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2001 Rose Bowl

American college football game


American college football game

FieldValue
year_game_played2001
game_nameRose Bowl
title_sponsor_suffixpresented by AT&T
subheader87th Rose Bowl Game
football_season2000
visitor_name_shortPurdue
visitor_nicknameBoilermakers
visitor_schoolPurdue University
home_name_shortWashington
home_nicknameHuskies
home_schoolUniversity of Washington
visitor_record8–3
visitor_conferenceBig Ten
home_record10–1
home_conferencePac-10
visitor_coachJoe Tiller
home_coachRick Neuheisel
visitor_rank_AP14
visitor_rank_coaches14
visitor_rank_BCS17
home_rank_AP4
home_rank_coaches4
home_rank_BCS4
visitor_1q0
visitor_2q10
visitor_3q7
visitor_4q7
home_1q14
home_2q0
home_3q6
home_4q14
date_game_playedJanuary 1
stadiumRose Bowl
cityPasadena, California
MVP_labelPlayer of the Game
MVPMarques Tuiasosopo (Washington QB)
oddsPurdue by 2 points
refereeJack Childress (ACC)
halftimeUniversity of Washington Husky Marching Band, Purdue All-American Marching Band
attendance94,392
us_networkABC
us_announcers_linkList of announcers of major college bowl games
us_announcersKeith Jackson (play-by-play)
Tim Brant (analyst)
Todd Harris (sideline)

Tim Brant (analyst) Todd Harris (sideline)

The 2001 Rose Bowl was a college football bowl game played on January 1, 2001. It was the 87th Rose Bowl Game, and matched the champions of the Big Ten and Pac-10 conferences.

The University of Washington Huskies defeated the Purdue University Boilermakers 34–24. Washington senior quarterback Marques Tuiasosopo was named the Player of the Game.

Teams

Washington Huskies

Main article: 2000 Washington Huskies football team

In the 2000 season, the Huskies shared the Pacific-10 Conference title with Oregon and Oregon State. Washington had given Oregon State their only defeat of the year 33-30. Oregon gave Washington their only defeat of the year 23-16. Oregon State beat Oregon in the 2000 Civil War game 23-13. Ultimately, it was a 23-37 loss at Wisconsin by Oregon earlier in the season that decided the Rose Bowl representative. With two losses, by the multiple team tie rules Oregon was out of the running. This left Oregon State and Washington, and the Huskies won the head-to-head matchup with the Beavers. Washington, Oregon State, and Oregon were ranked fourth, fifth, and ninth, respectively, in the final regular season AP football poll.

It was the fourteenth Rose Bowl appearance for Washington, but their first since going to three straight in the early 1990s under head coach Don James. Despite their record and ranking, the Huskies were a slight underdog to Purdue.

Purdue Boilermakers

Main article: 2000 Purdue Boilermakers football team

The Big Ten champion Purdue Boilermakers were led by quarterback Drew Brees. They did not have a particularly auspicious start, winning against Central Michigan and Kent State before losing at Notre Dame. They defeated Minnesota, but then lost at struggling Penn State. The Boilermakers made surprising wins in October starting with Michigan, at Northwestern, at Wisconsin, and finishing with Ohio State. A 30-10 drubbing at the hands of Michigan State set them back, but a win over Indiana and losses by Michigan and Ohio State left them in a three-way tie with Northwestern and Michigan. Purdue got the Rose Bowl invitation by virtue of the head-to-head victories over both teams.

Game summary

First quarter

  • Washington – Cleman, 1-yard run, 8:33 (Anderson kick)
  • Washington – Tuiasosopo, 5-yard run, 4:42 (Anderson kick)

Second quarter

  • Purdue – Sutherland, 5-yard pass from Drew Brees, 11:32 (Dorsch kick)
  • Purdue – Dorsch, 26-yard field goal, 0:26

Third quarter

  • Washington – Anderson, 47-yard field goal, 13:12
  • Purdue – Sutherland, 24-yard pass from Brees, 11:58 (Dorsch kick)
  • Washington – Anderson, 42-yard field goal, 6:55

Fourth quarter

  • Washington – Elstrom, 8-yard pass from Tuiasosopo, 12:00 (Anderson kick)
  • Washington – Hurst, 8-yard run, 7:25 (Anderson kick)
  • Purdue – Brown, 42-yard run, 6:37 (Dorsch kick)

Aftermath

Washington, led by senior quarterback Marques Tuiasosopo, the Rose Bowl MVP, finished the season at 11–1 and was ranked third in the final polls. Rick Neuheisel became the only former Rose Bowl MVP to win a Rose Bowl as head coach.

Oregon State and Oregon both won their bowl games, and the final rankings were Washington 3rd, Oregon State 4th, and Oregon 7th in the final AP poll. Oklahoma, who was undefeated and beat Florida State in the Orange Bowl, was named the national champion. Washington's victory broke a four-game win streak by the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl.

This was Purdue's second Rose Bowl appearance, as both of Purdue's starting Rose Bowl quarterbacks (Bob Griese and Brees) eventually started and won the Super Bowl.

References

References

  1. (January 1, 2001). "America's Line". Spokesman-Review.
  2. Blanchette, John. (January 2, 2001). "Command performance". Spokesman-Review.
  3. Nadel, John. (January 2, 2001). "Huskies follow leader to bowl victory". Eugene Register-Guard.
  4. (January 2, 2001). "Tuiasosopo guides Huskies to Rose victory over Purdue". Reading Eagle.
  5. link. (March 6, 2008 , [[2008 Rose Bowl]]. Accessed January 26, 2008.)
  6. Nadel, John. (January 1, 2001). "Huskies have been strong in the end". Eugene Register-Guard.
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