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词条 Buffalo Bulls football
释义

  1. History

     Early history (1894–1903)  The UB Bisons (1915–1930)  Welcome the Bulls (1930–1942)  Post-World War II (1946–1954)  Offenhamer era (1955–1965)  Out with a whimper (1965–1970)  Division III football (1977–1992)  Division I-AA (1993–1998)  Return to Division I-A (1999–2005)  Turner Gill era (2006–2009)  Jeff Quinn era (2010–2014)  Lance Leipold era (2015–present) 

  2. Conference affiliations

  3. Championships

      Conference championships   Divisional championships 

  4. Bowl game appearances

  5. Head coaches

  6. Notable players

     NFL/AFL drafted players  Undrafted NFL players  Other notable players 

  7. Broadcasting

  8. All-time vs Current MAC teams

  9. Future non-conference opponents

  10. References

  11. External links

{{for|information on all University at Buffalo sports|Buffalo Bulls}}{{Infobox NCAA football school
| CurrentSeason = 2019 Buffalo Bulls football team
| TeamName = Buffalo Bulls
| Image = Buffalo Bulls logo.svg
| ImageSize = 200
| FirstYear = {{Start date|1894}}
| AthleticDirector = Mark Alnutt
| HeadCoach = Lance Leipold
| HeadCoachYear = 5th
| HCWins = 23
| HCLosses = 27
| OtherStaff = Rob Ianello
| Stadium = UB Stadium
| StadCapacity = 29,013
| StadSurface = A-Turf Titan
| Location = Amherst, New York
| NCAAdivision = I FBS
| Conference = Mid-American Conference
| ConfDivision = East
| PastAffiliations =
| WebsiteName = UBBulls.com
| WebsiteURL = http://ubbulls.com/sports/fball/index
| ATWins = 371
| ATLosses = 492
| ATTies = 28
| BowlWins = 0
| BowlLosses = 3
| BowlTies =
| NatlTitles =
| ConfTitles = 1 (2008)
| DivTitles = 3 (2007, 2008, 2018)
| Heismans =
| AllAmericans =
| uniform = MAC-Uniform-UB.png
| FightSong = Victory March
| MascotDisplay = Victor E. Bull
| MarchingBand = Thunder of the East
| PagFreeLabel =
| PagFreeValue =
}}

The Buffalo Bulls football program is the intercollegiate American football team for the State University of New York at Buffalo located in the U.S. state of New York. The team competes at the NCAA Division I level in the Football Bowl Subdivision and is a member of the Mid-American Conference. Buffalo's first football team was fielded in 1894.[1] The team plays its home games at the 31,000+ seat UB Stadium on University at Buffalo's north campus in Amherst, New York. The Bulls are coached by Lance Leipold.[2]

History

{{See also|List of Buffalo Bulls football seasons}}

UB's first run with football started in 1894 and lasted until 1970, when the football program was suspended due to the student body's vote to stop funding the program. The football program was reintroduced in 1977. When reintroduced, the team played in Division III level football until 1992. In 1993, the school made the jump to Division I-AA. In 1999, the Bulls moved up again to Division I-A Bowl Subdivision level football.

Early history (1894–1903)

In 1894, UB established an athletics association and fourteen UB Medical students formed the first UB football team.[2] By 1896, they were a local force in Western New York football playing collegiate and club teams and finishing the season with an impressive 9–1–2 record.[3] In 1897, C. W. Dibble coached UB to a perfect 7–0–0 record beating Syracuse twice.[4] In 1899, Bemus Pierce coached UB to a 6–0 record.[5] In 1900, Buffalo beat Penn State 10–0.[6] In 1901, former player James B. "Turk" Gordon coached the UB team to a 4–2 record.[7] In 1903, Ray Turnbull led the UB team to a 3–3 record.[8] After the 1903 season, UB would not again put a team on the field until 1915.[9]

The UB Bisons (1915–1930)

