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2009 Holiday Bowl


FieldValue
year_game_played2009
title_sponsorPacific Life
game_nameHoliday Bowl
imagePacificLifeHolidayBowlLogo.png
football_season2009
visitor_name_shortArizona
visitor_nicknameWildcats
visitor_schoolUniversity of Arizona
home_name_shortNebraska
home_nicknameCornhuskers
home_schoolUniversity of Nebraska
visitor_record8–4
visitor_conferencePac-10
home_record9–4
home_conferenceBig 12
visitor_coachMike Stoops
home_coachBo Pelini
visitor_rank_AP22
visitor_rank_coaches23
visitor_rank_BCS20
home_rank_AP20
home_rank_coaches19
home_rank_BCS22
visitor_1q0
visitor_2q0
visitor_3q0
visitor_4q0
home_1q10
home_2q13
home_3q10
home_4q0
date_game_playedDecember 30
stadiumQualcomm Stadium
citySan Diego, California
MVPWR Niles Paul (Nebraska)
S Matt O'Hanlon (Nebraska)
refereeTom Zimorski (ACC)
attendance64,607
payout2,130,000 per team
us_networkESPN
us_announcers_linkList of announcers of major college bowl games
us_announcersChris Fowler
Craig James
Jesse Palmer
Erin Andrews
ratings3.7

S Matt O'Hanlon (Nebraska) Craig James Jesse Palmer Erin Andrews

The 2009 Holiday Bowl was the thirty-second edition of the college football bowl game and was played at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California. The game started at 5:00 pm US PST on Wednesday, December 30, 2009. The game was telecast on ESPN. The Nebraska Cornhuskers defeated the Arizona Wildcats 33–0 for the first shutout in the history of the bowl. This was a rematch of the two teams, who faced each other in the 1998 Holiday Bowl, where Arizona defeated Nebraska 23–20.

Background

The game featured the 2nd pick from the Pac-10 and the 3rd pick from the Big 12. The game had recently become a type of "upset" bowl. In previous years, teams rejected by the BCS had lost to heavy underdogs. In 2005, a 10–1 Oregon team (favored by 3 points while ranked 6th in the nation) playing without its star quarterback Kellen Clemens lost 17–14 to a surging Oklahoma squad that had won six out of its last seven. In 2004, one-loss California was defeated by Big 12 Texas Tech, 45–31. In 2003, Big 12 representative Texas was knocked off by Pac-10 representative Washington State, led by Matt Kegel.

The Wildcats drew the bid the day they wrapped up an 8-4 season with a 21–17 victory at USC, a win that gave Arizona a share of second place (along with Oregon State and Stanford) in the Pac-10 with a 6–3 conference record. Nebraska lost a 13–12 heartbreaker to Texas in the Big 12 Championship Game. The Cornhuskers won the conference's North Division with a 6–2 record. The 1998 meeting between the two teams was the only time that either school had appeared in the Holiday Bowl. The only other meeting between the two schools was a 14–14 tie in 1961.

On December 8, 2009, the Holiday Bowl committee announced a marketing campaign with fast food franchise Jack in the Box where Jack Box, the fictional chairman and CEO of the company and star of its marketing campaigns, would be the honorary chairman of the game and the grand marshal of the Port of San Diego Big Bay Balloon Parade.

Game summary

Nebraska wore their home red jerseys, and Arizona wore their white away jerseys with their newly introduced white helmets.

Nebraska's 33–0 defeat of Arizona was the first and, to date, only shutout victory in the Holiday Bowl. Prior to the 2009 Holiday Bowl no team had scored fewer than 10 points in a game. The Wildcats were held to just 109 total yards of offense and just 6 first downs. The Cornhuskers were led on offense by wide receiver Niles Paul who hauled in 4 catches for 123 yards, including a touchdown, which accounted for 74 of his receiving yards. Quarterback Zac Lee threw for 173 yards and the TD to Paul. Rex Burkhead of Nebraska led all rushers with 89 yards and a touchdown on 17 carries. This also marked the first time in Nebraska's 46 bowl game history that it has shut out a team in postseason. However, this was the third time in Arizona's bowl history that they have been shut out, the second time in a game in San Diego. The Wildcats lost the 1921 San Diego East-West Christmas Classic to Centre College 38–0 and the 1990 Aloha Bowl to Syracuse 28–0. The game also marked Nebraska's first 10-win season since 2003.

Scoring summary

Scoring PlayScore
**1st Quarter**
NE — Zac Lee 4-yard rush (Alex Henery kick), 13:45NE 7–0
NE — Alex Henery 47-yard field goal, 8:53NE 10–0
**2nd Quarter**
NE — Rex Burkhead 5-yard rush (Alex Henery kick), 11:57NE 17–0
NE — Alex Henery 50-yard field goal, 8:25NE 20–0
NE — Alex Henery 41-yard field goal, 0:35NE 23–0
**3rd Quarter**
NE — Alex Henery 22-yard field goal, 10:07NE 26–0
NE — Niles Paul 74-yard pass from Zac Lee (Alex Henery kick), 3:39NE 33–0
**4th Quarter**
None

References

References

  1. "Arizona vs. Nebraska - Box Score - December 30, 2009 - ESPN".
  2. Jon Solomon, [http://media.al.com/solomon/photo/113bcstvjpg-3d3c3517c7fc3bf3.jpg 2009-10 Bowl TV Ratings], ''The Birmingham News'', January 13, 2010
  3. "Huskers harass Cats in first Holiday Bowl shutout". Yahoo! Sports.
  4. "Jack Box Named Bowl's Honorary Chair, Grand Marshal {{!}} 2009".
  5. "Huskers harass Cats in first Holiday Bowl shutout".
  6. (November 16, 2006). "Holiday Bowl history". ESPN.com.
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