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The 1979 Holiday Bowl was a college football bowl game played December 21, 1979, in San Diego, California. It was part of the 1979 NCAA Division I-A football season. It featured the Indiana Hoosiers against the BYU Cougars. Indiana won 38–37.
1979 Holiday Bowl | |||||||||||||||||||
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Date | December 21, 1979 | ||||||||||||||||||
Season | 1979 | ||||||||||||||||||
Stadium | San Diego Stadium | ||||||||||||||||||
Location | San Diego, California | ||||||||||||||||||
MVP | Marc Wilson (BYU) Tim Wilbur (Indiana) | ||||||||||||||||||
Attendance | 52,500[1] | ||||||||||||||||||
Payout | US$271,214 per team[1] | ||||||||||||||||||
Background
editIndiana won seven games to complete their first winning season since 1968 while qualifying for a bowl game for the first time since the Rose Bowl team of 1967, while finishing fourth in the Big Ten Conference. Western Athletic Conference champion BYU was a perfect 11-0 going into this game, having risen from #20 to #9 by the fourth game, with a win over #14 Texas A&M beginning a season that saw the most wins in one season in school history up to that point.
Game summary
edit- BYU – Eric Lane 1-yard touchdown run (Brent Johnson kick)
- Indiana – Bob Stephenson 38-yard touchdown pass from Tim Clifford (Kevin Kellog kick)
- Indiana – Clifford 1-yard touchdown run (Kellog kick)
- BYU – Marc Wilson 3-yard touchdown run (Johnson kick)
- BYU – Johnson 40-yard field goal
- Indiana – Clifford 1-yard touchdown run (Kellog kick)
- BYU – Homer Jones 13-yard touchdown pass from Wilson (Johnson kick)
- Indiana – Mike Harkrader 1-yard touchdown run (Kellog kick)
- Indiana – Kellog 26-yard field goal
- BYU – Johnson 29-yard field goal
- BYU – Eric Lane 15-yard touchdown pass from Wilson (Johnson kick)
- Indiana – Tim Wilbur 62-yard punt return (Kellog kick)
The game, which featured an 11-0 BYU team going against a 7-4 Indiana team coached by future ESPN college football analyst Lee Corso, went back and forth from start to finish. The Cougars held a 37–31 lead late in the fourth quarter when Tim Wilbur took a 62-yard punt back for the go-ahead score. Brent Johnson's 27 yard field goal attempt with seven seconds to go was blocked and Indiana held on to get their first ever bowl win in school history. Wilbur was named co-MVP, along with Marc Wilson of BYU, who threw 28-of-43 for 380 yards with 2 touchdowns and 3 interceptions while rushing for 40 yards on 9 carries for a touchdown.[2][3][4]
Statistics
editStatistics | Indiana | BYU |
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First downs | 21 | 31 |
Rushing yards | 183 | 140 |
Passing yards | 171 | 380 |
Total Net Yards | 354 | 520 |
Passing | 11–30–1 | 28–43–3 |
Fumbles–lost | 1–0 | 1–1 |
Penalties–yards | 7–70 | 1–15 |
Punts–average | 6–41.3 | 2–38.0 |
Kickoff return yards | 114 | 126 |
Punt return yards | 66 | 30 |
Time of possession | 35:07 | 24:53 |
Aftermath
editIndiana did not make a bowl game again until 1986, while BYU continued to make bowl games, including five more Holiday Bowls in a five-year span, with the 1980 team breaking the record for most wins a season with 12.
References
edit- ^ a b "Holiday Bowl Game History". Archived from the original on December 16, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2008.
- ^ "1979 Holiday Bowl – Bowl Games – Tradition - BYU Football Guide". Archived from the original on November 19, 2015. Retrieved January 6, 2017.
- ^ "CougarStats: BYU Football: BYU vs. Indiana 1979 Holiday Bowl".
- ^ "1979 Holiday Bowl: Indiana 38, BYU 37". Deseret News. December 4, 2000. Archived from the original on January 7, 2017.