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1978 Cotton Bowl Classic


FieldValue
game_nameCotton Bowl Classic
subheader42nd Cotton Bowl Classic
date_game_playedJanuary 2
year_game_played1978
football_season1977
imageCotton Bowl Classic 1978.png
visitor_schoolUniversity of Notre Dame
visitor_name_shortNotre Dame
visitor_nicknameFighting Irish
visitor_record10–1
visitor_rank_AP5
visitor_rank_coaches5
visitor_coachDan Devine
visitor_conferenceIndependent
visitor_1q3
visitor_2q21
visitor_3q7
visitor_4q7
home_schoolUniversity of Texas
home_name_shortTexas
home_nicknameLonghorns
home_record11–0
home_rank_AP1
home_rank_coaches1
home_coachFred Akers
home_conferenceSWC
home_1q3
home_2q7
home_3q0
home_4q0
typebg
stadiumCotton Bowl
cityDallas, Texas
oddsTexas by 7 points
attendance76,701
MVPBob Golic(N. Dame LB)
Vagas Ferguson (N. Dame RB)
refereeVance Carlson (Big Eight)
us_networkCBS
us_announcersLindsey Nelson, Paul Hornung, Paul Alexander, and Don Criqui

Vagas Ferguson (N. Dame RB)

The 1978 Cotton Bowl Classic was the 42nd edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas, on Monday, January 2. Part of the 1977–78 bowl game season, it matched the top-ranked and undefeated Texas Longhorns of the Southwest Conference (SWC) and the #5 Notre Dame Fighting Irish, an independent. A record crowd of 76,701 turned up to see the coronation of the Longhorns championship season, but Notre Dame surprisingly won as they dominated the Longhorns 38–10.

New Year's Day was on Sunday in 1978, and the major college bowl games were played the following day.

Teams

Main article: 1977 NCAA Division I football season

Notre Dame

Main article: 1977 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team

Fifth-ranked Notre Dame entered the game at 10–1. In September, they were upset by Mississippi in Jackson, but had won all nine games since.

Texas

Main article: 1977 Texas Longhorns football team

Texas had won all eleven games; the closest margins were in October against Oklahoma and Arkansas.

Game summary

Televised by CBS, the game kicked off at around 1 p.m. CST, as did the Sugar Bowl on ABC.

Heisman Trophy winner Earl Campbell of Texas gained 116 yards on 29 carries, but was kept out of the end zone. Tied at three after the first quarter, the Irish scored three touchdowns in eight minutes to lead 24–3; Texas finally got in the end zone late in the second quarter to narrow the lead to fourteen points at halftime. Notre Dame then shut out the Longhorns in the second half while scoring two more touchdowns.

The 28-point loss by the Longhorns resulted in complete chaos in the final polls, with Notre Dame vaulting past #3 Alabama to win the national championship.

Scoring

First quarter

  • Notre Dame – Dave Reeve 47-yard field goal, 11:35 remaining (after fumble recovery by Ross Browner) ND 3–0
  • Texas – Russell Erxleben 42-yard field goal, 6:07. Tie 3–3 Second quarter
  • Notre Dame – Terry Eurick 6-yard run (Reeve kick), 14:56 (after fumble recovery by Jim Browner) ND 10–3
  • Notre Dame – Eurick 10-yard run (Reeve kick), 11:37 (after fumble recovery by Willie Fry) ND 17–3
  • Notre Dame – Vagas Ferguson 17-yard pass from Joe Montana (Reeve kick), 7:28 (after interception by Doug Becker) ND 24–3
  • Texas – Mike Lockett 13-yard pass from Randy McEachern (Erxleben kick), 0:01 ND 24–10 Third quarter
  • Notre Dame – Ferguson 3-yard run (Reeve kick), 6:49 (after interception by Steve Heimkreiter) ND 31–10 Fourth quarter
  • Notre Dame – Ferguson 26-yard run (Reeve kick), 9:41 (after fake punt attempt) ND 38–10 :Source:

Statistics

:{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center" ! Statistics !! Notre Dame !! Texas |- |First downs ||26 ||16 |- |Rushing yards ||53–243 ||50–130 |- |Passing yards ||156 ||160 |- |Passing || 14–32–1 || 11–24–3 |- |Total offense ||85–399 ||74–290 |- |Fumbles–lost ||0–0||3–3 |- |Turnovers ||1||6 |- |Punts–average ||5–30.4 || 3–40.0 |- |Penalties–yards ||4–37 ||1–5 |} :Source:

Aftermath

Texas' loss opened the door to the national championship for several teams: second-ranked Oklahoma was soundly beaten 31–6 by #6 Arkansas in the Orange Bowl nightcap, and in between, fourth-ranked Michigan fell 27–20 to #13 Washington in the Rose Bowl. That left third-ranked Alabama and #5 Notre Dame as the primary teams for the title.

Alabama felt that with their convincing 35–6 win over #9 Ohio State in the Sugar Bowl, they would be champions due to the losses by Texas and Oklahoma, but the pollsters saw it differently. Notre Dame was voted number one in every poll. Perhaps the rout by fellow SWC member Arkansas in the Orange Bowl made the difference as it made Notre Dame's victory over Texas (who had won at Arkansas in mid-October) even more impressive.

References

References

  1. (December 31, 1977). "Cotton Bowl should decide who's tops". Nashua Telegraph.
  2. Underwood, John. (January 9, 1978). "Shake down the thunder".
  3. (January 3, 1978). "Texas fumbles title and Irish fall on it". Eugene Register-Guard.
  4. Mizell, Hubert. (January 3, 1978). "Notre Dame corrals 'Horns, Campbell in 38-10 cruise". St. Petersburg Times.
  5. Loomis, Tom. (January 3, 1978). "Irish put in bid for No. 1, beat Texas in all phases". Toledo Blade.
  6. Bock, Hal. (January 3, 1978). "Devine feels Irish No. 1 after easy victory". Youngstown Vindicator.
  7. (September 18, 1977). "Irish stunned by Ole Miss". Toledo Blade.
  8. (January 2, 1978). "Sports on TV". Spokesman-Review.
  9. (January 4, 1978). "AP, UPI agree – it's Notre Dame". St. Petersburg Times.
  10. (January 4, 1978). "It might not add up, but Irish are clearly No. 1". Eugene Register-Guard.
  11. "January 2, 1978 - Notre Dame 38, Texas 10".
  12. (January 3, 1978). "How they fared". Deseret News.
  13. Browning, Al. (January 3, 1978). "No. 1? Bear doesn't know". Tuscaloosa News.
Info: Wikipedia Source

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