MAC Football
Championship Game
SportCollege football
ConferenceMid-American Conference
Current stadiumFord Field
Current locationDetroit, Michigan
Played1997–present
Last contest2023
Current championMiami RedHawks
Most championshipsMarshall, Northern Illinois (5)
TV partner(s)ESPN/ESPN2
Official websiteMAC-Sports.com football
Sponsors
Marathon Petroleum (2003–2019)
Rocket Mortgage (2020–2022)
Host stadiums
Marshall University Stadium (1997–2000, 2002)
Glass Bowl (2001)
Doyt Perry Stadium (2003)
Ford Field (2004–present)
Host locations
Huntington, West Virginia (1997–2000, 2002)
Toledo, Ohio (2001)
Bowling Green, Ohio (2003)
Detroit, Michigan (2004–present)

The MAC Football Championship Game is an annual postseason college football game played to determine the champion of the Mid-American Conference (MAC).

History

Locations of the full members of the Mid-American Conference.

The game has been played since 1997, when the conference was first divided into divisions and since 2020 has been sponsored by Rocket Mortgage (officially known as the Rocket Mortgage MAC Football Championship). The winner of the game is guaranteed a berth in a bowl game which the MAC has contractual obligations to field a team. Unlike the MAC's Group of Five contemporaries, which hold their respective championship games on campus sites, the MAC Championship Game is held at a neutral site, Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan since 2004 and is scheduled to be held there through at least 2025.[1][2]

In 2000, 2001, and 2007, due to an unbalanced conference schedule, the team with best division record within each division was awarded that division's championship game berth. In other years, the teams with the best overall conference records received a berth. Starting in 2024 the MAC will eliminate divisions and include the two teams with the best overall conference records.[3]

The game is held on the first Saturday in December, on the same weekend that other NCAA Division I FBS conferences hold their championship games.

Results

Below are the results from all MAC Football Championship Games played. The winning team appears in bold font, on a background of their primary team color. Rankings are from the AP Poll released prior to the game.

From 1997 through 2003, the championship game was played at campus sites. Since 2004, the game has been played at Ford Field in Detroit.

Year West East Site Attendance
1997 Toledo Rockets14 Marshall Thundering Herd34 Marshall University StadiumHuntington, WV 28,021
1998 Toledo Rockets17 Marshall Thundering Herd23 28,085
1999 Western Michigan Broncos30 11 Marshall Thundering Herd34 28,069
2000 Western Michigan Broncos14 Marshall Thundering Herd19 24,816
2001 Toledo Rockets41 20 Marshall Thundering Herd36 Glass BowlToledo, OH 20,025
2002 Toledo Rockets45 24 Marshall Thundering Herd49 Marshall University Stadium • Huntington, WV 24,582
2003 20 Bowling Green Falcons27 13 Miami RedHawks49 Doyt Perry StadiumBowling Green, OH 24,813
2004 Toledo Rockets35 Miami RedHawks27 Ford FieldDetroit, MI 22,138
2005 Northern Illinois Huskies30 Akron Zips31 12,051
2006 Central Michigan Chippewas31 Ohio Bobcats10 25,483
2007 Central Michigan Chippewas35 Miami RedHawks10 25,013
2008 12 Ball State Cardinals24 Buffalo Bulls42 12,871
2009 Central Michigan Chippewas20 Ohio Bobcats10 23,714
2010 24 Northern Illinois Huskies21 Miami RedHawks26 12,031
2011 Northern Illinois Huskies23 Ohio Bobcats20 13,052
2012 19 Northern Illinois Huskies442OT 18 Kent State Golden Flashes37 18,132
2013 16 Northern Illinois Huskies27 Bowling Green Falcons47 21,106
2014 Northern Illinois Huskies51 Bowling Green Falcons17 15,110
2015 Northern Illinois Huskies14 Bowling Green Falcons34 16,425
2016 13 Western Michigan Broncos29 Ohio Bobcats23 45,615
2017 Toledo Rockets 45 Akron Zips28 16,225
2018 Northern Illinois Huskies30 Buffalo Bulls29 10,255
2019 Central Michigan Chippewas21 Miami RedHawks26 22,427
2020 Ball State Cardinals38 23 Buffalo Bulls28 0
2021 Northern Illinois Huskies41 Kent State Golden Flashes23 10,317
2022 Toledo Rockets 17 Ohio Bobcats 7 15,550
2023 Toledo Rockets 14 Miami RedHawks 23 20,200

