jets 2015 4 104 James Sample SS 23 Jacksonville Jaguars 2015 6 177 Deiontrez Mount OLB 22 Tennessee Titans 2015 6 189 Charles Gaines CB 22 Cleveland Browns 2015 6 193 B.J. Dubose DE 23 Minnesota Vikings 2015 7 239 Gerod Holliman FS 21 Pittsburgh Steelers 2015 7 256 Gerald Christian TE 24 Arizona Cardinals 2014 1 18 Calvin Pryor DB 22 New York Jets 2014 1 26 Marcus Smith LB 22 Philadelphia Eagles 2014 1 32 Teddy Bridgewater QB 21 Minnesota Vikings 2014 3 73 Preston Brown LB 21 Buffalo Bills 2012 7 232 Greg Scruggs DE 22 Seattle Seahawks 2011 3 88 Johnny Patrick DB 23 New Orleans Saints 2011 4 126 Bilal Powell RB 22 New York Jets 2011 6 175 Byron Stingily T 22 Tennessee Titans 2011 7 225 *Anthony Allen RB 22 Baltimore Ravens 2009 1 28 Eric Wood C 23 Buffalo Bills 2009 5 170 George Bussey T 24 New England Patriots 2008 2 56 Brian Brohm QB 22 Green Bay Packers 2008 3 84 Harry Douglas WR 23 Atlanta Falcons 2008 5 141 Gary Barnidge TE 22 Carolina Panthers 2008 5 150 Breno Giacomini T 22 Green Bay Packers 2008 7 246 Mario Urrutia WR 22 Cincinnati Bengals 2007 1 10 Amobi Okoye DT 20 Houston Texans 2007 4 100 Michael Bush RB 23 Oakland Raiders 2007 5 148 Kolby Smith RB 22 Kansas City Chiefs 2007 5 170 William Gay DB 22 Pittsburgh Steelers 2006 3 75 Jason Spitz G 23 Green Bay Packers 2006 4 126 Elvis Dumervil DE 22 Denver Broncos 2006 5 142 Brandon Johnson LB 23 Arizona Cardinals 2006 6 182 Montavious Stanley DT 24 Dallas Cowboys 2005 2 54 Eric Shelton RB 22 Carolina Panthers 2005 4 121 Stefan LeFors QB 24 Carolina Panthers 2005 4 123 Kerry Rhodes DB 23 New York Jets 2005 5 154 Robert McCune LB 26 Washington Redskins 2005 7 236 Lionel Gates RB 23 Buffalo Bills 2005 7 253 J.R. Russell WR 23 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 2003 2 64 Dewayne White DE 23 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 2003 3 88 Dave Ragone QB 23 Houston Texans 2003 7 217 Curry Burns DB 22 Houston Texans 2003 7 245 Chris Johnson DB 23 Green Bay Packers 2002 2 65 Deion Branch WR 23 New England Patriots 2001 6 179 Rashad Holman DB 23 San Francisco 49ers 2000 3 75 Chris Redman QB 23 Baltimore Ravens 2000 4 115 Frank Moreau RB 23 Kansas City Chiefs 1997 2 44 Sam Madison DB 23 Miami Dolphins 1997 4 118 Tyrus McCloud LB 22 Baltimore Ravens 1997 5 156 Carl Powell DE 23 Indianapolis Colts 1997 7 238 Leland Taylor DT 24 Baltimore Ravens 1996 3 66 Roman Oben T 23 New York Giants 1996 5 167 Alan Campos LB 23 Dallas Cowboys 1995 5 137 Jamie Asher TE 22 Washington Redskins 1994 1 13 Joe Johnson DE 22 New Orleans Saints Year Rd Pick Player Pos Age Team 1993 3 65 Ray Buchanan DB 21 Indianapolis Colts 1993 6 149 Deral Boykin DB 23 Los Angeles Rams 1992 12 311 Klaus Wilmsmeyer P 24 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1991 1 25 Ted Washington NT 23 San Francisco 49ers 1991 2 34 Browning Nagle QB 23 New York Jets 1991 11 292 Jerry Crafts T 23 Indianapolis Colts 1991 11 298 Mike Flores DE 24 Philadelphia Eagles 1990 2 42 Carwell Gardner FB 23 Buffalo Bills 1987 1 23 Bruce Armstrong T 21 New England Patriots 1986 2 34 Ernest Givins WR 22 Houston Oilers 1985 6 167 Ron Davenport RB 22 Miami Dolphins 1984 4 98 Tom Andrews T 22 Chicago Bears 1984 5 138 Dean May QB 22 Miami Dolphins 1983 8 223 Mark Clayton WR 22 Miami Dolphins 1983 10 260 Richard Tharpe DE 22 Buffalo Bills 1982 12 314 Donnie Craft RB 22 Houston Oilers 1981 7 187 Eddie Johnson LB 22 Cleveland Browns 1980 1 19 Otis Wilson LB 22 Chicago Bears 1980 11 283 Ricky Skiles LB 22 Green Bay Packers 1979 6 161 Dwayne Woodruff DB 22 Pittsburgh Steelers 1979 10 250 Nathan Poole RB 22 Cincinnati Bengals 1978 11 292 Calvin Prince RB — Cincinnati Bengals 1976 15 418 Wilbur Summers P 22 Denver Broncos 1975 13 332 A.J. Jacobs DB 22 Los Angeles Rams 1975 15 390 Marty Smith DT 21 Pittsburgh Steelers 1974 5 127 Richard Bishop DE 24 Cincinnati Bengals 1973 4 88 Tom Jackson LB 22 Denver Broncos 1973 14 351 John Madeya QB 21 Atlanta Falcons 1973 16 393 Howard Stevens RB 23 New Orleans Saints 1972 4 91 Larry Ball LB 22 Miami Dolphins 1972 6 154 Amos Martin LB 23 Minnesota Vikings 1971 12 305 Horace Jones DE 22 Oakland Raiders 1970 3 59 Lee Bouggess RB 22 Philadelphia Eagles 1970 7 172 Cleo Walker LB 22 Green Bay Packers 1970 17 431 Dave Sanks G 22 San Diego Chargers 1969 6 137 WaIly Oyler DB 21 Atlanta Falcons 1968 3 71 Ed Harmon LB 21 Dallas Cowboys 1968 6 145 John Neidert LB 22 Cincinnati Bengals 1968 10 247 Wayne Patrick RB 22 Cincinnati Bengals 1968 15 395 Clarence Spencer FL — San Francisco 49ers 1967 2 39 Tom Holzer DE 22 San Francisco 49ers 1967 13 334 Bill Downs DT — Philadelphia Eagles 1967 15 379 Clarence Spencer FL — San Francisco 49ers 1966 4 60 Doug Buffone LB 22 Chicago Bears 1966 6 91 Charlie Johnson DT 21 San Francisco 49ers 1966 17 252 Benny Russell QB 22 St. Louis Cardinals 1965 17 228 Tom LaFramboise QB — Chicago Bears 1964 1 9 Ken Kortas DT 22 St. Louis Cardinals 1964 19 258 Dick Schott E — Minnesota Vikings 1962 14 196 Ernie Green HB 23 Green Bay Packers 1961 16 213 Ron Petty T — Washington Redskins 1961 18 244 John Finn T — Chicago Bears 1960 19 222 Howard Turley E — Pittsburgh Steelers 1959 26 306 Ed Young E — San Francisco 49ers 1958 1 11 Lenny Lyles DB 22 Baltimore Colts 1958 18 207 Mario Cheppo E — Chicago Cardinals 1957 26 306 Joe Unitas T — Baltimore Colts 1956 9 108 Maury Wolford T — Los Angeles Rams 1955 9 102 Johnny Unitas QB 22 Pittsburgh Steelers 1953 19 222 Jim Williams B P ittsburgh Steelers 1952 28 329 John Brewer FB 24 Philadelphia Eagles 1950 18 234 Joe Trabue B — Cleveland Browns 1949 13 130 Bob Todd T — Chicago Cardinals 1942 14 121 Clure Mosher C 22 Pittsburgh Steelers 2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL 230History2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL 231gocards.com ALL-TIME BOWL HISTORY Bowl Game Appearances (By Game): Liberty – 4 Independence – 1 Belk – 2 Motor City – 1 GMAC – 2 Orange – 1 Beef ‘O’ Brady’s – 1 Pasadena – 1 Citrus – 1 Fiesta – 1 Russell Athletic – 1 Humanitarian – 1 Music City – 2 Sugar – 1 Gator/TaxSlayer – 2 Sun – 1 All-Time Bowl Opponents Opponent .........................................Bowl Record Alabama ..........................................................1-0 Boise State .......................................................1-1 Brigham Young ................................................1-0 Colorado State .................................................0-1 Drake ..............................................................1-0 Florida .............................................................1-0 Georgia ...........................................................0-1 Long Beach State ......................................... 