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1975 Orange Bowl

American college football game


American college football game

FieldValue
game_nameOrange Bowl
subheader41st Orange Bowl
date_game_playedJanuary 1
imageFile:Miami orange bowl stadium cropped.jpg
captionThe Miami Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, hosted the Orange Bowl.
year_game_played1975
football_season1974
stadiumOrange Bowl
cityMiami, Florida
visitor_schoolUniversity of Notre Dame
visitor_name_shortNotre Dame
visitor_nicknameFighting Irish
visitor_record9–2
visitor_rank_AP9
visitor_rank_coaches8
visitor_coachAra Parseghian
visitor_conferenceIndependent
visitor_1q7
visitor_2q6
visitor_3q0
visitor_4q0
home_schoolUniversity of Alabama
home_name_shortAlabama
home_nicknameCrimson Tide
home_record11–0
home_rank_AP2
home_rank_coaches1
home_coachBear Bryant
home_conferenceSEC
home_1q0
home_2q3
home_3q0
home_4q8
MVPWayne Bullock (Notre Dame FB)
Leroy Cook (Alabama DE)
oddsAlabama by 9 to 10 points
refereeRobert Fallon (Big Ten)
(split crew between Big Ten and SEC)
attendance71,801
us_networkNBC
us_announcersJim Simpson and John Brodie
ratings28.8

Leroy Cook (Alabama DE) (split crew between Big Ten and SEC) The 1975 Orange Bowl was the 41st edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, on Wednesday, January 1. Part of the 1974–75 bowl game season, it matched the ninth-ranked independent Notre Dame Fighting Irish and the undefeated #2 Alabama Crimson Tide of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). It was a rematch of the previous season's Sugar Bowl. In a game dominated by both defenses, underdog Notre Dame held on to upset the Tide, 13–11.

Teams

Main article: 1974 NCAA Division I football season

Notre Dame

Main article: 1974 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team

Notre Dame went 9–2 in the regular season, with losses to Purdue and USC. Following Notre Dame's victory over Navy, Orange Bowl officials announced an invitation to Notre Dame and Alabama. This was Notre Dame's sixth bowl game appearance and their second Orange Bowl. It was notable as Ara Parseghian's final game as head coach, as he announced his resignation from the position December 15. He was succeeded by Dan Devine, the head coach of the NFL's Green Bay Packers for four seasons, and previously led Missouri (1958–1970) and Arizona State (1955–1957).

Alabama

Main article: 1974 Alabama Crimson Tide football team

Alabama won all eleven games in the regular season and were conference champions. Following Alabama's victory over Mississippi State, Orange Bowl officials announced Alabama had accepted an invitation to play against Notre Dame in a rematch of the previous year's Sugar Bowl. It was Alabama's 28th bowl game appearance and seventh Orange Bowl.

Undefeated Alabama was first in the UPI coaches poll (#2 in AP poll) and favored by nine to ten points.

Game summary

Earlier in the evening in California, fifth-ranked USC won the Rose Bowl by a point over #3 Ohio State. Top-ranked Oklahoma was bowl ineligible, and #4 Michigan was also idle, as this was the final season that the Big Ten Conference (and Pac-8) allowed just one bowl team.

The final game of New Year's Day, the Orange Bowl kicked off at night; midway through the first quarter, Alabama's Willie Shelby fumbled a punt that was recovered by Notre Dame's Al Samuel at the Crimson Tide 16-yard line. Five plays later, the Irish scored on a four-yard Wayne Bullock touchdown run to take a 7–0 lead. Their lead was extended to 13–0 midway through the second quarter after Mark McLane scored on a nine-yard touchdown run to cap a 17-play drive that covered 77 yards. A 21-yard field goal by Danny Ridgeway cut the lead to 13–3 at the half.

After a scoreless third, the Crimson Tide scored a late touchdown on a 48-yard Richard Todd touchdown pass to Russ Schamun, and with a successful two-point conversion closed the gap to 13–11. After a defensive stop, Alabama got the ball back at its own 38 with under two minutes remaining, needing only a field goal to win. After two completions, the ball was on the Irish 38; Todd missed an open Ozzie Newsome and threw an interception to Reggie Barnett, effectively ending the comeback for the Tide. Bullock was the leading rusher at 83 yards, and was named the game's outstanding player, with Alabama defensive end Leroy Cook.

Aftermath

In an era of few postseason games, this was Alabama's sixteenth consecutive bowl appearance, but was the eighth straight without a victory (0–7–1). Their last postseason win was in January 1967; starting with the next season, the Tide won six consecutive bowl games.

Scoring

:Source:

Statistics

:{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center" ! Statistics !! Notre Dame !! Alabama |- | First downs || 15|| 14 |- | Rushes–yards|| 66–185|| 33–62 |- | Passing yards|| 19|| 223 |- | Passes (C–A–I) ||4–8–2 ||15–29–2 |- | Total Offense ||74–204||62–285 |- |Punts–average ||6–38.0|| 7–40.0 |- |Fumbles–lost ||1–1|| 5–2 |- |Turnovers||3||4 |- |Penalties–yards ||1–15|| 1–5 |} :Source:

References

References

  1. McKenzie, Mike. (January 2, 1975). "Mistakes spell defeat for Tide". Tuscaloosa News.
  2. (January 13, 1975). "Top of the ladder, with a boost".
  3. (January 2, 1975). "Memory of USC defeat spurs Irish to upset Alabama". Milwaukee Journal.
  4. (January 2, 1975). "Emotion-charged Notre Dame jolts 'Bama in Orange Bowl". Toledo Blade (Ohio).
  5. (December 16, 1974). "Notre Dame's Ara Parseghian ends 25-year coaching career". Lodi News-Sentinel.
  6. (December 16, 1974). "Parseghian quits, says he needs rest". Tuscaloosa News.
  7. McKenzie, Mike. (November 5, 1974 <!--). "Bama takes Orange bid, Bear silent". Tuscaloosa News.
  8. "Alabama Crimson Tide". Sports Reference LLC.
  9. (January 1, 1975). "Irish hurting physically for Ara's finale at ND". Toledo Blade.
  10. (January 1, 1975). "Game of the year for Crimson Tide". Tuscaloosa News.
  11. McKenzie, Mike. (January 2, 1975). "Mistakes spell defeat for Tide". Tuscaloosa News.
  12. (January 2, 1975). "End of Ara era: Irish stem Tide". Pittsburgh Press.
  13. (January 2, 1975). "Individual stats for Tide, Irish". Tuscaloosa News.
  14. (January 2019). "Game-by-game recaps: 1975". 2019 Capital One Orange Bowl media guide.
Info: Wikipedia Source

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