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1965 Orange Bowl

American college football game


American college football game

FieldValue
game_nameOrange Bowl
subheader31st Orange Bowl
imageFile:Miami orange bowl stadium cropped.jpg
captionThe Miami Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, hosted the Orange Bowl.
date_game_playedJanuary 1
year_game_played1965
football_season1964
stadiumOrange Bowl
cityMiami, Florida
visitor_schoolUniversity of Texas
visitor_name_shortTexas
visitor_nicknameLonghorns
visitor_record9–1
visitor_conferenceSWC
visitor_rank_AP5
visitor_rank_coaches5
visitor_coachDarrell Royal
visitor_1q7
visitor_2q14
visitor_3q0
visitor_4q0
home_schoolUniversity of Alabama
home_name_shortAlabama
home_nicknameCrimson Tide
home_record10–0
home_conferenceSEC
home_rank_AP1
home_rank_coaches1
home_coachBear Bryant
home_1q0
home_2q7
home_3q7
home_4q3
MVPJoe Namath (Alabama QB)
oddsAlabama by 3 points
refereeE.D. Cavette (SEC;
split crew: SEC, SWC)
attendance72,880
us_networkNBC
us_announcersJim Simpson, Bud Wilkinson
ratings20.6

split crew: SEC, SWC) The 1965 Orange Bowl, part of the 1964–65 bowl season, was the 31st edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, on Friday, January 1. Part of the 1964–65 bowl season, It matched the top-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide of the Southeastern Conference (SEC), and the #5 Texas Longhorns of the Southwest Conference (SWC). Texas built an early lead and won 21–17.

This was the first Orange Bowl game played at night, and the first live national network telecast of a college football game during prime time. NBC acquired the television rights and the kickoff was moved to follow the network's Rose Bowl telecast, without competition from other bowls. It also was the first Orange Bowl in twelve years not to include a team from the Big Eight Conference.

Despite Alabama's loss they were still named co-national champions (along with Arkansas).

Teams

Main article: 1964 NCAA University Division football season

Alabama

Main article: 1964 Alabama Crimson Tide football team

Alabama finished the regular season as both SEC and national champions with a record of 10–0. During the Iron Bowl, Alabama accepted a bid to play in the Orange Bowl from bowl officials. It was fourth Orange Bowl appearance for Alabama and their 18th bowl game. With USC upsetting Notre Dame 20–17 on the final weekend of the season, Alabama was selected as the 1964 national champions by both final major polls, released prior to the bowl games.

Texas

Main article: 1964 Texas Longhorns football team

The defending national champion Longhorns finished the regular season with a 9–1 record Only a 14–13 loss against Arkansas in week five kept the Longhorns from repeating as national champions.

Game summary

After the defense stopped Alabama at the one-yard line on fourth down, Texas responded quickly with the first score of the evening. After moving the ball 20 yards, Longhorn running back Ernie Koy took the ball 79-yards for a 7–0 Texas lead with only :23 remaining in the first quarter. Texas extended their lead to 14–0 on their next offensive possession when George Sauer caught a 69-yard touchdown reception from Jim Hudson. Alabama cut the lead in half later in the second quarter when Joe Namath hit Wayne Trimble for a 7-yard touchdown reception. On the following possession, Alabama blocked a 35-yard David Conway field goal attempt, recovered the ball, but fumbled it on the return, which Texas recovered. Ernie Koy capped the ensuing 38-yard drive with a two-yard touchdown run to give the Longhorns a 21–7 lead at halftime.

In the second half, Texas was held scoreless, but Alabama was unable to take the lead with only ten additional points. The first score was a 20-yard Ray Perkins touchdown reception from Namath and the second on a 26-yard David Ray field goal early in the fourth quarter. Although on the losing side, Alabama quarterback Namath was selected as the game's outstanding player for completing 18 of 37 passes for 255 yards and a pair of touchdowns.

Scoring

:Source:

Statistics

:{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center" ! Statistics !! Texas !! Alabama |- |First downs || 15|| 18 |- |Rushes–yards|| 51–212|| 26–49 |- |Passing yards|| 101|| 298 |- |Passes (C–A–I)|| 4–17–1 || 20–44–2 |- |Total offense || 68–313 || 70–347 |- |Punts–average ||9–36.8|| 5–3.4 |- |Fumbles–lost ||2–1|| 3–1 |- |Turnovers|| 2 || 3 |- |Penalties–yards ||3–25|| 4–46 |} :Source:

Aftermath

The following day, Namath signed his record contract with the New York Jets of the American Football League (AFL), estimated at $400,000 over three years.

Both final polls were released at the end of the regular season, prior to the bowls.

References

References

  1. Land, Charles. (January 1, 1965). "Tide, Texas in Orange Bowl battle". Tuscaloosa News.
  2. Underwood, John. (January 11, 1965). "Fabulous in defeat".
  3. (January 3, 1965). "Alabama fell six inches short". Tuscaloosa News.
  4. (January 2, 1965). "Tenacious Texas tops No.1 ranked Alabama". Eugene Register-Guard.
  5. (December 31, 1964). "Orange Bowl". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  6. Vecsey, George. (January 6, 2010). "Namath Has His Own Memories of ’65". [[The New York Times]].
  7. Land, Charles. (December 1, 1964). "Bama crowned best in nation". The Tuscaloosa News.
  8. (November 27, 1964). "Orange Bowl bid offered, accepted". The Tuscaloosa News.
  9. Smothers, Jimmy. (December 31, 1964). "Orange Bowl battle just a day away now". The Gadsden Times.
  10. Fitzgerald, Tommy. (January 2, 1965). "Big plays by Texas hold off Namath rush". The Miami News.
  11. Land, Charles. (January 2, 1965). "Namath's 18 completions set Orange Bowl record". The Tuscaloosa News.
  12. (January 2, 1965). "Joe Namath to sign $400,000 pro pact". Eugene Register-Guard.
  13. (January 1, 1965). "Texas vs Alabama (Jan 1, 1965)". University of Texas Athletics.
  14. (January 2019). "Game-by-game recaps: 1965". 2019 Capital One Orange Bowl media guide.
  15. (January 3, 1965). "Namath now pro football's richest rookie". Eugene Register-Guard.
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