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1951 Sugar Bowl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

College football game
1951 Sugar Bowl
17th Sugar Bowl
Kentucky WildcatsOklahoma Sooners
(10–1)(10–0)
SECBig 7
137
Head coach: 
Bear Bryant
Head coach: 
Bud Wilkinson
APCoaches
77
APCoaches
11
1234Total
Kentucky760013
Oklahoma00077
DateJanuary 1, 1951
Season1950
StadiumTulane Stadium
LocationNew Orleans, Louisiana
FavoriteOklahoma by 6 to 7 points[1]
RefereeRonald Gibbs (Big Seven;
split crew: Big Seven,SEC)
Attendance80,206[2]
Sugar Bowl
 < 1950  1952

The1951 Sugar Bowl was acollege footballbowl game played on January 1, 1951. The 17th playing of theSugar Bowl, it was one of the1950–51 bowl games concluding the1950 college football season.

Teams

[edit]

Kentucky

[edit]
Main article:1950 Kentucky Wildcats football team

Kentucky entered the bowl with a 10–1 record. The Wildcats were 5–1 in SEC play, thus winning the conference title. The Wildcats' lone loss was toTennessee. This was the Wildcats' first appearance in a Sugar Bowl.

Oklahoma

[edit]
Main article:1950 Oklahoma Sooners football team

Oklahoma entered the Sugar Bowl top-ranked with a 10–0 record, having won all 6 of theirBig Seven regular season games, thus clinching the conference title. Bothmajor polls (AP writers, UP coaches) awarded the Sooners with their firstnational championship at the end of the regular season.[3][4] There were no post bowl polls at the time, but asked by the NCAA (who doesn’t officially recognize champions in football) to retroactively apply his methods to name a champion for each year prior to the beginnings of his rankings in 1978, Jeff Sagarin named Kentucky the champion for the 1950 season. Oklahoma had a record of 2–0 in prior Sugar Bowl games, having won in1949 and1950.

Game summary

[edit]

Kentucky fielded three defensive tackles for much of the game, which caused Oklahoma quarterbackClaude Arnold to hurry his handoffs and passes. One Wildcat tackle wasBob Gain, winner of theOutland Trophy that season. The third wasWalt Yowarsky, who had played less than five minutes on defense during the regular season. Yowarsky recovered a fumble on the Oklahoma 22-yard line, leading to Kentucky's first score: on the next play after Yowarsky's fumble recovery, Kentucky quarterbackBabe Parilli threw a touchdown pass to Wilbur Jamerson for a 7–0 lead at the end of the first quarter. In the second quarter, the Wildcats drove 81 yards for a touchdown, a run by Wilbur Jamerson, and led 13–0 at halftime.

In the third quarter, Oklahoma had the ball, first and goal on the Kentucky 3-yard line. The Wildcat defense held on first and second down; on third down Yowarsky tackled the Oklahoma ball carrier for a five-yard loss. On fourth down, the Sooners were stopped and Kentucky took possession.

In the fourth quarter, Yowarsky recovered a fumbled punt. With seven minutes left in the game, Oklahoma quarterbackBilly Vessels threw a 17-yard touchdown pass to Merrill Green. Kentucky, however, retained possession of the football for the rest of the game, with the exception of one play, for a 13–7 victory. Yowarsky was named the game's Most Valuable Player.

1951 Sugar Bowl
Quarter1234Total
No. 7 Kentucky760013
No. 1 Oklahoma00077

atTulane StadiumNew Orleans, Louisiana

  • Date: Monday, January 1, 1951
Game information
First quarter
  • UK – Jamieson 22-yard pass from Parelli, kick (Kentucky 7–0)
Second quarter
  • UK – Jamieson 1-yard rush, kick failed (Kentucky 13–0)
Third quarter
No scoring
Fourth quarter
  • OKLA – Green 22-yard pass from Vessels, Jim Weatherall kick (Kentucky 13–7)

Statistics

[edit]
StatisticsUKOKLA
First downs718
Plays–yards
Rushes–yards
Passing yards
Passing:comp–att–int
Time of possession
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
KentuckyPassing
Rushing
Receiving
OklahomaPassing
Rushing
Receiving

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Oklahoma choice to grab 32nd grid win".Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. January 1, 1951. p. 4, part 2.
  2. ^Tramel, Berry (December 27, 2013)."Oklahoma football: A look at the Sooners' Sugar Bowl history". theoklahoman.com.Archived from the original on September 18, 2020.
  3. ^"Sooners keep top grid spot".Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). United Press. December 5, 1950. p. 16.
  4. ^Opotowsky, Stan (December 5, 1951)."Oklahoma expected to win Sugar Bowl tilt; extend its winning streak to 32 games".Bend Bulletin. (Oregon). United Press. p. 2.
History & conference tie-ins
Games
Notes

# denotes national championship game; † denotesCollege Football Playoff semifinal game


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