0-0-1 Louisiana State ................................................0-1 Louisiana Tech .................................................0-1 Marshall ..........................................................0-2 Miami, Fla. ......................................................1-0 Miami, Ohio ....................................................0-1 Michigan State .................................................1-0 Mississippi State ..............................................1-1 North Carolina State ........................................0-1 Southern Miss ..................................................1-0 Texas A&M ......................................................1-0 Virginia Tech ...................................................0-1 Wake Forest .....................................................1-0 Bowl Record vs. Conferences Conference ......................................Bowl Record Atlantic Coast ..................................................2-2 Big Ten ............................................................1-0 Big West ..........................................................1-0 Conference USA ..............................................1-0 Independent ....................................................1-0 Mid-American .................................................0-3 Mountain West ................................................1-2 Pacific Coast Athletic ................................... 0-0-1 Southeastern ....................................................3-3 Southland ........................................................0-1 Beef ‘O’ Brady’s Bowl n St. Petersburg, Florida Record: Won 1, Lost 0 2010.................... Louisville 31, Southern Miss 28 Belk Bowl n Charlotte, North Carolina Record: Won 0, Lost 2 2011...........North Carolina State 31, Louisville 24 2014..............................Georgia 37, Louisville 14 Citrus Bowl n Orlando, Florida Record: Won 0, Lost 1 2016.....................Louisiana State 29, Louisville 9 Fiesta Bowl n Tempe, Arizona Record: Won 1, Lost 0 1990.............................. Louisville 34, Alabama 7 Gator Bowl/TaxSlayer n Jacksonville, Florida Record: Won 0, Lost 2 2005...................... Virginia Tech 35, Louisville 24 2017.................Mississippi State 31, Louisville 27 GMAC Bowl n Mobile, Alabama Record: Won 0, Lost 2 2002.............................Marshall 38, Louisville 15 2003..................... Miami, Ohio, 49, Louisville 28 Humanitarian Bowl n Boise, Idaho Record: Won 0, Lost 1 1999......................... Boise State 34, Louisville 31 Independence Bowl n Shreveport, Louisiana Record: Won 0, Lost 1 1977................... Louisiana Tech 24, Louisville 14 Liberty Bowl n Memphis, Tennessee Record: Won 3, Lost 1 1993..................... Louisville 18, Michigan State 7 2000................... Colorado State 22, Louisville 17 2001...................Louisville 28, Brigham Young 10 2004......................... Louisville 44, Boise State 40 Motor City Bowl n Pontiac, Michigan Record: Won 0, Lost 1 1998.............................Marshall 48, Louisville 29 Music City Bowl n Nashville, Tennessee Record: Won 2, Lost 0 2015.........................Louisville 27, Texas A&M 21 2019.................Louisville 38, Mississippi State 28 Orange Bowl n Miami, Florida Record: Won 1, Lost 0 2006....................... Louisville 24, Wake Forest 13 Pasadena Bowl n Pasadena, California Record: Won 0, Lost 0, Tied 1 1970................Louisville 24, Long Beach State 24 Russell Athletic Bowl n Orlando, Florida Record: Won 1, Lost 0 2013..................... Louisville 36, Miami, Florida 9 Sugar Bowl n New Orleans, Louisiana Record: Won 1, Lost 0 2012............................... Louisville 33, Florida 23 Sun Bowl n El Paso, Texas Record: Won 1, Lost 0 1957.................................Louisville 34, Drake 24 NOTE: Throughout this section, years refer to the season which ended with the bowl game. The Fiesta, Gator, Orange, Sugar and Sun Bowls were played in January following the season. Year Bowl Date Location Stadium Result 2019 Music City December 30, 2019 Nashville, Tenn. Nissan Stadium Louisville 38 Mississippi State 28 2017 TaxSlayer December 30, 2017 Jacksonville, Fla. EverBank Stadium Mississippi State 31 Louisville 27 2016 Citrus December 31, 2016 Orlando, Fla. Camping World LSU 29 Louisville 9 2015 Music City December 30, 2015 Nashville, Tenn. Nissan Stadium Louisville 27 Texas A&M 21 2014 Belk December 30, 2014 Charlotte, N.C. Bank of America Stadium Georgia 37 Louisville 14 2013 Russell Athletic December 28, 2013 Orlando, Fla. Orlando Citrus Bowl Stadium Louisville 36 Miami 9 2013 Sugar January 2, 2013 New Orleans, La. Mercedes-Benz Superdome Louisville 33 Florida 23 2011 Belk December 27, 2011 Charlotte, N.C. Bank of America Stadium NC State 31 Louisville 24 2010 Beef ‘O’ Brady’s December 21, 2010 St. Petersburg, Fla. Tropicana Field Louisville 31 S. Miss 28 2007 Orange January, 2 2007 Miami, Fla. Dolphin Stadium Louisville 24 Wake Forest 13 2006 Gator January 2, 2006 Jacksonville, Fla. EverBank Stadium Virginia Tech 35 Louisville 24 2004 Liberty December 21, 2004 Memphis, Tenn. Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium Louisville 44 Boise St 40 2003 GMAC December 18, 2003 Mobile, Ala. Ladd Peebles Stadium Miami (OH) 49 Louisville 28 2002 GMAC December 18, 2002 Mobile, Ala. Ladd Peebles Stadium Marshall 38 Louisville 15 2001 Liberty December 31, 2001 Memphis, Tenn. Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium Louisville 28 BYU 10 2000 Liberty December 29, 2000 Memphis, Tenn. Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium Colorado St. 22 Louisville 17 1999 Humanitarian December 30, 1999 Boise, Idaho Albertsons Stadium Boise State 34 Louisville 31 1998 Motor City December 23, 1998 Detroit, Mich. Pontiac Silverdome Marshall 48 Louisville 29 1993 Liberty December 28, 1993 Memphis, Tenn. Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium Louisville 18 Michigan St. 7 1991 Fiesta January 1, 1991 Tempe, Ariz. Sun Devil Stadium Louisville 34 Alabama 7 1977 Independence December 17, 1977 Shreveport, La. Independence Stadium La. Tech 24 Louisville 14 1970 Pasadena December 19, 1970 Pasadena, Calif. Rose Bowl Stadium Louisville 24 Long Beach St. 24 1958 Sun Bowl January 1, 1958 El Paso, Texas Kidd Field Louisville 34 Drake 20BOWL RECAPS 2019 Music City Bowl Louisville - 38 | Mississippi State - 28 Dec. 30, 2019 n Nashville, Tenn. 1 2 3 4 F Louisville 0 10 14 14 38 Mississippi State 7 7 0 14 28 NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Micale Cunningham threw for 279 yards and two touchdowns and ran for 81 more, and Louisville capped coach Scott Satterfield’s debut season by beating Mississippi State 38-28 in the Music City Bowl. The Cardinals rallied from a 14-point deficit by scoring 31 straight to finish their big turnaround from 2-10 last season. Louisville also finally beat Mississippi State on the field for the first time in six tries, though the series now is tied 3-3 thanks to a pair of forfeits by the Bulldogs in the 1970s. Mississippi State had been trying to finish the season with a three-game winning streak for the first time since 2013 and only the third time since the end of