•
Kilgore College (TX) 32, Holmes Junior College 12, (December 9, 1950) - The first football game played in the newly opened stadium. •
Southern Mississippi 55, Louisville 26, (November 11, 1952) - The first Division I-A game played in the stadium. •
Ole Miss 39, UT Chattanooga 6 (September 19, 1953) - This was the first game played by Ole Miss in the stadium. •
Texas Tech 27, Mississippi State 20, (October 31, 1953) - This was the first game played by Mississippi State in the stadium. •
Mississippi State 13, Auburn 10, (November 5, 1963) - The unranked Bulldogs pulled the upset over the #5 ranked Tigers on the strength of an interception late in the game that allowed them to drive down for a game winning 36-yard Justin Canale field goal with just 22 seconds remaining. •
Jackson State 20, Grambling State 14, (October 1967) - Jackson State's first game at Memorial Stadium effectively desegregated the state's largest sporting venue. The game versus SWAC foe Grambling was witnessed by 20,000 fans. •
Houston 29, Ole Miss 7, (October 26, 1968) - The Houston Cougars dealt Ole Miss quarterback
Archie Manning his only loss in Jackson. Manning was 8–1 as a starter in games played at Veterans Memorial Stadium. •
Ole Miss 26, LSU 23, (November 1, 1969) - With his team trailing 23–12 in the third quarter, Ole Miss QB Archie Manning engineered two touchdown drives to give the Rebels a three-point win over the Tigers. Ole Miss clinched the game when heir defense knocked down a fourth-down pass at their own 23 with time running out. •
Jackson State 72, Lane College 0, (1972) - Jackson State running back, and future
Pro Football Hall of Famer,
Walter "Sweetness" Payton set the NCAA Division I-AA scoring record, racking up 46 points by rushing for 6 touchdowns and scoring a pair of
two-point conversions. Payton also rushed for a then school record 279 yards. •
Ole Miss 38, Mississippi State 10, (November 24, 1973)- The first Egg Bowl played at the stadium. •
Ole Miss 20, Notre Dame 13, (September 17, 1977) - The Rebels forced five turnovers and en route to an upset over the third ranked, and 14 point favorite, Fighting Irish. trailing 13–10 with 4:53 left to play a senior third-string QB Tim Ellis completed three of four passes for 68 yards and directed an 80-yard drive that ended with a touchdown throw to Fullback James Storey. The contest would prove to be Notre Dame's only loss of the season and the Irish would go on to be named both AP and UPI national champions. •
Mississippi State 6, Alabama 3, (Nov. 1, 1980) - Coached by
Bear Bryant the Crimson Tide were ranked No. 1 in the national polls and had won 28 consecutive games, 26 straight Southeastern Conference games and had defeated Mississippi State 22 straight times. Bulldog head coach
Emory Bellard was credited with being the inventor of the
wishbone offense and had worked with the defense all week to come up with a scheme that could stop it. Trailing 6–3 the Tide had a first-and-goal at the State 4-yard line with 22 seconds left. Alabama QB Don Jacobs ran the
triple option, MSU
defensive lineman Tyrone Keys penetrated the backfield and hit Jacobs before he had a chance to pitch the ball. Jacobs fumbled and Bulldog lineman Billy Jackson recovered for State. •
Southern Miss 7, Mississippi State 6, (November 7, 1981) - Southern clinches a narrow 7–6 victory before a crowd reported at 64,112 – a figure some claim set the stadium's all-time attendance record, although other accounts say that the record was broken during the 1984 Mississippi Valley – Alcorn State game. •
Alcorn State 42, Mississippi Valley State 28, (November 4, 1984) - Both teams entered the contest with undefeated records. Valley, under the guidance of future SWAC hall of fame coach
Archie "Gunslinger" Cooley was 7–0 (4–0 SWAC) and ranked fifth in Division I-AA while Alcorn, coached by future
college football hall of famer Marino "The Godfather" Casem, was 6–0 (3–0 SWAC) and ranked fourth. Led by quarterback
Willie "Satellite" Totten and future Pro Football Hall of Fame wide receiver
Jerry Rice, The Valley Delta Devils entered the game averaging 666 yards and 64 points per game on offense, tops in Division I-AA. By contrast Alcorn State Braves entered the game ranked second on defense. Behind the running of tailback Perry Quails, who finished the day with 211 yards and 5 touchdowns on the ground, and an effective pass rush the Braves built a 28-7 halftime lead over the Delta Devils. Valley stormed back scoring 3 unanswered touchdowns and tying the game with 14:56 left to play. In the end, however, the Braves' running game and defense proved too much. With 9:26 to go, Totten's pass for Cleo Armstrong was intercepted at the Alcorn 20. The Braves then went on a 6-minute 17-play touchdown drive that ended with Quails carrying the ball the last five plays. On the next series, Totten underthrew Rice, and corner-back
Issiac Holt returned the pass 29 yards for a touchdown to make the final score 42–28. On the day Totten finished 26 of 52 for 383 yards with 2 touchdowns and 4 interceptions. Rice finished the day with 134 yards and 1 touchdown on 8 receptions. Alcorn State would go on to win the SWAC championship while Valley finished second. •
Alcorn State 52, Jackson State 34, (November 19, 1994) - Steve McNair's penultimate college game was played in front of 62,512 fans inside Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium as the annual JSU-Alcorn rivalry reached a fever pitch. McNair capped off his campaign for the Heisman with a 533-yard performance. •
Millsaps 20, Mississippi College 19, (September 2, 2000) - After a 40-year hiatus Millsaps and Mississippi College renewed their rivalry. Redubbed "The Backyard Brawl", the contest was witnessed by a reported crowd of 10,200. The game was played there through the 2004 meeting when the series took another brief hiatus while Mississippi College attempted a move to Division II. The move didn't happen and the series resumed in 2006 with the games alternating between the schools' campuses. ==Other events==