In 1915, UB re-established the football program and officially instituted men's basketball. Both teams were named the 'Bisons' and used as their logo a caricature of a male American bison, often outfitted in a UB jersey. Frank Mount Pleasant was called on to coach the football team but was replaced the following season after a 3–4 record. Art Powell would take over in 1916 and coach the team for six seasons (13–22–5). In 1920, UB would start playing on what would eventually be called Rotary Field.[10] UB would go through two coaches in a span of two years – 'Dim' Batterson[11] in 1922 and James Bond in 1923 – before Russ Carrick would take over, serving five seasons despite winning only five games (while losing 30 and garnering two ties). The team would last be known as the Bisons under the command of Jay "Biffy" Lee, who coached for two seasons (until 1930), leading UB to an 8–7 record.

Welcome the Bulls (1930–1942)

In 1931, the University changed its mascot to the Bulls in order to distinguish UB from professional teams in the Queen City. The Bulls played every year until the outbreak of World War II mainly under the coaching guidance of Jim Peelle who was at the helm from 1935–1942 and would lead the Bulls to a 38–34–1 record including a 6–2 season in 1942.

Post-World War II (1946–1954)

After World War II, UB again took to the grid-iron under Jim Peelle, who led UB in two impressive seasons of 7–2 (1946) and 8–1 (1947), but were not selected to a bowl in either season. The program was next taken over by Frank Clair, who coached for two seasons, leaving with an impressive mark of 12–4–1. The following season represented one of the low points for UB when, under the guidance of coach Fritz Febel, UB won only four games in three years with an overall record of 4–19–1.

Offenhamer era (1955–1965)

If the Febel season can be seen as one of the high points in UB football history, then Dick Offenhamer brought in UB's most successful era when from 1955 to 1965, he would coach UB to an impressive 58–37–5 record. In 1958, the football team won the Lambert Cup, emblematic of supremacy in Eastern U.S. small-college football. That led to the team's first bowl invitation, to the Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, Florida against Florida State University. However, the Orlando Elks Lodge, the bowl's sponsor, told the Bulls that they would be allowed to participate only if back-up defensive end Mike Wilson and starting halfback Willie Evans, who were black, did not play. Despite protests from the Elks Lodge, the local high school association that operated the stadium – the Orlando High School Athletic Association[12] – refused to rescind its rule against integrated events. The team stood behind the two, and unanimously refused the bowl offer. The team was profiled on ESPN's Outside the Lines in 2008.[13] Buffalo would not be invited to a bowl or be bowl-eligible for another 50 years.

Several UB football stars from the Offenhamer years went on to have careers in professional football, including quarterback John Stofa with the American Football League's Miami Dolphins and Cincinnati Bengals, and defensive lineman Gerry Philbin with the AFL's New York Jets, and Buddy Ryan who was on Offenhamer staff as the defensive line coach.[14] Philbin is a member of the AFL Hall of Fame and the All-time All-AFL Team. Philbin and UB's Willie Ross were the first two UB graduates to play on professional football championship teams: Ross with the 1964 AFL Champion Buffalo Bills; and Philbin with the 1968 AFL Champion New York Jets, who went on to win Super Bowl III. They have been followed by Ramon Guzman who played on two Grey Cup Championship teams with the Montreal Alouettes and James Starks with the Super Bowl XLV champion Green Bay Packers.

Out with a whimper (1965–1970)

Following the departure of Offenhamer in 1965, UB lasted only five more years before suspending football in 1970. There was some success under coach Doc Urich, who led UB to an 18–12 record over three years, but declining performance under his successor, Bob Deming (1969–1970) and financial issues caused UB to suspend its football program. The main reason that football was dropped was that the student body voted to stop funding the team. At the time athletics at UB were fully funded by student fees. It would be seven years until UB would again take the field.