World War II. Instead, the Bulldogs go home having lost a bowl game in each of coach Joe Moorhead’s two seasons. Javian Hawkins led Louisville with 105 yards rushing, and he ran for a TD late. The Cardinals outgained Mississippi State 510-366. Category UL MS First Downs 23 24 Rushes-Yards 44-198 36-145 Passing Yards 312 221 Passes C-A-I 17-25-0 17-26-0 Plays-Yards 510 366 2017 TaxSlayer Bowl Mississippi State - 31 | Louisville - 27 Dec. 30, 2017 n Jacksonville, Fla. 1 2 3 4 F Louisville 7 14 3 3 27 Mississippi State 14 3 0 14 31 JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - It was Keytaon Thomp- son’s coming-out party. Thompson, a highly touted freshman making his first start in place of injured quarterback Nick Fitzgerald, ran for 147 yards and three touchdowns to help No. 24 Mississippi State beat Lamar Jackson and Louisville 31-27 in the TaxSlayer Bowl. Thompson completed 11 of 20 passes for 127 yards, with an interception. He was more effective as a runner, carrying on 27 of the team’s 55 run- ning plays. Thompson scored twice in the fourth quarter, including a 1-yard plunge with 3:39 remaining that put the Bulldogs (9-4) ahead for good. Jackson had the Cardinals on the move late, but safety Mark McLaurin intercepted his third pass of the game. Jackson got another chance in the waning seconds following a failed, fourth- down conversion. But his desperation heave was batted away in the end zone. Jackson ran 24 times for 158 yards and a touch- down, breaking the TaxSlayer Bowl record for most rushing yards by a quarterback. West Virginia’s Pat White set the previous mark with 145 yards in 2007. He also broke his own school records for rushing yards and yards from scrimmage. Category UL MS First Downs 20 23 Rushes-Yards 39-187 55-277 Passing Yards 171 127 Passes C-A-I 13-31-4 11-20-1 Plays-Yards 358 404 2016 Citrus Bowl LSU - 29 | Louisville - 9 Dec. 31, 2016 n Orlando, Fla. 1 2 3 4 F LSU 0 16 10 3 29 Louisville 3 3 0 3 9 ORLANDO, Fla. - Sophomore running back Derrius Guice ran for 138 yards, including a 70- yard touchdown, and caught a scoring pass to help No. 19 LSU Tigers to a 29-9 victory over No. 15 Louisville in Saturday’s Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl. Guice, who stepped in for departed Leonard Fournette, consistently made explosive plays run- ning the ball, as a receiver and a kickoff return man for the Tigers (8-4). His performance was eclipsed only by the overpowering performance of the Tigers defense that completely shut down Heisman Trophy- winning quarterback Lamar Jackson and the Cardinals. The Cardinals did not score a touch- down. Jackson was sacked eight times, including a safety for an 8-yard loss late in the second quar- ter. Jackson completed just 10 of 27 passes for 153 yards while leading the rushing attack with 33 yards as the Cardinals (9-4) ended their season with three straight losses. LSU quarterback Danny Etling threw for 217 yards and two touchdowns as the Tigers moved the ball with balance all game. Malachi Dupre led LSU in receiving with seven catches for 139 yards. Category UL LSU First Downs 11 20 Rushes-Yards 35-67 41-177 Passing Yards 153 217 Passes C-A-I 10-27-0 16-29-1 Plays-Yards 62-220 70-394 2015 Music City Bowl Louisville - 27 | Texas A&M - 21 Dec. 30, 2015 n Nashville, Tenn. 1 2 3 4 F Texas A&M 7 13 7 10 21 Louisville 7 0 7 0 27 NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Lamar Jackson ran for a career-high and Music City Bowl-record 226 yards and two touchdowns and threw for two more scores to help Louisville beat Texas A&M. The freshman, making his first start since Oct. 30, finished with a bowl-record 453 total yards, and set the Louisville career rushing mark before the end of the first quarter in giving the Cardinals a 20-7 lead they never lost. Jackson ran for 126 yards in the first 15 minutes, including a 61-yard scoring run. Texas A&M nearly had first-and-goal at the Car- dinals 6, but a review showed Christian Kirk did not maintain possession of the ball on his catch. That left Jake Hubenak two more chances inside the final 2 minutes. The Cardinals batted down a pass, then Hubenak was incomplete throwing into the end zone. Louisville linebacker Devonte Fields had three sacks, and Louisville safety Josh Harvey-Clemons stripped Hubenak him of the ball and intercepted a pass both in the third quarter. Jackson had no such issues as he passed Stefan LeFors’ previous career rushing mark of 756 yards between 2002 and 2004. He showed off the speed that Louisville coach Bobby Petrino wants to bring to the Atlantic Coast Conference, running through, around and over the Aggies. Jackson set a bowl rushing record, topping the 187 yards Marion Barber of Minnesota ran for in 2004. He also set the total offense mark of 424 set by Mike Glennon of North Carolina state in 2012 as he threw for 227 yards. Category UL TAMU First Downs 21 25 Rushes-Yards 46-307 39-138 Passing Yards 227 307 Passes C-A-I 12-26-0 28-48-1 Plays-Yards 72-534 87-445 *QB Lamar Jackson set a bowl record with 226 yards rushing, and became the third QB to rush and pass for over 200 yards in a bowl game. 2014 Belk Bowl Georgia - 37 | Louisville - 14 Dec. 30, 2014 n Charlotte, N.C. 1 2 3 4 F Georgia 7 13 7 10 37 Louisville 7 0 7 0 14 CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Freshman Nick Chubb ran for a career-high 266 yards and two touchdowns as No. 13 Georgia defeated the 20th-ranked Car- dinals 37-14 in the Belk Bowl. Louisville finished 9-4 in its first season with Bobby Petrino back at the helm. The Cardinals came in with the nation’s second best defense but allowed 301 yards on the ground. Chubb’s rushing total was second highest in school history behind only Herschel Walker’s 283 yards rushing against Vanderbilt in 1980. Chubb aver- aged 8 yards per carry. Chubb set a new Belk Bowl rushing record, eclipsing the 174-yard effort set by Boston Col- lege’s Andrew Callender in 2004. Kyle Bolin, who was making his first career start, threw for 314 yards, but tossed three interceptions. Category UL UGA First Downs 20 22 Rushes-Yards 27-62 52-305 Passing Yards 314 200 Passes C-A-I 21-44-3 14-24-1 Plays-Yards 76-505 71-376 2013 Russell Athletic Bowl Louisville - 36 | Miami - 9 Dec. 28, 2013 n Orlando, Fla 1 2 3 4 F Miami 2 0 0 7 9 Louisville 6 16 7 7 36 ORLANDO, Fla. - Leading up to the Rus- sell Athletic Bowl, Louisville quarterback Teddy Bridgewater batted back questions about whether the game would be his last in college. If it was, he left plenty for the Cardinals to remember. Bridgewater threw three touchdown passes and ran for another score to help No. 18 Lou- isville rout Miami 36-9. The Cardinals spotted 2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL 232HistoryMiami an early 2-0 lead, then dominated the rest of the way, racking up 554 total yards to the Hur- ricanes’ 174. With Cardinals’ fans chanting “Teddy! Teddy!” at times throughout the game, Bridgewater, pro- jected to be