The Cotton Bowl Classic has been held annually in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex since January 1, 1937. Historically, the game hosted the champion of the Southwest Conference against a team invited from elsewhere in the country, frequently a major independent or a runner-up from the Southeastern Conference. The game was originally played at its namesake stadium in Dallas before moving to AT&T Stadium in nearby Arlington in 2010.
About Cotton Bowl Classic in brief

In 1946, Missouri was defeated by Texas, despite the 4th quarter work of freshman fullback Robert Lee Clodfelter, who was to mature under Weeb Ewbank at Washington University in St. Louis the next three years. The 1953 Cotton Bowl would be a rematch of the 1951 bowl game as Texas and Tennessee played for the second time. Texas defensive stars shut out the Vols 16–0 as the Longhorns avenged the previous meeting when Tennessee beat Texas 20–14. The 1957 Cotton Bowl matched the TCU Horns-led against the Jim Brown-led Syracuse Horned Horns. This Cotton Bowl was the first bowl appearance for Texas as theonghorns would go on to appear in a record 22 Cotton Bowls, the most of any team. In 1943, The Texas Longhorn represented the SWC in their first ever bowl game against a highly ranked Georgia Tech team at the time. The Longhorns defeated the Yellow Jackets 14–7 in what was mostly a defensive battle. Later that year, a group of Dallas citizens took over the staging of the game as the Cotton Bowl Athletic Association. A few months later, the CBAA became an agency of theSWC’s champion from 1941 to 1994, From 1941 to 1994, the Southwest conference’s champion hosted the Cottonbowl Classic. In 1947 LSU and Arkansas played in front of 38,000 people to a scoreless tie in what would later become known as the \”Ice Bowl.
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This page is based on the article Cotton Bowl Classic published in Wikipedia (as of Jan. 02, 2021) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