Division III football (1977–1992)

In 1977 UB began playing football at the NCAA Division III level under Coach Bill Dando, who would be the Bulls' longest serving coach, lasting thirteen years. UB had moderate success during his tenure, and he retired after the 1989 season. Sam Sanders would take over, but lasted only two seasons. His coaching career ended because of medical issues and Jim Ward was promoted because of a New York State hiring freeze and ushered in UB's return to Division I football. In 1986 the Bulls upset Villanova for their biggest win of the season. Douglas Engel was named Freshman Defensive player of the year (1986–87)

Division I-AA (1993–1998)

UB's return to Division I football started in Division I-AA (known today as the Football Championship Subdivision). UB would have only one winning season during their time in I-AA. Under Coach Craig Cirbus, UB would go 8–3 in 1996. This would be UB's last season at or above .500 for a dozen years.

Return to Division I-A (1999–2005)

In 1999 UB joined the Mid-American Conference in Division I-A (Football Bowl Subdivision) football. They retained their head coach from their I-AA seasons, Craig Cirbus. After a few years of dismal results, the team hired Jim Hofher, a former head coach at Division I-AA Cornell University to be the head coach. However, Hofher's teams were marked by poor discipline and lack of effort, and won only eight games during his five seasons at UB. Buffalo won only 10 games and lost 69 during this seven-year period, the second-worst record in the Football Bowl Subdivision during that time. A 2002 win on the road over Rutgers was their only win against a BCS team until 2013.

Turner Gill era (2006–2009)

In early December 2005, Hofher was replaced by Green Bay Packers assistant coach and former Heisman Trophy candidate Turner Gill. The former University of Nebraska quarterback led the program in a remarkable turnaround, helping the team to a 5–7 (5–3 MAC East divisional co-champions) in 2007, their best season since the school joined the MAC.

On November 21, 2008, the Buffalo Bulls won their first outright MAC Eastern Division Championship, sealing the win with a thrilling 2-OT victory over Bowling Green, 40–34. Down 27–7 at the beginning of the 4th quarter, the Bulls stormed back to tie the game at 27 and force it into overtime. In the second OT, running back James Starks ran 25 yards on the first play for a touchdown and a Bulls win. The quarterback coach for Bowling Green that day was former UB head coach Jim Hofher.

Following a loss to Kent State that broke a five-game winning streak for Buffalo, the Bulls entered the conference title game at 7–5, while MAC West champion Ball State was an unblemished 12–0. However, on December 5, at Ford Field in Detroit, Buffalo's defense returned two fumbles for touchdowns and the Bulls defeated the Cardinals, 42–24, to become Mid-American Conference champions for 2008. Their successful season earned the Bulls an invitation to the International Bowl in Toronto, Ontario to face Connecticut. The Bulls went on to lose that game to UConn by a score of 38–20.

2009 would not be as successful as Starks was lost before the season even started to a shoulder injury. The offense also struggled without four-year starting quarterback Drew Willy as new quarterback Zach Maynard had an up-and-down season as UB finished 5–7. After the season, Gill left to become head coach of Kansas.

Jeff Quinn era (2010–2014)

On December 20, 2009, it was first reported that Jeff Quinn would be the new head coach. He took over after coaching Cincinnati in the 2010 Sugar Bowl. In Quinn's first season as coach, he was unable to build upon Gill's success as UB finished the season 2–10. Over the subsequent two seasons he amassed a record of 7–17.

The Bulls entered the 2013 season with low hopes. These were accentuated with season-opening losses to #4 Ohio State and #23 Baylor, 20–40 and 13–70, as they started the season 0–2. However, after a quintuple overtime 26–23 victory against Stony Brook in week 3, the team surged to 7 straight wins, including a 41–12 victory over Connecticut at UB Stadium on September 28, their first win against a BCS opponent since 2002, and clenched bowl eligibility for just the third time in team history with a 41–21 victory at Kent State on October 26. The 7 game winning streak was the longest winning streak in Bulls team history, and ended with a 41–51 loss at the Glass Dome to Toledo on November 12. The team finished the regular season 8–4, and finished in second place in the conference. The team ultimately went on to play in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl against San Diego State, losing the game 24–49. The team finished with an overall record of 8–5. This 2013 team featured Khalil Mack who went 5th overall in the 2014 NFL Draft to the Oakland Raiders, making him the highest player in Buffalo history to ever be drafted, as well as the highest defensive player in the Mid-American Conference to ever be drafted. This team also featured the undrafted Branden Oliver, who broke James Starks's rushing record of most rushing yards in school history. Oliver signed with the San Diego Chargers and was thrust into the starting lineup during the 2014 NFL season after early season injuries to Ryan Mathews, Danny Woodhead and Donald Brown.