a top NFL draft pick if he comes out this summer, set a school season record with 31 touchdown passes. The Miami native also tied the school record with his 27th victory as Louisville’s starter. He was 35 for 45 for career-high 447 yards. Louisville won its second straight bowl game for its second 12-win season. Category LOU UM First Downs 28 14 Rushes-Yards 31-107 28-14 Passing Yards 447 160 Passes C-A-I 35-45-0 12-27-0 Plays-Yards 76-554 55-174 2013 Sugar Bowl Louisville - 33 | Florida - 23 Jan. 2, 2013 n New Orleans, La. 1 2 3 4 F Florida 0 10 0 13 23 Louisville 14 10 6 3 33 NEW ORLEANS, La. - Louisville safety Calvin Pryor predicted the Cardinals would “shock the world” against Florida in the Sugar Bowl. Terell Floyd returned an interception 38 yards for a touchdown on the first play, dual- threat quarterback Teddy Bridgewater directed a handful of scoring drives and No. 22 Louisville stunned the fourth-ranked Gators 33-23 in the Sugar Bowl. Bridgewater was 20 of 32 passing for 266 yards and two touchdowns against the heavily favored Gators. Among his throws was a pinpoint, 15- yard timing toss that DeVante Parker acrobatically grabbed as he touched one foot down in the cor- ner of the end zone. His other scoring strike went to Damian Cope- land from 19 yards one play after a surprise onside kick by the Gators backfired badly. Jeremy Wright had a short touchdown run which gave the two- touchdown underdogs from the Big East a 14-0 lead from which the Gators never recovered. Category UL UF First Downs 23 17 Rushes-Yards 36-70 30-111 Passing Yards 266 175 Passes C-A-I 20-32-1 16-29-2 Plays-Yards 68-336 59-286 2011 Belk Bowl NC State - 31 | Louisville - 24 Dec. 27, 2011 n Charlotte, N.C. 1 2 3 4 F Louisville 7 3 7 7 24 NC State 7 14 10 0 31 CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Mike Glennon threw for 264 yards and three touchdowns and David Amer- son returned an interception 65 yards for a touch- down as North Carolina State defeated Louisville 31-24 in the Belk Bowl. Louisville’s Teddy Bridgewater, who threw for 274 yards and two touchdowns and ran for another, nearly brought the Cardinals back from a 21-point deficit, but his final heave on fourth-and-23 was picked off by Amerson with 41 seconds left. Bridgewater threw a pair of 2-yard touchdown passes to close the gap to 31-24 with 3:55 left in the game. With his team trailing down 21, Louisville coach Charlie Strong started to gamble. Strong called for a fake punt after the Cardinals’ next drive stalled and Preston Brown, the up back on the punt team, took a direct snap from center and raced 32 yards for a first down. That set up a 2-yard touchdown pass from Bridgewater to tight end Nate Nord in the back corner of the end zone. Category UL NCS First Downs 18 19 Rushes-Yards 35-117 28-65 Passing Yards 274 264 Passes C-A-I 24-43-3 21-33-1 Plays-Yards 78-391 61-329 2010 Beef ‘O’ Brady’s Bowl Louisville - 31 | Southern Miss. - 28 Dec. 21, 2010 n St. Petersburgh, Fla. 1 2 3 4 F Southern Miss 14 7 0 7 28 Louisville 0 21 0 10 31 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Justin Burke threw for a pair touchdowns and Jeremy Wright scored on a 95-yard kickoff return to help Louisville beat for- mer Conference USA rival Southern Mississippi 31-28 in the Beef ‘O’ Brady’s Bowl. Burke tossed scoring passes of 11 yards to Cameron Graham and 10 yards to Josh Chiches- ter while the Cardinals erased a 14-point first-half deficit, then produced a go-ahead field goal in the fourth quarter. Wright’s long kickoff return made it 28-all early in the fourth quarter. Chris Philpott’s 36-yard field goal gave the Cardinals their first lead with 6:30 remaining. Austin Davis completed 19 of 32 passes, in- cluding TD throws of 32 yards to Pierce and 8 yards to Zeke Walters for the Golden Eagles. Bilal Powell rushed for 75 yards for Louisville - well below his season average of 120.9 - however the 215-pound senior was instrumental in helping the Cardinals exhaust most of the clock after fi- nally taking the lead. Category LOU USM First Downs 15 24 Rushes-Yards 29-109 40-170 Passing Yards 178 226 Passes C-A-I 20-32-0 21-34-0 Plays-Yards 61-287 74-396 2007 Orange Bowl Louisville - 24 | Wake Forest - 13 Jan. 2, 2007 n Miami, Fla. 1 2 3 4 F Wake Forest 0 3 7 3 13 Louisville 0 10 0 14 24 MIAMI, Fla. - Brian Brohm threw for 311 yards to lead Louisville past Wake Forest 24-13 in the 2007 FedEx Orange Bowl. The Cardinals averaged 39 points and ranked second in the nation in total offense this season, but fell behind 13-10 in the final period before their offense went into high gear. Alphonso Smith nearly blocked Art Carmody’s errant kick and also harried Louisville’s punter into a 14-yard boot that set up a 44-yard field goal by Sam Swank of Wake Forest. But Sam Swank made a 36-yarder to cap a 61-yard drive and put the Demon Deacons ahead 13-10 early in the fourth quarter. The Cardinals responded with an eight-play drive capped by Anthony Allen’s 1-yard plunge for a 17-13 lead with 12:31 to go. They quickly forced a punt, and mounted a 10-play drive that ended with Brock Bolen’s 18-yard scoring run. Brohm finished 24- for-34 and was chosen the game’s most valuable player. Category LOU WFU First Downs 23 18 Rushes-Yds 37-125 29-111 Passing 332 271 Passes A-C-I 35-25-0 33-21-1 Plays-Yards 72-457 62-382 2006 Gator Bowl Virginia Tech - 35 | Louisville - 24 Jan. 2, 2006 n Jacksonville, Fla. 1 2 3 4 F Louisville 14 3 0 7 24 Virginia Tech 3 7 3 22 35 JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Virginia Tech had a much better experience in the River City this time around. Marcus Vick threw two touchdown passes and the 12th-ranked Hokies rallied to beat No. 15 Louisville 35-24 in the Gator Bowl. The Hokies scored on three consecutive pos- sessions in the second half, turning a 17-10 deficit into a 28-24 lead. James Anderson sealed the vic- tory when he intercepted Hunter Cantwell’s pass and returned it 39 yards for a touchdown with 5:04 to play. Vick was huge in directing the come- back, which snapped a five-game winning streak for Louisville. He completed a 54-yard pass to David Clowney, and Cedric Humes scored on the next play from 24 yards. Chris Ellis sacked Cantwell on the ensuing drive and knocked the ball loose. Anderson recov- ered near midfield, and Vick did the rest.He threw two deep passes that might have been caught if not for pass interference penalties. Two plays later, he found Jeff King for the go-ahead score. Category LOU VT First Downs 20 21 Rushes-Att-Yds 30-127 48-187 Passing Yards 216 203 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 15-37-3 11-21-0 Plays-Yards 67-343 59-390 2004 Liberty Bowl Louisville - 44 | Boise State - 40 Dec. 31, 2004 n Memphis, Tenn. 1 2 3 4 F Boise State 10 21 3 6 40 Louisville 14 7 14 9 44 MEMPHIS, Tenn. - In the highest scoring Au- toZone Liberty Bowl ever, it was a defensive play by Louisville that ended Boise State’s 22-game winning streak. Louisville