2020 game attendance was played behind closed doors due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Results by team

Appearances School Wins Losses Win % Year(s) Won Year(s) Lost
9 [[Northern Illinois Huskies football|Northern Illinois]] 5 4 .556 2011, 2012, 2014, 2018, 2021 2005, 2010, 2013, 2015
8 [[Toledo Rockets football|Toledo]] 4 4 .500 2001, 2004, 2017, 2022 1997, 1998, 2002, 2023
6 [[Marshall Thundering Herd football|Marshall]] 5 1 .833 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002 2001
6 [[Miami RedHawks football|Miami]] 4 2 .667 2003, 2010, 2019, 2023 2004, 2007
5 [[Ohio Bobcats football|Ohio]] 0 5 .000   2006, 2009, 2011, 2016, 2022
4 [[Central Michigan Chippewas football|Central Michigan]] 3 1 .750 2006, 2007, 2009 2019
4 [[Bowling Green Falcons football|Bowling Green]] 2 2 .500 2013, 2015 2003, 2014
3 [[Buffalo Bulls football|Buffalo]] 1 2 .333 2008 2018, 2020
3 [[Western Michigan Broncos football|Western Michigan]] 1 2 .333 2016 1999, 2000
2 [[Akron Zips football|Akron]] 1 1 .500 2005 2017
2 [[Ball State Cardinals football|Ball State]] 1 1 .500 2020 2008
2 [[Kent State Golden Flashes football|Kent State]] 0 2 .000   2012, 2021

Eastern Michigan is the only team currently in the conference to have not qualified for a Championship Game. Marshall is the only Championship Game Winner to not be a current member of the MAC. Bowling Green is the only team that has represented both the East and West Divisions in the Championship Game (was a member of the West Division prior to Marshall's departure from the MAC). Temple, UCF and UMass were previously in the conference during this era and never reached the championship game.

Common matchups

Matchups that have occurred more than once:

# of Times East Division West Division Record Years played
4 Marshall Toledo Marshall, 3–1 1997, 1998, 2001, 2002
3 Bowling Green Northern Illinois Bowling Green, 2–1 2013, 2014, 2015
2 Marshall Western Michigan Marshall, 2–0 1999, 2000
2 Ohio Central Michigan Central Michigan, 2–0 2006, 2009
2 Miami Central Michigan Tied, 1–1 2007, 2019
2 Buffalo Ball State Tied, 1–1 2008, 2020
2 Kent State Northern Illinois Northern Illinois, 2–0 2012, 2021

MVPs

YearMVP(s)TeamPosition
1997Randy MossMarshallWR
1998Chad PenningtonQB
1999
2000Byron Leftwich
2001Chester TaylorToledoRB
2002Byron LeftwichMarshallQB
2003Ben RoethlisbergerMiami
2004Bruce GradkowskiToledo
2005Luke GetsyAkron
2006Damien LinsonCentral MichiganWR
2007Dan LeFevourQB
2008Mike NewtonBuffaloDB
2009Dan LeFevourCentral MichiganQB
2010Thomas MerriweatherMiamiRB
2011Nathan PalmerNorthern IllinoisWR
2012Jordan LynchQB
2013Matt JohnsonBowling Green
2014Drew HareNorthern Illinois
2015Travis GreeneBowling GreenRB
2016Corey DavisWestern MichiganWR
2017Logan WoodsideToledoQB (Offensive)
Danzel McKinley-LewisWR (Special Teams)
2018Marcus ChildersNorthern IllinoisQB (Offensive)
Sutton SmithLB (Defensive)
2019Jack SorensonMiamiWR (Offensive)
Emmanuel RugambaLB (Defensive)
2020Drew PlittBall StateQB (Offensive)
Jimmy DawLB (Defensive)
2021Jay DuckerNorthern IllinoisRB (Offensive)
C.J. BrownDB (Defensive)
2022Dequan FinnToledoQB (Offensive)
Dyontae JohnsonLB (Defensive)