Quinn was dismissed partway through the 2014 season after accumulating a 3–4 record.

Lance Leipold era (2015–present)

Lance Leipold, who spent the past eight seasons as the head coach of the Division III University of Wisconsin at Whitewater (where he won six championships), was hired as the Bulls' next head coach shortly after the 2014 season.[15]

In June 2017, the university received state approval for the construction of an $18 million indoor athletic training facility, slated to be built just north of UB Stadium. Buffalo would be the last school in the MAC without such a facility.[16][17]

Conference affiliations

Buffalo has been both an independent and affiliated with conferences, including periods where no team was fielded.[18]{{RP|86–93}}{{better source|date=October 2018}}

  • Independent (1894–1903)
  • No team (1904–1914)
  • Independent (1915–1925)
  • New York State Conference (1926–1934)
  • Independent (1935–1942)
  • No team (1943–1945)
  • Independent (1946–1970)
  • No team (1971–1976)
  • Independent (1977–1998)
  • Mid-American Conference (1999–present)

Championships

Conference championships

Buffalo has won one conference championship, doing so after beating Ball State in the 2008 MAC Championship Game 42–24.

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Buffalo Bulls|Year|Conference|Coach|Overall Record|Conference Record}}
2008 Mid-American Conference Turner Gill 8–6 5–3

Divisional championships

As winners of the Mid-American Conference's East Division, Buffalo has made one appearance in the MAC Championship Game, in 2008. The Bulls also shared the Division title with Miami in 2007, but the tie-breaker allowed the RedHawks to represent the division in the championship game.

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Buffalo Bulls|Year|Division championship|Opponent|CG result}}
2007† MAC East N/A, lost tiebreaker to Miami
2008 MAC East Ball State W 42–24
2018 MAC East Northern Illinois L 29–30

† Co-champion

Bowl game appearances

Buffalo has participated in three bowl games, going 0–3 in these games.

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team= Buffalo Bulls|Season|Coach|Bowl|Opponent|Result}}
2008 Turner Gill International Bowl Connecticut L 20–38
2013 Jeff Quinn Famous Idaho Potato Bowl San Diego State L 24–49
2018 Lance Leipold Dollar General Bowl Troy L 32–42

Head coaches

Buffalo has been led by the following head coaches.[19]{{RP|94}}

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Buffalo Bulls|Coach|Tenure|Record|Pct.}}
No coach 1894–1896
C. W. Dibble 1897 7–0 7|0|0}}
No coach 1898
Bemus Pierce 1899 6–0 6|0|0}}
No coach 1900–1902
Ray Turnbull 1903 3–3 3|3|0}}
No team 1904–1914
Frank Mount Pleasant 1915 3–3 3|3|0}}
Art Powell 1916–1921 13–22–5 13|22|5}}
Dim Batterson 1922 1–5 1|5|0}}
James Bond 1923 2–5–1 2|5|1}}
Russell Carrick 1924–1928 5–30–2 5|30|2}}
Jay L. Lee 1929–1930 8–7 8|7|0}}
William Pritchard 1931 2–6 2|6|0}}
James B. Wilson 1932–1933,
1950–1951
12–15–3 12|15|3}}
George Van Bibber 1934–1935 4–10–1 4|10|1}}
Jim Peelle 1936–1942,
1946–1947
38–34–1 38|34|1}}
No team 1943–1945
Frank Clair 1948–1949 12–4–1 12|4|1}}
Fritz Febel 1952–1954 4–19–1 4|19|1}}
Dick Offenhamer 1955–1965 58–37–5 58|37|5}}
Doc Urich 1966–1968 18–12 18|12|0}}
Bob Deming 1969–1970 8–12 8|12|0}}
No team 1971–1976
Bill Dando 1977–1989 59–64–1 59|64|1}}
Sam Sanders 1990–1991 5–15–0 5|15|0}}
Jim Ward 1992–1994 8–24 8|24|0}}
Craig Cirbus 1995–2000 19–47 19|47|0}}
Jim Hofher 2001–2005 8–49 8|49|0}}
Turner Gill 2006–2009 20–30 20|30|0}}
Jeff Quinn 2010–2014 20–36 20|36|0}}
Alex Wood† 2014 2–2 2|2|0}}
Lance Leipold 2015–present 23–26 17|24|0}}