safety Kerry Rhodes intercepted a pass in the end zone as time expired to preserve Louisville’s 44-40 victory over 10th-ranked Boise State. Eric Shelton scored on the go-ahead touch- down on a 1-yard run with 6:48 left. Stefan LeFors 2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL 233gocards.com BOWL RECAPSBOWL RECAPS threw two touchdowns and ran for a third for the Cardinals. Quarterback Jared Zabransky drove the Bron- cos to the Louisville 30 before his final pass was intercepted by Rhodes as time expired. Everyone expected a high-scoring game in a bowl pairing the nation’s top two offenses, and the teams didn’t disappoint as they swapped the lead five times. The 84 combined points topped the 80 points by Colorado and Alabama in 1969 and was one of a handful of records set. The Car- dinals rolled up 564 yards, topping 500 yards for the ninth time this season. LeFors was 18-of-26 for 193 yards and ran 12 times for 76 yards. Category LOU BSU First Downs 29 15 Rushes-Att-Yds 50-329 38-88 Passing Yards 235 196 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 21-31-2 15-31-1 Plays-Yards 71-564 53-284 2003 GMAC Bowl Miami (OH) - 49 | Louisville - 28 Dec. 18, 2003 n Mobile, Ala. 1 2 3 4 F Miami (OH) 21 14 0 14 49 Louisville 0 21 7 0 28 MOBILE, Ala. - Ben Roethlisberger passed for 376 yards and four first-half touchdowns to lead No. 14 Miami of Ohio to a 49-28 victory over Lou- isville in the GMAC Bowl. He completed 21 of 33 passes, shaking off would-be sacks and throwing perfect strikes on the run. Miami scored two more touchdowns in the fourth to stymie a rally by Louisville. Roethlisberger completed 16-of-20 for 291 yards in the first half. The RedHawks outgained Louisville 597-492 in a matchup of high-powered offenses.The Miami defense twice came up big in the fourth. Matt Pusateri stepped in front of Stefan LeFors’ pass and raced 35 yards for a touchdown to erase Louisville’s comeback hopes, the Red- Hawks’ fifth score of the season on interception returns. Then, Terna Nande picked off another pass in the end zone. Cal Murray rushed 15 times for 142 yards and a touchdown for Miami. LeFors was 17-of-26 for 224 yards but was intercepted three times after getting picked off only seven times in the first 12 games. J.R. Russell caught seven passes for 144 yards and three touchdowns. Category LOU MIA First Downs 22 28 Rushes-Att-Yds 38-237 33-221 Passing Yards 255 376 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 18-27-3 33-21-0 Plays-Yards 56-492 66-597 2002 GMAC Bowl Marshall - 38 | Louisville - 15 Dec. 18, 2002 n Mobile, Ala. 1 2 3 4 F Marshall 7 10 7 14 38 Louisville 0 7 0 8 15 MOBILE, Ala. - Byron Leftwich completed 22- of-44 passes for 249 yards and four touchdowns as the Cardinals ended their season at 7-6 with a 38-15 loss to Marshall in the 2002 GMAC Bowl. The Thundering Herd scored the first 17 points of the game, coming on two touchdown passes from Leftwich and a Curtis Head 23-yard field goal. T.J. Patterson put Louisville on the board with a two-yard run with 5:15 left in the second quarter, but the Cards couldn’t stop the Thundering Herd. Marshall put the game away with 21 straight points. Leading, 17-7, Leftwich tossed two more scores and a 15-yard run by Frank Wallace iced the contest. Dave Ragone closed the scoring with an 11-yard pass to Tiger Jones. Ragone was 20-of-45 for 193 yards, but was sacked three times. Ragone was also the team’s top rusher with 31 yards, but the Cards were limited to 56 yards on 26 carries. Category LOU MU First Downs 23 20 Rushes-Att-Yds 30-99 26-56 Passing Yards 249 205 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 44-22-1 48-21-1 Plays-Yards 74-348 74-261 2001 Liberty Bowl Louisville - 28 | BYU - 10 Dec. 31, 2001 n Memphis, Tenn. 1 2 3 4 F BYU 0 7 3 0 10 Louisville 7 7 7 7 28 MEMPHIS, Tenn. - The No. 23-ranked Cardi- nals made an impressive statement to cap one of the most successful seasons in school history with a 28-10 pounding of No. 19 Brigham Young in the AXA Liberty Bowl. The Louisville defense, ranked 10th in the nation in points allowed, held the nation’s high- est scoring offense (46.8 points per game) 14 points below its previous low. So it was only fitting that the Cardinal defense came up with the biggest play of the game. Zek Parker had returned the opening kickoff 70 yards to the BYU 22 to set up the Cards’ first score, with Henry Miller carrying it in from the one yard line. Then the Cougars scored on a trick play, a lateral to lineman Dustin Rykert for a 10-yard touchdown to make it 7-7 midway through the second quarter. Deion Branch had three catches in the next Cardinal drive, including a 34-yard touchdown that put Louisville ahead 21-10 with 4:15 remain- ing in the third quarter. Safety Curry Burns had one of the best games of his career with nine solo tack- les and two pass break-ups. Category LOU BYU First Downs 17 17 Rushing Yards 37-58 32-84 Passes 19-28 18-38 Passing Yards 228 192 Plays-Yards 65-286 50-276 2000 Liberty Bowl Colorado State - 22 | Louisville - 17 Dec. 29, 2000 n Memphis, Tenn. 1 2 3 4 F Colorado State 3 13 3 3 22 Louisville 7 3 0 7 17 MEMPHIS, Tenn. - In the only bowl game of the 2000 season that featured a pair of confer- ence champions, the Mountain West champs - the Colorado State Rams bulled their way to a 22-17 win over the Louisville Cardinals, Conference USA champions. More than 25,000 UofL fans braved wind chills in the single digits and saw the Cardinals jump out to a 10-3 lead early in the second quarter. Sopho- more quarterback Dave Ragone connected with little-used wide receiver Damien Dorsey on a 58- yard scoring play and got three more from the right foot of placekicker Nate Smith. The Rams battled back late in the first half getting a pair of touch- downs on the ground from Cecil Sapp and Frank Rice. Sapp would go on to earn game MVP honors after a 160-yard performance. Armed with a 16-10 halftime lead, the Rams would bump the score to 19-10 after the second of three C.W. Hurst field goals, a 21-yarder early in the third quarter. UofL pulled within two at 19-17 when Ragone connected with Deion Branch on a 14-yard scoring play with 13:35 left in the game. For the day, Ragone completed 24 of 37 throws for 321 yards in winds up to 30 miles per hour. Branch set a Liberty Bowl record with 10 recep- tions for 170 yards and a score. Category CSU LOU First Downs 22 17 Rushing Yards 157 76 Passes 13-28-1 24-37-0 Passing Yards 158 321 Total Offense 315 397 1999 Humanitarian Bowl Boise State - 34 | Louisville - 31 Dec. 30, 1999 n Boise, Idaho 1 2 3 4 F Louisville 17 7 0 7 31 Boise State 14 7 6 7 34 BOISE, Id. - Freshman Brock Forsey rushed for 152 yards and helped Boise State, in its fourth season since moving up from Division I-AA, to a 34-31 victory Thursday over Louisville in the Hu- manitarian Bowl. UofL drew first blood less than three minutes into the game when senior Jon Hilbert split the up- rights from 40 yards out to