Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Citrus Bowl


Related Topics

  
  Sun Harvest Citrus - Fresh Florida Citrus fruit and gift packages.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Citrus may have light brown blemishes, known as wind scars, as a result of being blown by the wind against tree branches during fruit development.
Citrus is called seedless if it consistently has zero to six seeds.
Another reason your fruit might have some green color in the peel is from a natural process called “regreening.” In the spring, as citrus trees begin to grow, they produce large quantities of chlorophyll, which is the green pigment in the leaves and fruit.
www.sunharvestcitrus.com /juicydetails.cfm   (413 words)

  
  Official Internet Home of the University of Central Florida Golden Knights
The Florida Citrus Bowl, home to the University of Central Florida Golden Knights, is a 70,000 seat stadium with a long history of renovations and additions.
The newest addition to the Citrus Bowl is the Citrus Bowl Centre, which is adjacent to the south end zone of the stadium.
The Citrus Bowl was one of eight sites chosen in the United States to host the soccer matches.
rain.prohosting.com /kincole/CitrusBowl.htm   (515 words)

  
 Capital One Bowl - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Capital One Bowl is an annual college football game played in Orlando, Florida at the Citrus Bowl, and previously known as the Tangerine Bowl (1947-1982) and the Florida Citrus Bowl (1983-2002).
From 1968 through 1975 the bowl featured the Mid-American Conference champion against an opponent from the Southern Conference (through 1972), the Southeastern Conference (1972-1973) or an at-large opponent (1975).
Currently, the bowl has tie-ins with the Southeastern Conference and the Big Ten Conference holding the first selection after the BCS for both conferences.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Capital_One_Bowl   (405 words)

  
 Mites, peculiarly the citrus rusty pinch, stern severely deface the rind.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Crimes citrus valley medical center on the campus are few and vehement crimes are most nonexistent..
The Cloverdale Citrus Sightly is the secondment outside Citrus Clean on the West Glide and the earliest impartial of the twelvemonth.
Citrus Commons Computers citrus heights Tampa Florida is your unity finish rootage for calculator parts, estimator mend, figurer serve, figurer networking and entanglement blueprint..
hemicwall.xoompages.com /citrus-memorial-hospital.html   (3506 words)

  
 Citrus Bowl at AllExperts
The Florida Citrus Bowl (official name is Orlando-Orange County Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium) is a stadium in Orlando, Florida, USA, built for American football and currently seats over 65,000.
The Florida Citrus Bowl was the site of filming of the 1993 movie The Program, the "Bourbon Bowl" scene in the 1998 movie The Waterboy, and home of the fictional team Orlando Breakers of the 1989-97 television show Coach.
In 2004, the Capital One Bowl, held at the Citrus Bowl, bid to become a BCS game, but was not chosen, due to the stadium's aging condition.
en.allexperts.com /e/c/ci/citrus_bowl.htm   (1009 words)

  
 Citrus County Web Hosting and Web Design at CitrusWebs.com
Citrus County is located on "Florida's Nature Coast", it is located 70 miles north of Tampa and 60 miles northwest of Orlando, along Florida's west-central coast and the Gulf of Mexico.
The surrounding counties include Levy to the north - northwest, Marion to the northeast, Sumter to the east - southeast, and Hernando to the south.
Also, Citrus County is known for its beautiful waterways, crystal clear springs, and gentle manatees.
citruswebs.com /citrus_county/citrus_county.htm   (252 words)

  
 College Gridirons-Citrus Bowl-Central Florida Golden Knights
The Citrus Bowl dates back to the mid 1930’s when federal grants allowed for various projects.
The Tangerine Bowl was renamed Orlando Stadium in 1977, and then received its current name of the Citrus Bowl in 1983.
Over the years, the Citrus Bowl has been the home of the UCF Golden Knights football, World Cup and Olympic soccer, and the annual Citrus Bowl game.
www.collegegridirons.com /cusa/CitrusBowl.htm   (286 words)

  
 Citrus Bowl pales next to in-state stadium rivals - Newsday.com
The difference: Miami-Dade County is ready to pump $50 million into renovating the Orange Bowl, and UCF is looking to abandon the Citrus Bowl to move into a stadium on campus by 2006.
And Crotty is less inclined to invest in the Citrus Bowl than he was a year ago when the BCS was interested in Orlando.
The aging Florida Citrus Bowl struggles -- and fails -- to compete with the state's more modern stadiums in the quest to land top-tier football events.
www.newsday.com /sports/orl-asecsportstown01030105mar01,0,7275769.story?page=2   (784 words)

