Mitchell Bowl

Summary

The Mitchell Bowl is one of the two semifinal bowls of U Sports football, Canada's national competition for university teams that play Canadian football. It is held in the more westerly location of the two semifinal venues. The winner of this game goes on to play against the Uteck Bowl champions for the Vanier Cup. The home of the Mitchell Bowl, as well as the two conference champions, changes each year on a rotating basis. The Mitchell Bowl was named after Douglas H. Mitchell, a former Canadian Football League commissioner and member of the National Hockey League board of governors.

Mitchell Bowl
SportCanadian football
LeagueU Sports football
Awarded forWinning the U Sports Semifinal Championship
CountryCanada
History
First award2002
Editions21
First winnerSaskatchewan Huskies
Most winsSaskatchewan Huskies (4)
Calgary Dinos (4)
Laval Rouge et Or (4)[1]
Most recentUBC Thunderbirds (2023)
Websiteusports.ca/en/championships/mitchell-bowl/m Edit this at Wikidata

History edit

In 2001, U Sports, then known as CIS, voted to change the permanent site of the Atlantic Bowl in the interest of competitive fairness. In 2002, the Mitchell Bowl was first awarded, replacing the Atlantic Bowl. During 2002, the Mitchell Bowl played opposite to the Churchill Bowl. In 2003, the Uteck Bowl replaced the Churchill Bowl.

The 2020 game was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2]

List of Mitchell Bowl champions edit

Date Champion Score Runner Up Location MVP Winner
November 16, 2002 Saskatchewan 22–0 McGill Percival-Molson Stadium, Montreal Sheldon Ball, Saskatchewan
November 15, 2003 Laval 36–32 McMaster Ivor Wynne Stadium, Hamilton Jeronimo Huerta-Flores, Laval
November 20, 2004 Saskatchewan 31–16 Saint Mary's Griffiths Stadium, Saskatoon Steve Bilan, Saskatchewan
November 19, 2005 Saskatchewan 29–27 Laval Griffiths Stadium, Saskatoon David Stevens, Saskatchewan
November 18, 2006 Saskatchewan 35–28 Ottawa Frank Clair Stadium, Ottawa Tyler O’Gorman, Saskatchewan[3]
November 17, 2007 Manitoba 52–20 Western Canad Inns Stadium, Winnipeg Mike Howard, Manitoba
November 16, 2008 Western 28–12 Saint Mary's TD Waterhouse Stadium, London Craig Butler, Western[4]
November 21, 2009 Queen's 33–30 Laval Richardson Memorial Stadium, Kingston Shomari Williams, Queen's
November 20, 2010 Calgary 35–8 Saint Mary's McMahon Stadium, Calgary Steven Lumbala, Calgary
November 18, 2011 Laval 41–10 Calgary McMahon Stadium, Calgary Sébastien Lévesque, Laval
November 17, 2012 McMaster 45–6 Calgary Ron Joyce Stadium, Hamilton Kyle Quinlan, McMaster
November 16, 2013 Calgary 44–3 Western McMahon Stadium, Calgary Mercer Timmis, Calgary
November 22, 2014 McMaster 24–12 Mount Allison Ron Joyce Stadium, Hamilton Mark Mackie, McMaster[5]
November 21, 2015 Montreal 25–10 Guelph Alumni Stadium, Guelph Junior Luke, Montreal
November 19, 2016 Calgary 50–24 St. Francis Xavier McMahon Stadium, Calgary Jimmy Underdahl, Calgary
November 18, 2017 Laval 35–23 Calgary McMahon Stadium, Calgary Hugo Richard, Laval
November 17, 2018 Western 47–24 Saskatchewan TD Stadium, London Chris Merchant, Western[6]
November 16, 2019 Calgary 30–17 McMaster McMahon Stadium, Calgary Jalen Philpot, Calgary
November 21, 2020 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[2]
November 27, 2021 Western 61–6 St. Francis Xavier Western Alumni Stadium, London Offence: Elliot Beamer, Western[7]
Defence: Daniel Valente Jr., Western[7]
November 19, 2022 Laval 27–20 Western Western Alumni Stadium, London Offence: Kalenga Muganda, Laval[8]
Defence: Alec Poirier, Laval[8]
November 18, 2023 UBC 47–17 St. Francis Xavier Thunderbird Stadium, Vancouver Offence: Garrett Rooker, UBC[9]
Defence: Jaxon Ciraolo-Brown, UBC[9]

Future participants edit

The teams and host sites of the Mitchell Bowl and the Uteck Bowl rotate on a six-year cycle, so that in each cycle each of the four conferences hosts and visits every other conference once. With the 2020 game cancelled, the cycle was delayed by one year with the 2020 teams playing in 2021.[10]

The participants and sites for future Mitchell Bowl games are listed below:[11]

Date/Year Visiting conference Host conference
2024 RSEQ Canada West
2025 Canada West OUA
2026 OUA Canada West
2027 AUS OUA
2028 RSEQ OUA
2029 AUS Canada West

All Mitchell Bowl games have been played at the home field of the host conference's champion. As of 2023, home teams have a record of 14–8.

Team win–loss records edit

Team W L Win %
Saskatchewan Huskies 4 1 .800
Laval Rouge et Or 4 2 .667
Calgary Dinos 4 3 .571
Western Mustangs 3 3 .500
McMaster Marauders 2 2 .500
Manitoba Bisons 1 0 1.000
Montreal Carabins 1 0 1.000
Queen's Gaels 1 0 1.000
UBC Thunderbirds 1 0 1.000
St. Francis Xavier X-Men 0 3 .000
Saint Mary's Huskies 0 3 .000
Guelph Gryphons 0 1 .000
McGill Redbirds 0 1 .000
Mount Allison Mounties 0 1 .000
Ottawa Gee-Gees 0 1 .000

References edit

  1. ^ Past U Sports Champions
  2. ^ a b "U Sports cancels 2020 fall championships due to COVID-19". U Sports. June 8, 2020.
  3. ^ "2006 Season in Review" (PDF). Canadian Interuniversity Sport. 2007. p. 25. Retrieved November 14, 2008.
  4. ^ "Mitchell Bowl: Western wins Mitchell Bowl, to face No. 1 Laval in Vanier Cup". Canadian Interuniversity Sport. November 16, 2008. Retrieved November 17, 2008.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ 'Off to Vanier: Marauders win Mitchell Bowl 24-12' from Marauders.ca, November 21, 2014, retrieved November 24, 2014
  6. ^ "Merchant leads Western past Saskatchewan to win Mitchell Bowl". Sportsnet.ca. The Canadian Press. November 17, 2018. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
  7. ^ a b "Mitchell Bowl: Mustangs gallop to Vanier Cup with victory over X-Men". U Sports. November 27, 2021.
  8. ^ a b "Mitchell Bowl: Rouge et Or defeat Mustangs, advance to 2022 Canada Life Vanier Cup". U Sports. November 20, 2022.
  9. ^ a b "Bird is the word: UBC advances to Vanier Cup with Mitchell Bowl victory over St. FX". 3DownNation.com. November 18, 2022. Retrieved November 20, 2023.
  10. ^ "U Sports announces 2021-23 fall championship hosts in soccer and rugby". usports.ca. July 3, 2020.
  11. ^ "U Sports Championship Calendar". U Sports. July 3, 2020. Retrieved July 3, 2020.

External links edit

  • Mitchell Bowl history