Game records

Team Record, Team vs. Opponent Year
Most points scored (one team) 51, Northern Illinois vs. Bowling Green 2014
Most points scored (losing team) 45, Toledo vs. Marshall 2002
Fewest points scored (winning team) 17, Toledo vs. Ohio 2022
Fewest points scored 7, Ohio vs. Toledo 2022
Most points scored (both teams) 94, Marshall (49) vs. Toledo (45) 2002
Fewest points scored (both teams) 24, Toledo (17) vs. Ohio (7) 2022
Most points scored in a half 35, Buffalo (2nd half) vs. Ball State
Ball State (1st half) vs. Buffalo
2008
2020
Most points scored in a half (both teams) 49, Marshall vs. Toledo (2nd half) 2002
Largest margin of victory 34, Northern Illinois (51) vs. Bowling Green (17) 2014
Smallest margin of victory 1, Akron (31) vs. Northern Illinois (30) 2005
Total yards 576, Miami (440 passing, 136 rushing) vs. Bowling Green 2003
Rushing yards 334, Northern Illinois vs. Bowling Green 2014
Passing yards 440, Miami vs. Bowling Green 2003
First downs 30, Western Michigan vs. Marshall
Ball State vs. Buffalo
1999
2008
Fewest yards allowed 224, Central Michigan vs. Ohio (137 passing, 87 rushing) 2006
Fewest rushing yards allowed 37, Western Michigan vs. Ohio 2016
Fewest passing yards allowed 102, Kent State vs. Northern Illinois 2021
Individual Record, Player, Team vs. Opponent Year
All-purpose yards448, Ben Roethlisberger, Miami vs. Bowling Green2003
Touchdowns (all-purpose)5, Matt Johnson, Bowling Green vs. Northern Illinois2013
Rushing yards270, Garrett Wolfe, Northern Illinois vs. Akron2005
Rushing touchdowns4, Trinity Dawson, Toledo vs. Marshall2002
Passing yards440, Ben Roethlisberger, Miami vs. Bowling Green2003
Passing touchdowns5, Matt Johnson, Bowling Green vs. Northern Illinois2013
Receiving yards191, Damien Linson, Central Michigan vs. Ohio2006
Receiving touchdowns4, Denero Marriott, Marshall vs. Toledo2001
Tackles16, shared by:
Noah Keller, Ohio vs. Central Michigan
Boomer Mays, Northern Illinois vs. Bowling Green
 
2009
2015
Sacks2, shared by nine players, most recent:
Tyrece Woods Jr., Buffalo vs. Ball State
 
2020
Interceptions2, Dechane Durante, Northern Illinois vs. Bowling Green2014
Long Plays Record, Player, Team vs. Opponent Year
Touchdown run96, Ontario Sneed, Central Michigan vs. Ohio2006
Touchdown pass86, Randy Moss from Chad Pennington, Marshall vs. Toledo1997
Kickoff return64, Clint Stephens, Bowling Green vs. Northern Illinois2014
Punt return48, Danzel McKinley-Lewis, Toledo vs. Akron2017
Interception return64, Shawun Lurry, Northern Illinois vs. Bowling Green2015
Fumble return92, Mike Newton, Buffalo vs. Ball State2008
Punt75, Curtis Head, Marshall vs. Toledo2001
Field goal52, shared by:
Chris Nendick, Northern Illinois vs. Akron
Tyler Tate, Bowling Green vs. Northern Illinois
 
2005
2013
Miscellaneous Record, Team vs. Team Year
Game attendance45,615, Ohio vs. Western Michigan2016

Source:[4]

See also

References

  1. "MAC Announces Three Year Contract Extension With Ford Field". getsomemaction.com. Mid-American Conference. July 26, 2022. Retrieved July 26, 2022.
  2. Kelly, Kyle (November 30, 2023). "MAC signs three-year extension to keep football title game at Ford Field". FBS Schedules. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  3. Paul, Tony (November 30, 2023). "Mid-American Conference to go to pods alignment for 2024". Detroit News. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
  4. "C-USA Records Master" (PDF). conferenceusa.com. pp. 35–36. Retrieved December 3, 2021.
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