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1979 Orange Bowl

American college football game


American college football game

FieldValue
year_game_played1979
game_nameOrange Bowl
imageFile:Miami orange bowl stadium cropped.jpg
captionThe Miami Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, hosted the Orange Bowl.
subheader45th Orange Bowl
football_season1978
visitor_name_shortOklahoma
visitor_nicknameSooners
visitor_schoolUniversity of Oklahoma
home_name_shortNebraska
home_nicknameCornhuskers
home_schoolUniversity of Nebraska
visitor_record10–1
visitor_conferenceBig Eight
home_record9–2
home_conferenceBig Eight
visitor_coachBarry Switzer
home_coachTom Osborne
visitor_rank_AP4
visitor_rank_coaches4
home_rank_AP6
home_rank_coaches6
visitor_1q7
visitor_2q7
visitor_3q17
visitor_4q0
home_1q7
home_2q0
home_3q3
home_4q14
date_game_playedJanuary 1
stadiumOrange Bowl
cityMiami, Florida
MVPBilly Sims(Oklahoma HB)
Reggie Kinlaw (Oklahoma NG)
oddsOklahoma by 11½ points
refereeKen Faulkner (SWC)
attendance66,365
us_networkNBC
us_announcers_linkList of announcers of major college bowl games
us_announcersDick Enberg and Merlin Olsen
ratings22.8

Reggie Kinlaw (Oklahoma NG) The 1979 Orange Bowl was the 45th edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, on Monday, January 1. Part of the 1978–79 bowl game season, it matched the fourth-ranked Oklahoma Sooners and #6 Nebraska Cornhuskers, both of the Big Eight Conference.

This matchup was an anomaly: It featured a rare rematch of conference rivals that played every regular season. Nebraska had upset #1 Oklahoma 17–14 on November 11 in Lincoln, their first win in the rivalry since the Game of the Century in 1971, and appeared headed toward a national championship showdown with Penn State. But unranked Missouri (6–4) stunned the #2 Huskers 35–31 in Lincoln the following week, dropping Nebraska into a tie with Oklahoma for the Big Eight championship and knocking them out of the national championship picture.

Penn State instead faced Alabama for the national title in the Sugar Bowl, and the Orange Bowl found itself with a selection dilemma. Nebraska earned the Big Eight's automatic Orange Bowl berth by virtue of its victory over the Sooners, but, with Penn State and Notre Dame (which accepted an invitation to the Cotton Bowl) off the board, the Orange Bowl committee decided to set up a bowl rematch with Oklahoma to create the best possible {{nowrap|matchup. and the last non-championship bowl to be a rematch of a regular-season conference game until the 2025 season at the Birmingham Bowl.

Despite the road loss to the Huskers in the regular season, Oklahoma was a double-digit favorite.

Teams

Main article: 1978 NCAA Division I-A football season

Oklahoma

Main article: 1978 Oklahoma Sooners football team

Nebraska

Main article: 1978 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team

Game summary

Underdog Nebraska scored first on a 21-yard touchdown pass from Tom Sorley to Tim Smith for a 7–0 lead. Oklahoma tied the score on a 3-yard scamper by Heisman Trophy winner Billy Sims, and then went ahead in the second quarter when quarterback Thomas Lott scored on a three-yard run, and took the 14–7 lead into halftime.

The revenge-minded Sooners then took control. In the third quarter, Sims scored again an eleven-yard run. Field goals were traded, then Lott scored from two yards out, increasing Oklahoma's lead to 31–10.

Nebraska rallied late, with Rick Berns scoring on a one-yard run, and then Sorley threw a two-yard strike to tight end Junior Miller as time expired. Oklahoma prevailed 31–24 to finish at 11–1, avenging its only loss of the season.

The game was televised by NBC and the traditional halftime Festival of Lights show was a tribute to "the greatest entertainment phenomenon in America in 1978: Disco!" Besides dancing to recorded disco songs, there was an appearance by KC and the Sunshine Band.

Scoring

;First quarter:

  • Nebraska – Tim Smith 21-yard pass from Tom Sorley (Billy Todd kick), 8:29
  • Oklahoma – Billy Sims 3-yard run (Uwe von Schamann kick), 0:01 ;Second quarter:
  • Oklahoma – Thomas Lott 3-yard run (von Schamann kick), 6:22 ;Third quarter:
  • Oklahoma – Sims 11-yard run (von Schamann kick), 13:30
  • Oklahoma – von Schamann 26-yard field goal, 9:18
  • Nebraska – Todd 31-yard field goal, 4:24
  • Oklahoma – Lott 2-yard run (von Schamann kick), 0:15 ;Fourth quarter:
  • Nebraska – Rick Berns 1-yard run (Todd kick), 9:12
  • Nebraska – Junior Miller 2-yard pass from Sorley (Todd kick), 0:00 :Source:

Statistics

:{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center" ! Statistics !! Oklahoma !! Nebraska

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}
:Source:

Aftermath

Oklahoma (11–1) climbed to third in the final AP poll and Nebraska (9–3) fell to eighth.

References

References

  1. (January 1, 1979). "The Latest Line". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  2. (January 2, 1979). "Oklahoma takes Big 8 rematch". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  3. (January 2, 1979). "Oklahoma feels it's No. 1 after avenging only loss". Pittsburgh Press.
  4. Putnam, Pat. (January 8, 1979). "Orange Bowl".
  5. Looney, Douglas S.. (November 20, 1978). "Nebraska was on the loose".
  6. (November 12, 1978). "Grid frustration ends in Huskers' triumph". Spokesman-Review.
  7. (November 19, 1978). "Powers' Tigers upset Nebraska". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  8. (November 19, 1978). "Orange Bowl lands Nebraska, Oklahoma". Sarasota Herald-Tribune.
  9. (November 19, 1978). "Bowl roundup". Sunday Star-News.
  10. Lyell, Kelly. (December 2015}}--> This was the last time a non-championship postseason bowl featured two teams from the same conference until the [[2015 NCAA Division I FBS football season). "Colorado State heads to Arizona Bowl to face MW foe Nevada". [[Fort Collins Coloradoan]].
  11. unknown. (Jan 13, 1979). "Football Turns To Disco Acts, Lights". [[Billboard (magazine).
  12. (January 2019). "Game-by-game recaps: 1979". 2019 Capital One Orange Bowl media guide.
  13. (2005). "Bowl games: 1979 Orange Bowl". 2005 Nebraska Cornhuskers football media guide.
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