give the Cards a 3-0 lead. BSU quarterback Bart Hendricks sprinted in from three yards out to give the Broncos a 7-3 ad- vantage, but UofL would strike back less than two minutes later as senior quarterback Chris Redman hit Arnold Jackson with a 54-yard scoring pass.The NCAA’s all-time leader in passes attempted and completed, Redman would close his historic col- legiate career by completing 26 of 47 throws for 314 yards and two scores. Following a Hendricks TD pass, junior Zek Parker returned the ensuing kickoff 91 yards for a score as UofL seized the lead back at 17-14. Park- er’s TD return was his third of the season. The two clubs matched touchdowns in the second stanza with Damien Dorsey catching his first pass as a collegian to give UofL a 24-21 lead at halftime. Category LOU BSU First Downs 22 28 Rushes-Att-Yds 38-237 33-221 Passing Yards 255 376 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 18-27-3 33-21-0 Plays-Yards 56-492 66-597 2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL 234History1998 Motor City Bowl Marshall - 48 | Louisville - 29 Dec. 23, 1998 n Detroit, Mich. 1 2 3 4 F Marshall 7 14 17 10 48 Louisville 0 21 0 8 29 DETROIT, Mich. - Marshall scored 24 unan- swered points to take control of the second an- nual Motor City Bowl, 48-29. The loss, however, could not dampen the metamorphosis of the Louisville football team during the 1998 season. UofL held serve with Marshall through the first 30 minutes holding a 21-21 deadlock with the Thundering Herd behind the offense of junior running back Leroy Collins and quarterback Chris Redman. Redman completed 35 of 56 throws for 336 yards and a second-quarter TD to Charles Shef- field. The outing was a fitting end to a junior season which saw him finish second nationally in total offense and become the 13th quarter- back in I-A history to throw for 4,000 yards. Collins found the end zone three times in the bowl loss to cap a recordsetting season. The ju- nior college transfer hit paydirt 19 times during the regular season to break Lenny Lyles 40-year- old mark. Herd quarterback Chad Pennington set virtually every MCB record completing 18 of 24 passes for 411 yards and four touchdowns as Marshall exploited an injury-riddled UofL defense. Category MU LOU First Downs 27 26 Rushing Yards 202 66 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 18-24 34-54 Passing Yards 411 336 Total Offense 613 402 1993 Liberty Bowl Louisville - 18 | Michigan State - 7 Dec. 28, 1993 n Memphis, Tenn. 1 2 3 4 F Michigan State 7 0 0 0 7 Louisville 3 0 0 15 18 MEMPHIS, Tenn. - The 1993 Cardinals put a cap on an 8-3 regular season with an 18-7 victory over Michigan State at the Liberty Bowl. Howard Schnellenberger’s squad registered the first win ever by the Cardinals over a Big Ten foe. The conditions were hardly ideal for an aerial display, but quarterback Jeff Brohm checked in with one of the guttiest efforts in the history of Car- dinal football. Brohm, playing with two steel pins and one steel plate in the index finger of his throw- ing hand completed 19-of-29 passes for 197 yards and a touchdown amidst 20-degree temperatures and freezing rain. Most of that courage was shown in the fourth quarter. Entering the final frame, Lou- isville trailed 7-3. With 12:05 remaining, Brohm connected on a 25-yard strike to Reggie Ferguson to put the Cardinals in front for good. Just over three minutes later, it was the defense’s turn to make a big play. Pinned back to their one-yard line, the Spar- tans were merely looking to get some breathing room for their offense. Running back Craig Thomas took the handoff and was immediately met by All- American defensive end Joe Johnson and reserve linebacker Tyrus McCloud for a safety. Category MSU LOU First Downs 18 20 Rushing Yards 114 172 Passes Cmp-Att-I 15-28-1 19-31-0 Passing Yards 193 197 Total Offense 307 369 1991 Fiesta Bowl Louisville - 34 | Alabama - 7 Jan. 1, 1991 n Tempe, Ariz. 1 2 3 4 F Louisville 25 0 7 2 34 Alabama 0 7 0 0 7 TEMPE, Ariz. - Playing in its first bowl game in 13 years, the Louisville football team felt it had something to prove at the 1991 Fiesta Bowl. The squad proved its point to the tune of a 34-7 thrashing of Alabama. The Cardinals came out on all cylinders, scoring 25 points in the first quarter. Browning Nagle tossed two long touchdown pass- es and Ray Buchanan recovered a blocked punt for a touchdown. Nagle threw for a Fiesta Bowl record 451 yards, including 223 during a 25-point first- quarter explosion. He completed 20-of-33 passes and had three scoring passes. Alabama’s offense did not experience much more success. For the game the Tide rolled for just 189 yards of total offense. UofL defensive back Ray Buchanan was tabbed as the game’s defensive most valuable player. Category ALA LOU First Downs 10 25 Rushing Yards 95 113 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 12-35-2 21-39-3 Passing Yards 94 458 Total Offense 189 571 1977 Independence Bowl Louisiana Tech - 24 | Louisville - 14 Dec. 17, 1977 n Shreveport, La. 1 2 3 4 F La. Tech 21 3 0 0 24 Louisville 7 0 7 0 14 SHREVEPORT, La. - The 1977 Louisville team, coached by Vince Gibson, ended a seven-year bowl drought, and took a 24-14 setback from Lou- isiana Tech at the Independence Bowl. Louisiana Tech, the Southland Conference champion, took the thrill out of the trip for UofL, handing the Cards a 10-point loss. Kevin Miller provided the spark offensively for UofL, electrify- ing the crowd with a 60-yard first quarter punt re- turn for a touchdown. In the third quarter, Miller scored again on a 13-yard run to cap a 13- play, 58-yard scoring drive. Tech quarterback Keith Thibodeaux, the offensive player of the game, countered Miller’s heroics with two touchdown passes. Miller nearly came up with another TD, but he mishandled a pass in the end zone from Stu Stram. Category LT LOU First Downs 25 11 Rushing Yards 48 100 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 19-39-2 9-23-1 Passing Yards 287 61 Total Offense 335 161 1970 Pasadena Bowl Louisville - 24 | Long Beach St. - 24 Dec. 19, 1970 n Pasadena, Calif. 