Posts Tagged ‘Cotton Bowl’

Big 12 teams set to go bowling

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

The Big 12 conference season opens with A&M facing the underachieving yet athletic Georgia Bulldogs.  The defensive minded Nebraska Cornhuskers will face the Pac 10’s Arizona Wildcats on December 30th.  The disappointing Oklahoma Sooners will face Toby Gerhart and the Stanford Cardinal, Mizzou will take on the triple option offense of Navy and Iowa State will battle Minnesota on New Years Eve.  January 2nd will feature Oklahoma State battling Ole Miss and Texas Tech against Michigan State.  The conference’s final game is the biggest of the season as the Texas Longhorns face Alabama for all the marbles.  The BCS National Championship Game will be played on January 7th at 8:00.

Bowling with the Big 12: 7 Big 12 teams in postseason bowl games

Saturday, December 13th, 2008

2008 was a banner year for the Big 12 as three teams, all in the Big 12 South, finished the season with just one loss and four other teams from the conference will join them in postseason college football bowl games. Of course everyone knows that the Oklahoma Sooners will represent the Big 12 against Florida in the BCS Championship Bowl on January 8th on FOX. Now let’s take a look at the other 6 bowl teams from the Big 12 and which games they will play in as well as their opponents and the previews for each game which are linked below.

Missouri routs Arkansas in Cotton Bowl.

Tuesday, January 1st, 2008

Darren McFadden and Chase Daniel were supposed to be the headliners,

Temple ran for a Cotton Bowl-record 281 yards and four touchdowns to lead Missouri (12-2) to 38-7 rout of McFadden and Arkansas (8-5) to a 38-7 victory.

Temple ran for touchdowns in each quarter - 22 yards in the first, 4 yards in the second, 4 yards in the third, and a 40-yarder to cap off his big day in the fourth.

While Temple was having a huge day, McFadden was held to only 105 yards on 21 carries and Arkansas’ lone touchdown, which came late in the third, a three-yarder on a fourth-down play. His compatriot in the Razorbacks’ backfield, Felix Jones, was held to 45 yards on 10 carries, as Missouri’s defense backed up Temple’s big effort with a great performance of their own, which included a pick-six by William Moore that made it 28-0 before the Razorbacks were finally able to dent the scoreboard.

It’d been an up and down year for Temple, who ran for more than 1,000 yards this season, but entered the bowl game with 758. He must have had 1,000 on his mind, as he went over 1,000 with his performance, and bested his 1,036 yards from last year by three.

The senior has a knack for big performances in bowl games, as his previous career-high came in last season’s Sun Bowl, when he ran for 194 yards and two touchdowns in a 39-38 loss to Oregon St.

Temple is a senior, but due to an injury late in his freshman season in 2004, he’s reportedly trying to apply for a medical redshirt to get that year back, but if he’s not able to, he certainly helped his draft stock with a tremendous performance, which looks even better considering who his opposite numbers were.

As for the other Big 12 team that was in action early today, Texas Tech just completed an amazing comeback to win the Gator Bowl in the waning moments. The Red Raiders were down 28-14 late in the fourth, but scored 17 points in the final 3:31, benefiting from a crucial fumble by the Cavaliers that allowed Texas Tech to tie the game at 28, and then after a big defensive stop, Tech drove down the field for a game-winning 41-yard field goal by Alex Trlica with two seconds left. I’ll have more on that game later.

The Big 12 is now 4-2 in the bowl season, with Oklahoma’s Fiesta Bowl matchup against West Virginia coming up Wednesday and Kansas going up against Virginia Tech in the Orange Bowl on Thursday.

Celebrating the New Year with a Big 12 bowl bonanza.

Tuesday, January 1st, 2008

In last night’s Insight Bowl, Oklahoma St. got out to a huge early lead and capped off their 2007 with a winning record by defeated Indiana 49-33. Zac Robinson had a monster game, going 24 of 34 for 302 yards and three touchdowns through the air, and adding 70 yards and two touchdowns on the ground. Freshman Dez Bryant caught nine passes for 117 yards and two touchdowns, and two OSU seniors closed out their careers with solid outings, as running back Dantrell Savage ran for 100 yards and a touchdown, and receiver Adarius Bowman caught six passes for 74 yards and a score.

