How to Watch Saturday's College Football Bowl Games

A seven-game slate is set to open FBS's postseason.
How to Watch Saturday's College Football Bowl Games
How to Watch Saturday's College Football Bowl Games /

It's the most wonderful time of the year.

Bowl season has finally arrived, and with it all the conference cross-pollination that college football fans know and love. This year's might be the last of its kind: With 12 teams slated for entry into next year's College Football Playoff, the meaning of bowl season in an expansion-obsessed world remains hazy.

For now, however, there are 42 postseason games to feast on throughout this December and January. There are bowls in New York and Los Angeles and El Paso, Texas and Shreveport, La.. There are bowls involving Alabama and Notre Dame and James Madison and Jacksonville State. It's a delightful, nationwide sampling of what makes the game great.

So, settle in this Saturday for a septuple-header to kick off affairs. Times and TV networks for the first day of games are as follows.

Myrtle Beach Bowl

Ohio (9-3) vs. Georgia Southern (6-6)
TIME: 11 a.m. ET
TV: ESPN
STREAMING: ESPN app, ESPN+

Celebration Bowl

Howard (6-5) vs. Florida A&M (11-1)
TIME: Noon ET
TV: ABC
STREAMING: ESPN3, ESPN+

New Orleans Bowl

Jacksonville State (8-4) vs. Louisiana-Lafayette (6-6)
TIME: 2:15 ET
TV: ESPN
STREAMING: ESPN app, ESPN+

Cure Bowl

Miami-Ohio (11-2) vs. Appalachian State (8-5)
TIME: 3:30 ET
TV: ABC
STREAMING: ESPN3, ESPN+

New Mexico Bowl

Fresno State (8-4) vs. New Mexico State (10-4)
TIME: 5:45 ET
TV: ESPN
STREAMING: ESPN app, ESPN+

LA Bowl

Boise State (8-5) vs. UCLA (7-5)
TIME: 7:30 ET
TV: ABC
STREAMING: ESPN3, ESPN+

Independence Bowl

California (6-6) vs. Texas Tech (6-6)
TIME: 9:15 ET
TV: ESPN
STREAMING: ESPN app, ESPN+


Published
Patrick Andres
PATRICK ANDRES

Patrick Andres is a staff writer on the Breaking and Trending News team at Sports Illustrated. He joined SI in December 2022, having worked for The Blade, Athlon Sports, Fear the Sword and Diamond Digest. Andres has covered everything from zero-attendance Big Ten basketball to a seven-overtime college football game. He is a graduate of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism with a double major in history .