1 2 3 4 F Louisville 14 7 3 0 24 Long Beach State 7 7 2 8 24 PASADENA, Calif. - In 1970, the University of Louisville’s Missouri Valley Conference Champi- onship team tied Long Beach State 24-24 at the Pasadena Bowl to close the season. Long Beach trailed Lee Corso’s Cardinals almost the entire game after John Madeya scored a pair of touch- downs. On the strength of a safety and some nifty running by fullback Leon Burns, LBSU managed to forge a fourth-quarter tie. A strange play near the end of the game had the Louisville faithful thinkingthey just might secure a victory. Madeya threw a screen pass to tailback Tom Jesukaitis, who was supposed to go out of bounds. Instead Jesukaitis put the ball in the air again, throwing a pass to Cookie Brinkman who went in for a touchdown. Category LBSU LOU First Downs 16 20 Rushing Yards 243 210 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 9-17-1 12-23-1 Passing Yards 148 90 Total Offense 391 300 1958 Sun Bowl Louisville - 34 | Drake - 20 Jan. 1, 1958 n El Paso, Texas 1 2 3 4 F Louisville 7 14 7 6 34 Drake 7 7 0 6 20 EL PASO, Texas - The University of Louisville made its first bowl appearance Jan. 1, 1958, as Frank Camp’s squad battered Drake 34-20 in the Sun Bowl. The victory over the Drake Bulldogs capped a near-perfect season for the Cardinals. UofL fin- ished with a 9-1 record.Louisville’s squad was headed by Lenny Lyles, the nation’s leading rusher. Unfortunately, Lyles went down in the first quarter with an injury. He managed just six yards on two carries. In Lyles’ absence, Ken Porco and Pete Bryant stepped forward offensively. Porco ran for a game- high 119 yards on 20 carries. Bryant added 80 yards on 14 carries, while also tossing a 20-yard scoring pass. Category DRAKE LOU First Downs 16 14 Rushing Yards 176 228 Passes Cmp-Att-Int 10-33-0 6-10-0 Passes Int. 1 0 Passing Yards 140 148 Total Offense 316 316 2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL 235gocards.com BOWL RECAPSALL-TIME TV APPEARANCES 2019 (5-5) 9/2 ESPN Notre Dame 35, Louisville 17 9/14 ESPN Florida State 35, Louisville 24 10/12 ACC Network Louisville 62, Wake Forest 59 10/19 ABC Clemson 45, Louisville 10 10/26 ACC Network Louisville 28, Virginia 21 11/9 ESPN2 Miami 52, Louisville 27 11/16 ACC Network Louisville 34, NC State 20 11/23 ACC Network Louisville 56, Louisville 34 11/30 SEC Network Kentucky 45, Louisville 13 12/30 ESPN Louisville 38, Mississippi State 28 2018 (1-10) 9/1 ABC Alabama 51, Louisville 14 9/15 ACC Network Louisville 20, Western Kentucky 17 9/22 ACC Network Virginia 27, Louisville 3 9/29 ESPNU Florida State 28, Louisville 24 10/5 ESPN Georgia Tech 66, Louisville 31 10/13 ACC Network Boston College 28, Louisville 20 10/27 ACC Network Wake Forest 56, Louisville 35 11/3 ABC Clemson 77, Louisville 16 11/9 ESPN2 Syracuse 54, Louisville 23 11/17 ACC Network NC State 52, Louisville 10 11/24 ESPN2 Kentucky 56. Louisville 10 2017 (8-5) 9/2 FOX Louisville 35, Purdue 28 9/9 ESPN Louisville 47, North Carolina 35 9/16 ABC Clemson 47, Louisville 21 10/5 (Thurs.) ESPN NC State 39, Louisville 25 10/14 ACC Network Boston College 45, Louisville 42 10/21 ESPN Louisville 31, Florida State 28 10/28 ACC Network Wake Forest 42, Louisville 32 11/11 ESPNU Louisville 38, Virginia 21 11/18 ESPNU Louisville 56, Syracuse 10 11/25 SEC Network Louisville 44, Kentucky 17 12/30 ESPN Mississippi State 31, Louisville 27 2016 (9-4) 9/1 (Thurs.) RSN Louisville 70, Charlotte 14 9/9 (Fr.) ESPN2 Louisville 62, Syracuse 28 9/17 ABC Louisville 63, Florida State 20 9/24 CBS Sports Network Louisville 59, Marshall 28 10/1 ABC Clemson 42, Louisville 36 10/14 (Fri.) ESPN Louisville 24, Duke 14 10/22 ABC Louisville 54, NC State 13 10/29 ABC Louisville 32, Virginia 25 11/5 ESPN2 Louisville 52, Boston College 7 11/12 ESPN2 Louisville 44, Wake Forest 12 11/17 (Thur.) ESPN Houston 36, Louisville 10 11/26 ESPN Kentucky 41, Louisville 38 12/31 ESPN LSU 29, Louisville 9 2015 (8-4) 9/5 CBS Auburn 31, Louisville 24 9/12 FoxSports Houston 34, Louisville 31 9/17 (Thurs.) ESPN Clemson 20, Louisville 17 10/3 ACC Network Louisville 20, NC State 13 10/17 ESPN Florida State 41, Louisville 21 10/24 ACC Network Louisville 17, Boston College 14 10/30 (Fri.) ESPN2 Louisville 20, Wake Forest 19 11/7 ACC Network Louisville 41, Syracuse 17 11/14 FoxSports Louisville 38, Virginia 31 11/21 ESPNNews Pittsburgh 45, Louisville 34 11/28 SEC Network Louisville 38, Kentucky 24 12/30 (Wed.) ESPN Louisville 27, Texas A&M 21 2014 (9-4) 9/1 (Mon.) ESPN Louisville 31, Miami 13 9/6 ESPN3 Louisville 66, Murray State 21 9/13 ACC Network Virginia 23, Louisville 21 9/20 FoxSports1 Louisville 34, FIU 3 9/27 ESPNU Louisville 20, Wake Forest 10 10/3 (Fri.) ESPN Louisville 28, Syracuse 6 10/11 ESPNU #25 Clemson 23, Louisville 17 10/18 Raycom Louisville 30, NC State 18 10/30 (Thurs.) ESPN #2 Florida State 42, Louisville 31 11/8 ESPN2 Louisville 38, Boston College 19 11/22 NBC Louisville 31, Notre Dame 28 11/29 ESPN2 Louisville 44, Kentucky 40 12/30 (Tue.) ESPN #13 Georgia 37, Louisville 14 2013 (11-1) 9/1 (Sun.) ESPN Louisville 49, Ohio 7 9/7 ESPN3 Louisville 44, Eastern Kentucky 7 9/14 ESPN Louisville 27, Kentucky 13 10/5 ESPN Regional Louisville 30, Temple 7 10/10 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 24, Rutgers 10 10/18 (Fri.) ESPN UCF 38, Louisville 35 10/26 ESPN2 Louisville 34, USF 3 11/8 (Fri.) ESPN2 Louisville 31, Connecticut 10 11/16 ESPNU Louisville 20, Houston 13 11/23 ESPN3 Louisville 24, Memphis 17 12/5 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 31, #23 Cincinnati 24 12/28 ESPN Louisville 36, #25 Miami 9 2012 (10-2) 9/2 (Sun.) ESPN Louisville 32, Kentucky 14 9/15 ABC Louisville 39, North Carolina 34 9/22 ESPN3 Louisville 28, FIU 21 9/29 CBS Sports Net. Louisville 21, Southern Miss 17 10/13 ESPNU Louisville 45, Pittsburgh 35 10/20 ABC Louisville 27, USF 25 10/26 (Fri.) ESPN Louisville 34, Cincinnati 31 OT 11/3 ABC Louisville 45, Temple 17 11/10 ABC Syracuse 45, Louisville 26 11/24 BIG EAST Net. UConn 23, Louisville 20 3OT 11/29 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 20, Rutgers 17 1/2 (Tues.) ESPN Louisville 33, Florida 23 2011 (7-5) 9/1 (Thur.) ESPNU Louisville 21, Murray State 9 9/9 (Fri.) ESPN FIU 24, Louisville 17 9/17 ESPNU Louisville 24, Kentucky 17 10/8 ESPN2 North Carolina 14, Louisville 7 10/15 BIG EAST Net. Cincinnati 25, Louisville 16 10/21 (Fri.) ESPN2 Louisville 16, Rutgers 14 10/29 BIG EAST Net. Louisville 27, Syracuse 10 11/5 BIG EAST Net Louisville 38, West Virginia 35 11/12 BIG EAST Net. Pittsburgh 21, Louisville 14 11/19 BIG EAST Net. Louisville 34, Connecticut 20 11/25 (Fri.) ESPN2 Louisville 34, USF 24 12/27 (Tues.) ESPN NC State 31, Louisville 24 2010 (6-6) 9/4 ABC Kentucky 23, Louisville 16 9/18 FSN NW Oregon State 35, Louisville 28 10/2 ESPN3 Louisville 34, Arkansas State 24 10/9 ESPN3 Louisville 56, Memphis 0 10/15 (Fri.) ESPN Cincinnati 35, Louisville 27 10/23 ESPNU Louisville 26, Connecticut 0 10/30 BIG EAST Net. Pittsburgh 20, Louisville 3 11/6 BIG EAST Net. Louisville 28, Syracuse 20 11/13 ESPNU USF 24, Louisville 21 OT 11/20 BIG EAST Net. West Virginia 17, Louisville 10 11/26 (Fri.) ESPN2 Louisville 40, Rutgers 13 12/21 (Sun.) ESPN Louisville 31, Southern Miss 28 2009 (2-8) 9/19 ESPNU Kentucky 31, Louisville 27 9/26 CBS Sports Net. Utah 30, Louisville 14 10/2 (Fri.) ESPN2 Pittsburgh 35, Louisville 10 10/10 ESPNU Louisville 25, Southern Miss 23 10/17 BIG EAST Net. Connecticut 38, Louisville 25 10/24 ESPNU Cincinnati 41, Louisville 10 11/7 BIG EAST Net. West Virginia 17, Louisville 9 11/14 BIG EAST Net. Louisville 10, Syracuse 9 11/21 BIG EAST Net. USF 34, Louisville 22 11/27 (Fri.) ESPN2 Rutgers 34, Louisville 14 2008 (2-7) 8/31 (Sun.) ESPN Kentucky 27, Louisville 2 9/17 (Wed.) ESPN2 Louisville 39, Kansas State 28 9/26 (Fri.) ESPN2 Connecticut 26, Louisville 