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1981 Holiday Bowl


FieldValue
year_game_played1981
game_nameHoliday Bowl
football_season1981
visitor_name_shortWashington State
visitor_nicknameCougars
visitor_schoolWashington State University
home_name_shortBYU
home_nicknameCougars
home_schoolBrigham Young University
visitor_record8–2-1
visitor_conferencePac-10
home_record10–2
home_conferenceWAC
visitor_coachJim Walden
home_coachLaVell Edwards
visitor_rank_AP20
visitor_rank_coaches18
home_rank_AP14
home_rank_coaches12
visitor_1q0
visitor_2q7
visitor_3q21
visitor_4q8
home_1q7
home_2q17
home_3q7
home_4q7
date_game_playedDecember 18
stadiumJack Murphy Stadium
citySan Diego, California
MVPJim McMahon(QB, BYU)
Kyle Whittingham (LB, BYU)
oddsBYU by 3 points
refereeJack Gatto (PCAA)
halftimeMarching bands
attendance52,419
payout286,179 per team
us_networkESPN, Mizlou

Kyle Whittingham (LB, BYU) The 1981 Holiday Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 18 in San Diego, California. It was part of the 1981 NCAA Division I-A football season, and was the fourth edition of the Holiday Bowl. The Friday night game was the third of sixteen games in this bowl season and featured the #20 Washington State Cougars of the Pac-10 Conference, and the 14th-ranked BYU Cougars, champions of the Western Athletic Conference.

It was the first bowl appearance in 51 years for Washington State, who used a two-quarterback system: junior Clete Casper was the passer and sophomore Ricky Turner the runner. Meanwhile, it was the fourth straight year in the Holiday Bowl for BYU. BYU's quarterback was consensus All-American and future Super Bowl champion Jim McMahon, the fifth overall pick of the 1982 NFL draft. He was backed up by sophomore Steve Young, a future member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and also a Super Bowl champion.

Game summary

Favored BYU scored first on a 35-yard pass from McMahon to Dan Plater, the only scoring of the first quarter. McMahon threw a 7-yard pass to Gordon Hudson to increase BYU's lead to 14–0. Washington State got on the board after quarterback Turner scored on a two-yard run. BYU's Kurt Gunther kicked a 20-yard field goal and Waymon Hamilton ran in from a yard out to give BYU a 24–7 lead at halftime.

Early in the third quarter, BYU cornerback Tom Holmoe intercepted a Casper pass and returned it 35 yards for a touchdown, but WSU scored three unanswered touchdowns. Running back Matt LaBonne scored on an 18-yard run, Robert Williams scored on a 5-yard run, and Turner scored again on a 13-yard run to close the BYU lead to three points (31–28) at the end of the third quarter.

McMahon fired an 11-yard touchdown pass to Scott Pettis to take the lead back to ten points at 38–28. WSU fullback Mike Martin scored from a yard out and Turner added a 2-point conversion to close the gap to two points (38–36) with five minutes remaining. Late in the game, McMahon fumbled a third-down snap but picked up the ball and ran for a first down that helped to clinch the victory for BYU.

The players of the game, both from BYU, were McMahon and middle linebacker Kyle Whittingham, the future head coach at Utah. BYU evened its record in the bowl at 2–2, and played in the next three.

BYU moved up one spot to thirteenth in the final AP poll, and Washington State slipped out of the top twenty; their next bowl appearance was seven years later.

Scoring

First quarter

  • BYU – Dan Plater 35 pass from Jim McMahon (Kurt Gunther kick)

Second quarter

  • BYU – Gordon Hudson 4 pass from McMahon (Gunther kick)
  • WSU – Ricky Turner 4 run (Ward Leland kick)
  • BYU – Field goal, Gunther 20
  • BYU – Waymon Hamilton 1 run (Gunther kick)

Third quarter

  • BYU – Tom Holmoe 35 interception return (Gunther kick)
  • WSU – Matt LaBomme 18 run (Pat Beach pass from Clete Casper)
  • WSU – Robert Williams 5 run (pass failed)
  • WSU – Turner 13 run (Leland kick)

Fourth quarter

  • BYU – Scott Pettis 11 pass from McMahon (Gunther kick)
  • WSU – Mike Martin 1 run (Turner run)

:Source:

Statistics

:{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center" ! Statistics !! WSU !! BYU

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References

References

  1. (December 18, 1981). "The latest line". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  2. "Holiday Bowl Game History".
  3. Van Sickel, Gary. (December 18, 1981). "Holiday's history short, wild". Spokesman-Review.
  4. (December 19, 1981). "McMahon passes for 342 yards". Reading Eagle.
  5. Barrows, Bob. (December 19, 1981). "Washington State almost has a curtain call". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  6. Van Sickel, Gary. (December 19, 1981). "Happy Holidays – for BYU". Spokesman-Review.
  7. (December 19, 1981). "McMahon makes Holiday happy one for BYU, 38-36". Eugene Register-Guard.
  8. Robinson, Doug. (December 19, 1981). "Y. wins another Holiday heartstopper". Deseret News.
  9. (December 18, 1981). "WSU, BYU go 'bowling' tonight". Spokesman-Review.
  10. (December 18, 1981). "WSU got here via the 1-2 punch". Spokesman-Review.
  11. "1981 Holiday Bowl – Bowl Games – Tradition - BYU Football Guide".
  12. (January 3, 1982). "Polls agree that Tigers are No. 1". Eugene Register-Guard.
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