† Interim

Notable players

{{refimprove section|date=November 2018}}
Total selected:14
First picks in draft:0
1st Round:1
Hall of Famers:0
Pro Bowlers2

NFL/AFL drafted players

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Buffalo Bulls|Name|Year|Round|Team}}
Les Molnar 1952 18 New York Yanks
Frank Woidzik 1958 4 Los Angeles Rams
Lou Reale 1959 25 New York Giants
Willie Evans 1960 - Buffalo Bills
Gerry Philbin 1964 3 New York Jets
Ed Ellis 1997 4 New England Patriots
Drew Haddad 2000 7 Buffalo Bills
Trevor Scott 2008 6 Oakland Raiders
Jamey Richard 2008 7 Indianapolis Colts
James Starks 2010 6 Green Bay Packers
Josh Thomas 2011 5 Dallas Cowboys
Steven Means 2013 5 Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Khalil Mack 2014 1 Oakland Raiders
Kristjan Sokoli 2015 6 Seattle Seahawks
Mason Schreck 2017 7 Cincinnati Bengals
  • Khalil Mack was drafted by the Raiders fifth overall in the 2014 NFL Draft. Mack holds the all-time NCAA record for forced fumbles and is also tied for career tackles for loss in the NCAA. In 2015, he became the first first-team All-Pro in NFL history to be elected in two different positions in the same year, as a defensive end and outside linebacker. Mack was named the NFL Defensive Player of the Year for the 2016 season.[20]

Undrafted NFL players

NamePositionYears played
Jim|Ailinger}} Offensive line 1924
John|Stofa}} Quarterback 1966–1970
Ramon|Guzman}} Linebacker 2007
Drew|Willy}} Quarterback 2009
Mike Newton Safety 2010–2012
Naaman Roosevelt Wide receiver 2010–2013
Branden|Oliver}} Running back 2014–present
Jake|Schum}} Punter 2015–present
Joe|Licata}} Quarterback 2016
Matt|Weiser}} Tight end 2016
John|Kling|John Kling (American football)}} Tackle 2016–present
Jordan|Johnson|Jordan Johnson (American football)}} Running back 2017–present
Roubbens|Joseph}} Tackle 2017–present
Demone|Harris}} Defensive End 2018–present

Other notable players

  • Marc Panepinto, later a New York State Senator
  • Paul Snyder, Sr., businessman and eventual owner of the Buffalo Braves basketball team

Broadcasting

WWKB acquired the broadcast rights to Bulls games for the 2014 season. Former WIVB-TV sports anchor Paul Peck on play-by-play and former Navy quarterback Jim Kubiak on color commentary are expected to return. The Bulls previously aired their games on WHLD (2013), WECK (2008–12) and WGR.

A separate feed is available from the student Part 15 radio station, WRUB.

As a member of the Mid-American Conference, ESPN Inc. holds television rights to UB Bulls games. They are typically only broadcast online via ESPN3, with local radio personality Sal Capaccio on play-by-play, with some games sub-leased to American Sports Network's Buffalo affiliate, WNYO-TV.