21 10/10 (Fri.) ESPN2 Louisville 35, Memphis 28 11/1 ESPNU Syracuse 28, Louisville 21 11/8 ESPN Reg. Pittsburgh 41, Louisville 7 11/14 (Fri.) ESPN2 Cincinnati 28, Louisville 20 11/22 ESPN West Virginia 35, Louisville 21 12/4 (Thurs.) ESPN Rutgers 63, Louisville 14 2007 (6-6) 8/30 (Thur.) ESPNU Louisville 73, Murray State 10 9/6 (Thur.) ESPN2 Louisville 58, MTSU 42 9/15 ESPNC Kentucky 40, Louisville 34 9/22 ESPN Reg. Syracuse 38, Louisville 35 9/29 ESPNU Louisville 29, NC State 10 10/5 (Fri.) ESPN Utah 44, Louisville 35 10/13 ESPNU Louisville 28, Cincinnati 24 10/19 (Fri.) ESPN Connecticut 21, Louisville 17 10/27 ESPN Reg. Louisville, 24, Pittsburgh 17 11/8 (Thur.) ESPN West Virginia 38, Louisville 31 11/17 ESPNU USF 55, Louisville 17 11/29 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 41, Rutgers 38 2006 (10-1) 9/4 (Mon.) ESPN Louisville 59, Kentucky 28 9/16 ABC Louisville 31, Miami 7 9/23 FSN Louisville 24, Kansas State 6 10/6 (Fri.) ESPN2 Louisville 41, MTSU 17 10/14 ESPNU Louisville 23, Cincinnati 17 10/21 ESPN Reg. Louisville 28, Syracuse 13 11/2 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 44, West Virginia 34 11/9 (Thur.) ESPN Rutgers 28, Louisville 25 11/18 ESPNU Louisville 31, USF 8 11/25 ESPN Louisville 48, Pittsburgh 24 1/2 (Tues.) FOX Louisville 24, Wake Forest 13 2005 (8-3) 9/4 (Sun.) ESPN Louisville 31, Kentucky 24 9/17 ESPN2 Louisville 63, Oregon State 27 9/24 ESPNU USF 45, Louisville 14 10/1 ESPN Reg. Louisville 61, Florida Atlantic 0 10/15 ABC W.Virginia 46, Louisville 44 3OT 10/22 ESPNU Louisville 46, Cincinnati 22 11/3 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 42, Pittsburgh 20 11/11 (Fri.) ESPN2 Louisville 56, Rutgers 5 11/26 ESPNU Louisville 41, Syracuse 17 12/3 ESPN Louisville 30, Connecticut 20 1/2 (Sun.) NBC Virginia Tech 35, Louisville 24 2004 (6-1) 9/4 ESPN2 Louisville 28, Kentucky 0 10/14 (Thur.) ESPN Miami 41, Louisville 38 10/22 (Fri.) ESPN Louisville 41, USF 9 11/4 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 56, Memphis 49 11/10 (Wed.) ESPN Louisville 55, TCU 7 11/17 (Wed.) ESPN2 Louisville 70, Cincinnati 7 12/31 (Fri.) ESPN Louisville 44, Boise State 40 2003 (3-2) 8/31 (Sun.) ESPN2 Louisville 40, Kentucky 24 10/17 (Fri.) ESPN Louisville 47, Tulane 28 11/5 (Wed.) ESPN TCU 31, Louisville 28 11/28 (Fri.) ESPN2 Louisville 43, Cincinnati 40 12/18 (Thur.) ESPN2 Miami (OH) 49, Louisville 28 2002 (3-4) 9/1 (Sun.) ESPN2 Kentucky 22, Louisville 17 9/14 ESPN2 Colorado State 36, Louisville 33 9/26 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 26, Florida State 20 OT 10/8 (Tues.) ESPN2 Louisville 38, Memphis 32 11/7 (Thur.) ESPN Cincinnati 24, Louisville 14 11/14 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 20, Southern Miss 17 OT 12/18 (Wed.) ESPN2 Marshall 38, Louisville 15 2001 (5-1) 9/1 JP Louisville 36, Kentucky 10 9/22 ESPN2 Illinois 34, Louisville 10 10/4 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 7, Colorado State 2 10/16 (Tues.) ESPN2 Louisville 24, Southern Miss 14 11/15 (Thur.) ESPN Louisville 39, ECU 34 12/31 (Mon.) ESPN Louisville 28, BYU 10 1999 (0-4) 9/25 FOX Oklahoma 42, Louisville 21 10/7 (Thur.) FOX Army 59, Louisville 52 OT 11/20 FOX Southern Miss 30, Louisvillen 27 12/27 ESPN2 Boise State 34, Louisville 31 1998 (1-3) 9/5 FOX Kentucky 68, Louisville 34 9/19 ESPN2 Louisville 35, Illinois 9 10/17 FOX Tulane 28, Louisville 22 12/23 (Wed.) ESPN2 Marshall 49, Louisville 28 1997 (1-2) 9/13 CBS Louisville 26, Illinois 14 9/20 CBS Penn State 51, Louisville 27 11/8 FOX Cincinnati 28, Louisville 9 1996 (1-3) 8/31 ESPN2 Louisville 38, Kentucky 14 9/14 ABC Penn State 24, Louisville 7 9/28 FOX Southern Miss 24, Louisville 7 10/16 (Wed.) FOX Houston 38, Louisville 7 1995 (0-2) 9/16 PRIME Michigan State 30, Louisville 7 9/21 (Thur.) ESPN North Carolina 17, Louisville 10 1994 (0-2) 9/10 ABC Texas 30, Louisville 16 11/3 (Thur.) ESPN BC 35, Louisville 14 1993 (1-2) 11/6 ABC Tennessee 45, Louisville 10 11/13 ESPN Texas A&M 42, Louisville 7 12/28 (Tues.) ESPN Louisville 18, Michigan State 7 1992 (0-2) 9/5 ESPN Ohio State 21, Louisville 20 11/7 ABC Texas A&M 40, Louisville 18 1991 (1-2) 9/5 (Thur.) ESPN Tennessee 28, Louisville 11 9/14 ESPN Ohio State 23, Louisville 15 1/1 (Wed.) NBC Louisville 34, Alabama 7 2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL 236History2020 LO UIS VILLE C ARDIN ALS F OO TB ALL gocards.com ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION 237 Neeli Bendapudi is the 18th President of the University of Louisville. Selected by the UofL Board of Trustees in April 2018, Bendapudi came to Louis- ville from the University of Kansas where she served as Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor. Since becoming Presi- dent, Bendapudi has worked toward making the universi- ty a great place for students to learn, a great place for faculty and staff to work, and a great place for alumni and the community to invest. Under her leadership, the university will celebrate diversity, foster equity and strive for inclusion. She earned her PhD in marketing from the University of Kansas and has teaching experience at Texas A&M University and The Ohio State University. Bendapudi returned to KU in 2011 to become the School of Business dean and H.D. Price Professor of Business. During her career, she has taught at the undergraduate, MBA, Executive MBA and PhD levels and received numerous college, univer- sity and national teaching awards. Bendapudi specializes in the study of consumer behavior in service con- texts. Her research deals with customers’ willingness and ability to maintain long-term relation- ships with firms and with the brands and employees that represent them. Her research has been published in the Journal of Aca- demic Medicine, Harvard Business Review, Journal of Marketing (where she also served on the editorial board), Journal of Market- ing Research, Journal of Retailing, Journal of Service Research and in the proceedings of various national and international confer- ences. Her work has been featured by popu- lar media outlets including The New York Times, CNBC, CNN, MSNBC, WebMD and Fox News Network. Previously, she served as chief customer officer of the Huntington National Bank and was actively involved in business outreach through consulting and executive education programs. A highly sought-after keynote speaker, she has addressed national and international audiences for many companies, trade groups and organizations. Bendapudi sits on the Board of Direc- tors of publicly held company Lancaster Colony Corporation and has sat on several non-profit organization boards, including MRIGlobal, an independent research insti- tute. She is a former Leadership Foundation Fellow of the International Women’s Forum, one of a select group of women selected worldwide for this prestigious honor. She is married to Venkat Bendapudi. Their daughter, Sirisha, is married to Kyle Ladd. Dr. Neeli Bendapudi n University PresidentNext >