  
 Citrus Bowl becomes Capital One Bowl - Sports Central Message Boards
I don't really mind stuff like they had for the Rose Bowl "presented by AtandT" etc, but to rename a bowl like the Citrus to Capital One is really stupid.
So, that being said, that is why we have the Citrus bowl being called the Capital One Bowl.
Going to a bowl game will become routine for nearly every team, if you ask me. Man, I'm just wondering if team names will become advertisements before my time on earth is done...
www.sports-central.org /community/boards/showthread.php?t=4088   (482 words)

  
 Florida Citrus Sports   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The first annual bowl game was held in 1947, for the benefit of the Elks and was called the Tangerine Bowl Game.
In January 1989, the transformation of the Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium into a facility of the 90's began at the cost of $38 million.
The Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium is owned and operated by the City of Orlando and is part of the Orlando Centroplex, which includes the T.D. Waterhouse Centre, Bob Carr Performing Arts Center and the Expo Center.
fcsports.collegesports.com /facilities/florida-citrus-bowl.html   (368 words)

  
 Citrus Bowl   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The Florida Citrus Bowl was built in 1936 and hasn’t been significantly renovated since 1989.
Plans call for transforming the rusting 70-year-old Citrus Bowl by replacing its concrete bench-style bleachers with individual seats and adding 4,000 upscale club seats, 80 luxury boxes, and new bathrooms and concession stands.
Here is the presentation made by the Florida Citrus Bowl before the Orange County Commission on August 29, 2006.
www.projecthometown.com /pages/default.aspx?cc=citrus_bowl   (131 words)

  
 2000 Citrus Bowl - Florida vs Michigan State
It is the Spartans’ sixth bowl trip of the 1990s and first to a Jan. 1 bowl game since the 1989 Gator Bowl (a 34-27 loss to Georgia).
This marks the Spartans’ third appearance in a bowl in the state of Florida (0-2 in the 1938 Orange Bowl and the 1989 Gator Bowl).
A win in the Florida Citrus Bowl would give the Spartans a chance for their highest final AP ranking since at least its eighth-place ranking at the end of the 1987 season.
www.msu.edu /user/roudabus/2000citrusbowl2.htm   (6094 words)

  
 2 options unveiled for Citrus Bowl: South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Citrus Bowl supporters told Orange County leaders Tuesday that they could scale back a $252 million renovation plan and still make enough improvements to hold on to its major-college football games and even attract other pro sports and music events.
However, county leaders made it clear they want a face lift for the Citrus Bowl included in the pricey lineup of public projects now under discussion -- even if the community gets nothing more than the ability to hang on to the trio of major-college football games it already hosts.
The group's presentation compared the 70-year-old Citrus Bowl with newer stadiums in Jacksonville, Tampa, Dallas and others, describing Orlando's facility as "archaic" and more than once pointing to the trough-style urinals in its men's restrooms.
www.sun-sentinel.com /news/local/florida/orl-citrusbowl3006aug30,0,2288293.story   (961 words)

  
 Citrus Bowl Tickets - Citrus Bowl Information - Citrus Bowl Seating Chart
The price listed for Citrus Bowl tickets is the total price per ticket and may be over the printed price on the ticket.
Citrus Bowl seats are together, side by side, unless otherwise noted.
Actual Citrus Bowl seat numbers are withheld for the privacy of both buyer and seller.
www.vividseats.com /venues/citrus-bowl-tickets.html   (165 words)

  
 College Gridirons-Citrus Bowl-Capital One/Champs Sports Bowl
Orlando, FL The Citrus Bowl, home of the Central Florida Golden Knights, is the host of two annual bowl games, the Capital One Bowl and the Champs Sports Bowl.
The Champs Sports Bowl has been played at the Citrus Bowl since 2001 and matches teams from the ACC and the Big 12.
Over the years, the Citrus Bowl has been the home of the UCF Golden Knights football, World Cup and Olympic soccer.
www.collegegridirons.com /bowlstadiums/CitrusBowl.htm   (378 words)

  
 orlando Florida history   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The Citrus Bowl is the seventh oldest college football bowl game in the U.S. Until 1983 the primary charity was the Elks clubs hospitals.
The name of stadium was changed to the Citrus Bowl, while the annual bowl game continued to be called the Tangerine Bowl.
The Citrus Bowl was also the home of the imaginary NFL football team the Orlando Breakers from 1995 to 1997 when the producers of the TV sitcom Coach chose to move the characters to Orlando to move from college football to professional football.
www.cfhf.net /orlando/1936.htm   (790 words)

