Английская Википедия:1978 Rose Bowl

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Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox college football game The 1978 Rose Bowl was a college football bowl game, played on Monday, January 2, and was the 64th Rose Bowl Game. The Washington Huskies, champions of the Pacific-8 Conference, defeated the favored Michigan Wolverines, champions of the Big Ten Conference, Шаблон:Nowrap Washington quarterback Warren Moon was named the Rose Bowl Player of the Game.[1]

The Huskies led Шаблон:Nowrap at the half and extended it to Шаблон:Nowrap early in the third quarter, then held off a Wolverine comeback with two interceptions deep in their own territory in the last two minutes to win by seven.[2][3][4] It was the second of three consecutive losses in the Rose Bowl for Michigan, a two-touchdown favorite entering this game.[5]

The face value of game tickets was $17.50 each.[5]

Teams

Michigan Wolverines

Led by junior quarterback Rick Leach, Michigan began the season ranked second, and were first after four of the first six weeks. However, a stunning Шаблон:Nowrap loss on October 22 at Minnesota dropped them to sixth. A Шаблон:Nowrap win over fourth-ranked rival Ohio State gave the Wolverines the Big Ten title and they came into the Rose Bowl ranked fourth.[6]

Washington Huskies

In their third season under head coach Don James and quarterback Warren Moon, Washington stumbled out of the gate, losing three of their first four games, all out of conference. They then won six of seven, losing Шаблон:Nowrap at UCLA on October 29 (later vacated by the Bruins, due to ineligible players). The Huskies won the Pac-8 title and earned the Rose Bowl berth when UCLA lost its final game on a last second field goal to USC, Шаблон:Nowrap Washington entered the game ranked thirteenth in the AP poll, and tied for fourteenth in the UPI coaches poll.[6]

Scoring

Файл:1978 Rose Bowl Football (1983.317).jpg
A game ball from the 1978 Rose Bowl

First quarter

  • Washington – Warren Moon 2-yard run (Steve Robbins kick); UW 7–0

Second quarter

  • Washington – Robbins 30-yard field goal; UW 10–0
  • Washington – Moon 1-yard run (Robbins kick); UW 17–0

Third quarter

  • Washington – Spider Gaines 28-yard pass from Moon (Robbins kick); UW 24–0
  • Michigan – Curt Stephenson 76-yard pass from Rick Leach (Gregg Willner kick); UW 24–7
  • Washington – Robbins 18-yard field goal; UW 27–7

Fourth quarter

  • Michigan – Russell Davis 2-yard run (Willner kick); UW 27–14
  • Michigan – Stan Edwards 32-yard pass from Leach (kick failed); UW 27–20

Statistics

Statistics Washington   Michigan  
First downs 17 22
Rushes–yards 48–164 48–149
Passing yards 234 239
Passes 13–24–2 14–27–2
Total yards 398 388
Punts–average 5–39 4–43
Fumbles–lost 0–0 2–1
Turnovers by 2 3
Penalties–yards 6–47 3–11
Шаблон:Small[2][3]

Aftermath

With Notre Dame beating top-ranked and undefeated Texas in the Cotton Bowl, Michigan had hopes that a dominant win over Washington would boost the Wolverines to the national title. The Huskies' dramatic upset ended those hopes, and Notre Dame was voted first in the polls among five one-loss teams; Alabama, Arkansas, Texas, and Penn State were the others. Michigan dropped to ninth in the final AP poll and Washington climbed to tenth; both were a spot higher in the UPI coaches poll.[7]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:1977 bowl game navbox Шаблон:Rose Bowl navbox Шаблон:Michigan Wolverines bowl game navbox Шаблон:Washington Huskies bowl game navbox