Just as impressive as their offensive output was the fact that the defense held Indiana receiver James Hardy, one of the country’s top receivers - and biggest at 6′7, to only five catches for 50 yards and no touchdowns.

As we kick off the New Year, a couple of Big 12 teams are in action already. Missouri has put in a tremendous defensive performance in holding Arkansas running back Darren McFadden to only 86 yards and a touchdown on 20 carries, and Tigers running back Tony Temple is showing that McFadden and Felix Jones aren’t the only top-notch backs at the Cotton Bowl, as Temple has run for 261 yards and three scores to help Missouri to a 31-7 lead in the fourth. Chase Daniel has had an off-day, going only 11 of 29 for 127 yards and an interception, but thanks to the great game by Temple and the great defensive effort - Arkansas didn’t get on the board until late in the third, when it was already 28-0), Missouri’s looking at a 12-win season.

It’s not going as good for Texas Tech in the Gator Bowl, as they’re down 21-7 to Virginia at halftime. The Cavaliers have done a great job in shutting down Tech’s high-powered offense, outside of the Red Raiders’ second drive of the game, which they scored on to take a 7-0 lead. Since then, Virginia has scored 21 straight points, and have moved the ball well on Tech’s defense, and got a couple of big plays, one on defense in a safety on an intentional grounding penalty on Graham Harrell, and the other on a 96-yard touchdown run by Mikell Simpson. One bright spot for the Red Raiders is that they’ve held Virginia defensive end Chris Long without a sack thus far, though Harrell has been sacked twice.

It’s December, and you know what the means…bowling time!

Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

This week could have been one of great celebration for Missouri. But, on the way to the national championship game, Oklahoma happened. And, instead of playing Ohio St. for the national title, the Tigers will have to settle for the Cotton Bowl (which isn’t too shabby, but come on, national championship or Cotton Bowl? No contest!), while seeing their fiercest rival - who they beat the previous week - play in a BCS bowl.

After Oklahoma’s 38-17 win over Missouri in the Big 12 title game, you could say order was restored after Mizzoui and Kansas dominated headlines recently, and rose past the Sooners in the national polls. But, even though OU wasn’t a national title contender anymore, they certainly played spoiler to Missouri’s hopes, and got a BCS berth out of it.

Oklahoma, Missouri, and Kansas are three of the eight Big 12 members to be playing in the postseason. OU will look to reverse last year’s disappointment in the desert when they play Big East champ West Virginia in the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 2. Kansas, a BCS first-timer, will take on ACC champ Virginia Tech in the Orange Bowl the next day. As for their unhappy rivals, they’ll have to find a way to slow down Darren McFadden as they tangle with Arkansas on New Years’ Day.

As for the other matchups…

Gator Bowl (Jan. 1): Virginia (9-3) vs. Texas Tech (8-4)
Insight (Dec. 31): Oklahoma St. (6-6) vs. Indiana (7-5)
Independence (Dec. 30): Colorado (6-6) vs. Alabama (6-6)
Alamo (Dec. 29): Penn St. (8-4) vs. Texas A&M (7-5)
Holiday (Dec. 27): Arizona St. (10-2) vs. Texas (9-3)

There are a lot of intriguing matchups in the mix - Arkansas-Missouri because of the regional implications, Arizona St. and Texas because the Holiday Bowl is always a treat, and promises to be again, with two excellent offensive teams on display - I’ve always thought that the game could be on a different day, but with it being the only bowl game on the 27th, it’s got the spotlight to itself, which it deserves), and Penn St. and Texas A&M because of the two big names looking to finish disappointing seasons on a high note.

The regular season may be over, but the season is far from it. So, superglue yourself to your sofa, load up on the Tostitos and your favorite beverages, put the pizza places on speed dial, and get ready for a bowl seasons that, if it’s anything like the regular season was, will be worth watching all the way through.