  
 Travel Guide Orlando - Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The Florida Citrus Bowl, home to the UCF Golden Knights, as well as two bowl games, is one of the best college stadiums in the country.
In addition, the facility includes the Citrus Bowl Center, which is adjacent to the south end zone of the stadium.
The Citrus Bowl was one of eight sites chosen in the United States to host the soccer matches.
www.trip2orlandousa.com /rssvenues/v47.htm   (505 words)

  
 Citrus Bowl Tickets - Buy Tickets to Concerts, Sports and Shows at Citrus Bowl in Orlando
Sold out tickets to Tangerine Bowl are not a problem, We carry high end and hard to find tickets through out Orlando, Florida.
Citrus Bowl and other venues in Orlando can be found with us.
Citrus Bowl tickets and sold out shows throughout Orlando can be seen above.
www.premium-seats.com /florida-tickets/orlando-events/citrus-bowl.html   (151 words)

  
 Would Citrus Bowl fixes lure more games, acts? - Orlando Sentinel :   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Orlando will pitch a $252 million renovation of the Florida Citrus Bowl to the Orange County Commission on Tuesday at a time when the aged stadium is about to lose its only home team and faces increasingly fierce competition for events.
One group that won't come to a new Citrus Bowl: the University of Central Florida football team, which is playing its last season at the old field before moving into a new on-campus stadium in 2007.
But Chapin said even a top-notch Citrus Bowl would have a tough time drawing the events needed to justify a pricey new facility -- NFL games, marquee college-football matchups and stadium concerts -- because of growing competition and changing music and sports markets.
www.orlandosentinel.com /orl-citrus2806aug28,0,4288195.story?track=rss   (800 words)

  
 Florida-Citrus-Bowl-Stadium-Events
In 1967, the Stadium was expanded to 18,000 seats and in 1974, additional seating was added to bring the capacity to 48,000 seats.
e transformation of the Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium into a facility of the 90's began, at the cost of 38 million dollars, bringing the seating capacity up to 70,000.
Several improvements were made including an additional disabled elevator; additional disabled seating, electrical and phone upgrades and a state-of-the-art playing field.
orlando.checkindirect.com /Florida-Citrus-Bowl-Stadium-Events.html   (85 words)

  
 Citrus Bowl struggles to be winning venue   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Orlando sports boosters are pushing a $252 million Florida Citrus Bowl face-lift that would add more roomy seats for average fans and vastly expand upscale seating, which backers insist is needed to attract premier sporting events.
The funding request comes at a time when Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer also is pushing for tourist-tax funding for two other higher-profile projects: a new basketball arena to replace the TD Waterhouse Centre and a new performing-arts center that would sprawl over two blocks across from City Hall.
Citrus Bowl officials say competition is fierce for the premier events it still hosts: the Capital One Bowl, the Florida Classic and the Champs Sports Bowl.
www.topix.net /content/trb/0525599978021745450013521522492550237492   (1398 words)

  
 Capital One Florida Citrus Bowl: Michigan vs. Tennessee
Casey Clausen, nicknamed "Iceman," threw for 393 yards and three TDs and ran for two more as the Vols routed Michigan 45-10 to hand the Wolverines their worst bowl loss since 1992.
A statistical breakdown of the Capital One Florida Citrus Bowl between Michigan and Tennessee.
QB Casey Clausen was upset with last year's showing in the Cotton Bowl, and he wanted to do something about it this year.
espn.go.com /ncf/bowls01/citrus.html   (485 words)

  
 Florida Citrus Bowl News
ORLANDO –; Approximately 2,700 tickets remain to the 2004 Capital One Bowl, which will feature the Georgia Bulldogs (10-3, 6-2 SEC) and the Purdue Boilermakers (9-3, 6-2 Big Ten) on January 1 at the Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium in Orlando.
Officials at the Capital One Bowl announced Monday that parking in city controlled lots around the Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium is sold out.
Parking was made available through ClickandPark.com, an online parking and traffic management system, which allows event attendees to choose a parking lot, get direct routing to their parking space, and have a permit for their location before they arrive at the game.
www.orlandofloridaguide.com /orlando/sports/citrus_bowl/news.htm   (934 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.