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1975 Sugar Bowl

American college football game


American college football game

FieldValue
game_nameSugar Bowl
subheader42nd Sugar Bowl
imageLouisiana Superdome - Unbranded - 26 July 2021.jpg
captionThe Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, hosted the Sugar Bowl.
date_game_playedDecember 31
year_game_played1975
football_season1975
stadiumLouisiana Superdome
cityNew Orleans, Louisiana
visitor_schoolPenn State University
visitor_name_shortPenn State
visitor_nicknameNittany Lions
visitor_record9–2
visitor_rank_AP8
visitor_rank_coaches8
visitor_coachJoe Paterno
visitor_conferenceIndependent
visitor_1q0
visitor_2q0
visitor_3q3
visitor_4q3
home_schoolUniversity of Alabama
home_name_shortAlabama
home_nicknameCrimson Tide
home_record10–1
home_rank_AP4
home_rank_coaches4
home_coachBear Bryant
home_conferenceSEC
home_1q3
home_2q0
home_3q7
home_4q3
MVPRichard Todd (Alabama QB)
oddsAlabama by 13 points
refereeClint Fuller (Southwest)
attendance75,212
us_networkABC
us_announcersKeith Jackson, Bud Wilkinson
different_next[1977](1977-sugar-bowl)

The 1975 Sugar Bowl was the 42nd edition of the college football bowl game, played at night in the new Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Wednesday, December 31. Part of the 1975–76 bowl game season, it matched the fourth-ranked Alabama Crimson Tide of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and the independent #8 Penn State Nittany Lions. In the first Sugar Bowl played in the recently completed Superdome, favored Alabama won 13–6.

This was the last of four consecutive editions played at night on New Year's Eve; it returned to January 1 1977, as a day game.

Teams

Main article: 1975 NCAA Division I football season

Alabama

Main article: 1975 Alabama Crimson Tide football team

Alabama completed the regular season as SEC champions with a 10–1 record. The only defeat was a 20–7 non-conference loss to Missouri in week one. On November 17, bowl officials announced that Alabama would face Penn State in the Sugar Bowl. It marked the seventh appearance for Alabama in the Sugar Bowl and their 29th bowl game.

The Tide entered the Sugar Bowl as a thirteen-point favorite but had not won in its last eight bowl games.

Penn State

Main article: 1975 Penn State Nittany Lions football team

Penn State completed the regular season with a record of 9–2. Their only defeats were a 17–9 loss to Ohio State in week three and a 15–14 loss to North Carolina State in week ten. On November 17, bowl officials announced that Penn State would face Alabama in the Sugar Bowl. The invitation to Penn State was controversial as Alabama's Bryant personally selected Penn State as their opponent instead of the Big Eight runner-up (#6 Nebraska), ranked higher than the Nittany Lions. Bryant was miffed that the Orange Bowl, which was committed to the Big Eight champion (#3 Oklahoma), had snubbed the Crimson Tide in favor of the Big Ten runner-up, #5 Michigan (the Big Ten (and Pac-8), allowed multiple bowl teams for the first time this season). In Bryant's view, this effectively killed Alabama's chances for a national championship. It was the second appearance for Penn State in the Sugar Bowl and their fourteenth bowl game.

Game Summary

The game kicked off shortly after 6:30 p.m. CST on New Year's Eve, televised by ABC.

After Penn State's Chris Bahr missed a 62-yard field goal, Alabama scored on a 25-yard Danny Ridgeway field goal. The second quarter was scoreless, and the Crimson Tide led 3–0 at halftime.

Penn State tied the game at three on a 42-yard Bahr field goal in the third quarter. Alabama responded on the following drive with the lone touchdown of the game, a 14-yard Mike Stock run, to take a 10–3 lead.

A 37-yard Bahr field goal reduced the lead to four points with under twelve minutes remaining. The Crimson Tide responded with an extended drive, resulting in a 28-yard Ridgeway field goal to push the lead back to seven at 13–6, the final score. For his 210 yards passing after completing ten of twelve pass attempts, Alabama quarterback Richard Todd was named the game's outstanding player.

It was Alabama's first bowl win in nine years (since January 1967) and started a string of six straight bowl victories.

Statistics

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References

References

  1. (December 31, 1975). "Alabama trio benched for curfew violation". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  2. McKenize, Mike. (November 17, 1975). "Alabama vs. Penn State in Sugar". Tuscaloosa News.
  3. McKenize, Mike. (November 18, 1975). "Bryant defends picking Penn State as foe". The Tuscaloosa News.
  4. (December 31, 1975). "Sugar, Peach Bowls on tap". Victoria Advocate.
  5. Axelrod, Phil. (January 1, 1976). "Lions bow to Alabama". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  6. Wilson, Austin. (January 1, 1976). "Sugar Bowl is sweet for Alabama". The Gadsden Times.
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