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Pitt to face East Carolina in Military Bowl

Justin Guerriero
| Sunday, December 7, 2025 4:51 p.m.
Pitt’s Mason Heintschel (6), Desmond Reid (0), BJ Williams (55) and Kenny Johnson (2) celebrate earlier this season. (Andrew Palla | For TribLive)

Pitt’s wait regarding a postseason bowl invitation is over.

On Sunday afternoon, the Panthers (8-4, 6-2 ACC) were invited to the Military Bowl on Dec. 27 in Annapolis, Md., versus East Carolina (8-4, 6-2 American Conference).

The Panthers and Pirates will kick off at 11 a.m. from Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium.

This year marks the eighth in coach Pat Narduzzi’s 11th at the helm the Panthers have made a bowl.

His first season, in 2015, also resulted in a Military Bowl berth, with Pitt falling to No. 21 Navy, 44-28.

“The Military Bowl was my first bowl, and we’re excited to be back 10 years later to represent the University of Pittsburgh in this game,” Narduzzi said via Zoom Sunday night. “Got a great opponent. … The American Conference — we know how competitive it is. You look at the playoff today, with the two (Group of Five) teams in there, so we know the parity.

“I really don’t care — Group of Five, Power Four — they all got hearts. It comes down to who plays with more toughness and who wants it the most. That’s why we compete, and that’s kind of the football team we have in our locker room, as well.”

???? @MilitaryBowl

The Panthers are headed to Annapolis! pic.twitter.com/URgF8RUUlJ

— ACC Football (@ACCFootball) December 7, 2025

@Pitt_FB and @ECUPiratesFB are #goingbowling ????

????️ December 27????Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium⏰ 11 a.m.????️ https://t.co/CK2C2bij1z pic.twitter.com/dop0bdR64a

— Go Bowling Military Bowl (@MilitaryBowl) December 7, 2025

Blake Harrell, the Pirates’ coach, takes his team to the Military Bowl for the second straight year.

In 2024, after Mike Houston was fired midseason, Harrell took over and guided the Pirates to a 5-1 finish, including a win over N.C. State in the Military Bowl.

“It’s good to be back,” Harrell said. “We’re excited to be there and play in a bowl game. As I told our players earlier today … We’ll always celebrate winning around here, and we’ll always be grateful that we’re going to a bowl game. That’s something that East Carolina needs to get back to doing on the regular.

“We’ve been able to do it in back-to-back years and get to go back to Annapolis and do it again. Excited about the opportunity, and our players are excited about the opportunity.”

Losses by East Carolina this year came to N.C. State in Week 1, BYU, Tulane and UTSA.

The Pirates finished the season in fifth place in the American Conference.

With a win in the Military Bowl, the 2025 Panthers would tie for the second-most wins in a season under Narduzzi, matching the 9-4 2022 squad that won the Sun Bowl and trailing only the 11-3 ACC championship team in 2021.

Since 1983, Pitt has won nine or more games only five times (2022, 2021, 2009, 2008, 2002).

This season marks East Carolina’s fourth bowl berth since joining the American Conference in 2014.

“We look forward to a great matchup,” Military Bowl Foundation president and executive director Steve Beck said. “Two 8-4 teams. Pittsburgh, 6-2 in their league — a very, very competitive league. East Carolina came through again with a couple huge wins. We’re just lucky to have both teams and excited for a great day. … We really look forward to another great one. Both teams are very good travel partners for us, as well, being a drive away.”

Pitt’s bowl invitation came hours after the dust had settled around the College Football Playoff, with Miami earning the No. 10 seed as the ACC’s lone representative.

Tulane, league champion of the American Conference, entered the field as the No. 11 seed, followed by No. 12 James Madison, the second Group of Five team to make the cut.

THE 12-TEAM CFP BRACKET IS SET‼️

Did your team make the cut? ????@CFBPlayoff pic.twitter.com/tkdTkChBrg

— ESPN (@espn) December 7, 2025

Notre Dame (10-2), eligible for all of the ACC’s 10 affiliated bowls after missing the CFP, went on to decline a bowl invitation Sunday afternoon.

That, combined with Duke’s (8-5, 6-2) overtime win over Virginia (10-3, 6-2) in the ACC championship Saturday, shook up the projected bowl landscape for the league’s 10 qualifying teams.

After Cal, a former Pac-12 member, accepted an invitation to the Hawaii Bowl on Dec. 24, bowl-eligible ACC teams aside from the Panthers, Cavaliers and Blue Devils on Sunday consisted of SMU, No. 24 Georgia Tech (9-3, 6-2), Clemson (7-5, 4-4), N.C. State (7-5, 4-4), Louisville (8-4, 4-4) and Wake Forest (8-4, 4-4).

Following selection Sunday, the ACC’s bowl invites are as follows:

Friday, Dec. 19: N.C. State vs. Memphis (Gasparilla Bowl)

Tuesday, Dec. 23: Louisville vs. Toledo (Boca Raton Bowl)

Saturday, Dec. 27: Pitt vs. East Carolina (Military Bowl); Clemson vs. Penn State (Pinstripe Bowl); Georgia Tech vs. BYU (Pop-Tarts Bowl); Virginia vs. Missouri (Gator Bowl)

Wednedsay, Dec. 31: Duke vs. Arizona State (Sun Bowl)

Friday, Jan. 2: Wake Forest vs. Mississippi State (Duke’s Mayo Bowl); SMU vs. Arizona (Holiday Bowl)


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