Английская Википедия:1971 Sugar Bowl
Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox NCAA football yearly game The 1971 Sugar Bowl was the 37th edition of the college football bowl game, played at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Thursday, January 1. It featured the fourth-ranked Tennessee Volunteers of the Southeastern Conference (SEC), and the independent Air Force Falcons.[1][2]
Teams
Air Force
Шаблон:Main The Falcons were in their first Sugar Bowl under thirteenth-year head coach Ben Martin; he had a 68–57–7 record and brought Air Force into national prominence, ranked in the AP Poll for the second time in school history. However, the tenth-ranked Falcons lost their final regular season game 49–19 at home to Colorado. A week earlier, Air Force had defeated Pacific-8 champion Stanford, who later upset #2 Ohio State in the Rose Bowl.
Tennessee
Шаблон:Main Tennessee was under the leadership of 29-year old rookie coach Bill Battle, a member of the national champion 1961 Alabama Crimson Tide. This was the Vols' fifth Sugar Bowl appearance and first since the 1957 game. The Vols rolled over Alabama 24–0 at Knoxville in October and gained revenge for a 38–0 loss in 1969 to Ole Miss in November, but an early loss to Auburn in Birmingham wound up costing Tennessee the Southeastern Conference championship, which instead went to LSU.
The game was a match of offense vs defense. In the regular season, Air Force averaged 423.6 yards in offense, while Tennessee surrendered only 88.4 yards on defense.[3]
Game summary
Televised by ABC, the Sugar Bowl kicked off at 12 noon CST, an hour before the Cotton Bowl on CBS.[4]
Quarterback Bobby Scott summed the game up with a quote after the game: "We had the momentum going." The Volunteers, not fooled by Air Force's eight-man line, drove 59 yards in 2 minutes and 45 seconds and culminated with a Don McLeary touchdown. It only grew worse for the Falcons as they fumbled on their ensuing drive, as the Vols added in a field goal by George Hunt soon after. Following an Air Force punt, the Vols drove down the field once again, driving 58 yards that culminated in McLeary's 2nd touchdown. A fumble by Air Force gave the ball back to the Vols at the Falcons' own 24. Four plays later, Scott passed to Gary Theiler for a touchdown. By this point, 3:12 was left in the first period, and it was 24–0. Air Force did later score in the quarter, happening on a fumble recovery by Darryl Hass in the endzone on a bad snap while the Vols were in their own territory. The second quarter went scoreless, as the demoralized Falcons trailed 24–7 at halftime.
The third quarter turned out to be worse. Bobby Majors returned an Air Force punt 57 yards for a touchdown. Air Force added in a measly touchdown later in the quarter, but by that point it was 31–13, and Hunt added in his second field goal to make the final score 34–13.[5]
Scoring
First quarter
- TENN – Don McLeary 5-yard run (George Hunt kick)
- TENN – Hunt 30-yard field goal
- TENN – McLeary 20-yard run (Hunt kick)
- TENN – Gary Theiler 10-yard pass from Bobby Scott (Hunt kick)
- AFA – Darryl Haas fumble recovery in end zone (Barry kick)
Second quarter
- No scoring
Third quarter
- TENN – Bobby Majors 57-yard punt return (Hunt kick)
- AFA – Bob Bassa 27-yard pass from Bob Parker (kick failed)
Fourth quarter
- TENN – Hunt 32-yard field goal
Statistics
Statistics Tennessee Air Force First Downs 24 15 Yards Rushing 42–86 24–(-12) Passing 24–46–2 23–46–4 Yards Passing 306 239 Total Yards 88–392 70–227 Punts–Average 5–31.4 8–34.5 Fumbles–Lost 7–3 7–4 Turnovers 5 8 Penalties–Yards 6–74 0–0
Aftermath
Air Force has not returned to the Sugar Bowl or any other bowl sponsored by the Bowl Championship Series and its successor, the College Football Playoff. Tennessee has returned twice, 1986 and 1991, where they defeated the Miami Hurricanes and the Virginia Cavaliers, respectively.
This was the final event at Tulane Stadium that was played on grass. Poly-Turf was installed in the summer of 1971 at the request of the National Football League after naming the stadium as the host of Super Bowl VI, and remained in place until the stadium was torn down at the end of 1979.
References
Шаблон:1970 bowl game navbox Шаблон:Sugar Bowl navbox Шаблон:Air Force Falcons bowl game navbox Шаблон:Tennessee Volunteers bowl game navbox
- Английская Википедия
- 1970–71 NCAA football bowl games
- Sugar Bowl
- Air Force Falcons football bowl games
- Tennessee Volunteers football bowl games
- January 1971 sports events in the United States
- 1971 in sports in Louisiana
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