Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2004 Sugar Bowl

College football bowl game and BCS National Championship

2004 Sugar Bowl

College football bowl game and BCS National Championship

FieldValue
year_game_played2004
title_sponsorNokia
game_nameSugar Bowl
subheaderBCS National Championship Game
70th Sugar Bowl
image2004 Sugar Bowl logo.png
football_season2003
visitor_name_shortOklahoma
visitor_nicknameSooners
visitor_schoolOklahoma University
home_name_shortLSU
home_nicknameTigers
home_schoolLouisiana State University
visitor_record12–1
visitor_conferenceBig 12
home_record12–1
home_conferenceSEC
visitor_coachBob Stoops
home_coachNick Saban
visitor_rank_AP3
visitor_rank_coaches3
visitor_rank_BCS1
home_rank_AP2
home_rank_coaches2
home_rank_BCS2
visitor_1q0
visitor_2q7
visitor_3q0
visitor_4q7
home_1q7
home_2q7
home_3q7
home_4q0
date_game_playedJanuary 4
stadiumLouisiana Superdome
cityNew Orleans, Louisiana
MVPLSU RB Justin Vincent
oddsOklahoma by 6½
anthemJessica Simpson
refereeDennis Hennigan (Big East)
attendance79,342
us_networkABC
us_announcers_linkList of announcers of major college bowl games
us_announcersBrent Musburger (Play-by-Play)
Gary Danielson (Color Commentator)
Jack Arute (Sideline Reporter)
Lynn Swann (Sideline Reporter)
ratings14.8
navigation_2College football championship game
different_previous_2[2003](2003-fiesta-bowl)
different_next_2[2005](2005-orange-bowl)

70th Sugar Bowl Gary Danielson (Color Commentator) Jack Arute (Sideline Reporter) Lynn Swann (Sideline Reporter)

The 2004 Nokia Sugar Bowl, the BCS National Championship Game for the 2003 college football season, was played on January 4, 2004, at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana. The teams were the Oklahoma Sooners and the LSU Tigers. The Tigers won the BCS National Championship, their second national championship in school history, defeating the Sooners by a score of 21–14.

Set-up

2004 Sugar Bowl, Louisiana State vs. Oklahoma; January 4, 2004

BCS #2 ranked LSU came into the national championship title game 12–1, with their one loss at home to #17 Florida 19–7. Top-ranked Oklahoma was 12–1, with the lone defeat coming at a neutral site in the Big 12 Championship Game against Kansas State 35–7. There was substantial media and fan controversy as to which teams deserved to play in the National Title game. USC was ranked #3 in the BCS standings but #1 by both of the human polls, the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll and the AP poll, which made up a portion of the BCS Standings. Southern Cal owned a record of 11–1, with its one loss coming in triple overtime at unranked Cal 34–31.

Once the game commenced, LSU's #1 ranked defense held the country's most prolific offense, which had averaged 45.2 points and 461 yards per game, to 154 total yards (32 in the first half) and just one touchdown until midway though the fourth quarter. The Sooners' Heisman Trophy-winning QB Jason White completed only 13 of his 37 passing attempts for just 102 yards. He was also sacked seven times and intercepted twice. LSU's offense was largely supplied by freshman running back and Sugar Bowl MVP Justin Vincent, who rushed for 117 yards and a touchdown.

As a result, LSU won their second national championship and first since 1958. The majority of the coaches voted LSU National Champions as contractually required by the BCS. There were three dissenting coaches (Ron Turner of Illinois, Mike Bellotti of Oregon and Lou Holtz of South Carolina) who voted USC #1. BCS #3 USC won the Rose Bowl against #4 ranked Michigan and was voted the National Champion in the AP Poll, resulting in a split national championship - the last time this has happened.

Scoring summary

Scoring playScore
**1st quarter**
LSU - Skyler Green 24-yard run (Ryan Gaudet kick). 11:38LSU 7–0
**2nd quarter**
OU - Kejuan Jones 1-yard run (Trey DiCarlo kick). 7:31Tie 7–7
LSU - Justin Vincent 16-yard run (Gaudet kick). 4:21LSU 14–7
**3rd quarter**
LSU - Marcus Spears 20-yard interception return (Gaudet kick). 14:13LSU 21–7
**4th quarter**
OU - Jones 1-yard run (DiCarlo kick). 11:01LSU 21–14

Relevant bowl records

  • The attendance of 79,342 became the largest ever to see a game in the Superdome. That figure has since been surpassed by the 2008 BCS National Championship Game (79,651).
  • The team that led at halftime had won 10 of 11 Sugar Bowl games.
  • LSU improved its record to 5–7 in Sugar Bowl games.
  • The SEC improved its record to 34–29–1 in Sugar Bowl games.

References

References

  1. (November 8, 2023). "Split Decision: 2003 National Champions - LSU Tigers X USC Trojans".
  2. [http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/chi-09-lsujan09,1,3750337.story Football - chicagotribune.com]
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2004 Sugar Bowl — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report