All-time vs Current MAC teams

{{See also|UB Bulls Football Records}}

Results through the 2018–19 college football season.[21]

This table includes all MAC games from 1999, the year the Bulls joined the Mid-American Conference.

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Buffalo Bulls|Opponent|Games|Win|Loss|Pct.|PF|PA|First meeting|Last meeting|Streak|Most recent win}}
Akron18711.38942946619992018W 12018, 24-6
Ball State927.22218429220002017W 12008, 42–24
Bowling Green 16511.31338146820002018W 22018, 44-14
Central Michigan9 27.22219125719992018W 12018, 34-24
Eastern Michigan 826.25020622920012018W 12018, 35-28
Kent State 17 98.52936838119992018W 22018, 48-14
Miami University20713.35043762619992018W 12018, 51-42
Northern Illinois 11011.00017943919992018L 11-
Ohio 20812.40047158019992018L 12018, 31-24
Toledo 6 24.33313822020032018W 12018, 31-17
Western Michigan9 27.22224430819992018L 22013, 33–0
Central Florida (2002–2004) 312.333798420022004W 12004, 48–20
Marshall (1999–2004) 6 06.0008228019992004L 6-
Temple (2007–2011) 5 23.4008514820072011L 32008, 30–28
UMass (2012-2015) 4 31.7501287420122015L 12014, 41-21
Against nationally ranked opponents
{{unreferenced section|date=October 2018}}{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Buffalo Bulls|Team|Date|Ranking|Outcome}}
Western Michigan 11/19/16 14 L 0–38
Baylor 10/13/14 8 L 21–63
Ohio State 08/31/13 2 L 20–40
Georgia 10/01/12 6 L 23–45
Ball State 12/5/08 12 W 42–24
Missouri 09/20/08 5 L 21–42
Penn State 09/15/07 12 L 24–45
Rutgers 08/30/07 16 L 3–38
Wisconsin 11/18/06 10 L 3–35
Boston College 10/28/06 17 L 0–41
Auburn 09/23/06 3 L 7–38
Iowa 10/06/03 23 L 7–56
Marshall 10/23/99 15 L 3–59

Future non-conference opponents

Announced schedules as of October 8, 2018.[22]

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Buffalo Bulls|2019|2020|2021|2022|2023|2024}}
vs Robert Morris at Kansas State vs Wagner at Maryland at Wisconsin at Missouri
at Penn State vs Saint Francis at Nebraska at Coastal Carolina vs Liberty
at Liberty at Ohio State vs Coastal Carolina at Old Dominion
vs Temple at Army vs Old Dominion

References

1. ^{{cite web| title=Buffalo Historical Data| publisher=College Football Data Warehouse| url=http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_ia/mac/buffalo/index.php| accessdate=2014-02-11| deadurl=yes| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140222051358/http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_ia/mac/buffalo/index.php| archivedate=2014-02-22| df=}}
2. ^http://www.ubbullrun.com/2010/05/ub-football-101.html
3. ^"[https://library.buffalo.edu/ub-sports/mens-sports/football/1896-buffalo-football 1896 Buffalo Football]", University at Buffalo Sports History Collection – October 31, 2012.
4. ^"[https://library.buffalo.edu/ub-sports/mens-sports/football/1897-buffalo-football 1897 Buffalo Football]", University at Buffalo Sports History Collection – February 18, 2013.
5. ^"[https://library.buffalo.edu/ub-sports/mens-sports/football/1899-buffalo-football 1899 Buffalo Football]", University at Buffalo Sports History Collection – February 25, 2013.
6. ^"[https://library.buffalo.edu/ub-sports/mens-sports/football/1900-buffalo-football 1900 Buffalo Football]", University at Buffalo Sports History Collection – January 30, 2013.
7. ^"[https://library.buffalo.edu/ub-sports/mens-sports/football/1901-buffalo-football 1901 Buffalo Football]", University at Buffalo Sports History Collection – October 26, 2012.
8. ^"[https://library.buffalo.edu/ub-sports/mens-sports/football/1903-buffalo-football 1903 Buffalo Football]", University at Buffalo Sports History Collection – February 11, 2013.
9. ^"[https://library.buffalo.edu/ub-sports/mens-sports/football/1904-buffalo-football 1904 Buffalo Football]", University at Buffalo Sports History Collection – May 16, 2013.
10. ^"[https://library.buffalo.edu/ub-sports/mens-sports/football/1920-buffalo-football 1920 Buffalo Football]", University at Buffalo Sports History Collection – March 22, 2013.
11. ^"[https://library.buffalo.edu/ub-sports/mens-sports/football/1922-buffalo-football 1922 Buffalo Football]", University at Buffalo Sports History Collection – September 7, 2013.
12. ^{{cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/40875755/?terms=tangerine |title=Race Bias Makes Lemon Of Tangerine Bowl Bid |url-access=subscription |newspaper=New York Age |location=New York City |via=newspapers.com |date=December 6, 1958 |accessdate=March 3, 2017}}
13. ^Eric Neel, "All or Nothing", ESPN.com, retrieved November 20, 2008.
14. ^"Meet "Buddy" Ryan New Defense Coach", University of Buffalo Spectrum Newspaper – October 6, 1961.
15. ^[https://www.si.com/college-football/2014/11/28/buffalo-bulls-hire-lance-leipold-head-coach Buffalo hires Wisconsin-Whitewater's Lance Leipold as new head coach]. Sports Illustrated (November 28, 2014). Retrieved November 30, 2014.
16. ^{{cite news|last1=Miner|first1=Dan|title=University at Buffalo gets green light on $18M fieldhouse; will issue construction bids in next few days|url=http://www.bizjournals.com/buffalo/news/2017/06/22/university-at-buffalo-gets-green-light-on-18m.html?ana=twt|accessdate=23 June 2017|work=Buffalo Business First|publisher=American City Business Journals|date=June 22, 2017}}
17. ^{{cite news|url=http://buffalonews.com/2017/06/23/ub-make-18-million-football-fieldhouse-reality/|title=UB about to make $18 million football field house a reality|date=June 23, 2017|agency=The Buffalo News|author=Gaughan, Mark|accessdate=June 23, 2017|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170624004007/http://buffalonews.com/2017/06/23/ub-make-18-million-football-fieldhouse-reality/|archivedate=June 24, 2017|deadurl=yes|df=}}
18. ^{{cite web |title=2018 Media Guide |url=http://www.ubbulls.com/sports/fball/2018-19/files/2018_football_infoguide.pdf |website=ubbulls.com |publisher=Buffalo Bulls Athletics |accessdate=October 4, 2018 |format=PDF}}
19. ^{{cite web |title=2018 Media Guide |url=http://www.ubbulls.com/sports/fball/2018-19/files/2018_football_infoguide.pdf |website=ubbulls.com |publisher=Buffalo Bulls Athletics |accessdate=October 4, 2018 |format=PDF}}
20. ^{{cite web|title=Khalil Mack wins NFL Defensive Player of the Year|url=http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000782768/article/khalil-mack-wins-nfl-defensive-player-of-the-year|author=Wesseling, Chris|website=NFL.com|date=February 4, 2017}}
21. ^{{cite web|url=http://cfbinfo.com/team/buffalo-bulls|title=Buffalo Records by Team|last=|first=|date=|website=|publisher=cfbinfo.com|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=2018-11-30}}
22. ^{{cite web| title=Buffalo Bulls Football Schedules and Future Schedules|publisher=fbschedules.com| url=http://www.fbschedules.com/ncaa/mid-amer/buffalo-bulls.php|accessdate=October 8, 2018}}

External links

  • {{Official website}}
{{Buffalo Bulls football navbox}}{{University at Buffalo, The State University of New York}}{{Mid-American Conference football navbox}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Buffalo Bulls Football}}

3 : Buffalo Bulls football|American football teams established in 1894|1894 establishments in New York (state)

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