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1979 Tangerine Bowl

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College football game
1979 Tangerine Bowl
LSU TigersWake Forest Demon Deacons
(6–5)(8–3)
SECACC
3410
Head coach: 
Charles McClendon
Head coach: 
John Mackovic
1234Total
LSU141001034
Wake Forest037010
DateDecember 22, 1979
Season1979
StadiumOrlando Stadium
LocationOrlando, Florida
MVPDavid Woodley, LSU (overall)[1]
Jerry Murphree, LSU (offensive)[1]
Benjy Thibodeaux, LSU (defensive)[1]
Attendance38,666[1]
PayoutUS$150,000 per school[1]
Tangerine Bowl
 < 1978  1980

The1979 Tangerine Bowl was an Americancollege footballbowl game that was played on December 22, 1979 atOrlando Stadium inOrlando, Florida. The game matched theLSU Tigers against theWake Forest Demon Deacons.[2] It was the final contest of the1979 NCAA Division I-A football season for both teams. The game ended in a 34–10 victory for the Tigers.[3]

Teams

[edit]

The game matched theLSU Tigers of theSoutheastern Conference against theWake Forest Demon Deacons of theAtlantic Coast Conference. The Tigers had a conference record of4–2 and the Demon Decons had a conference record of3–2. The game was the first bowl game featuring the Tigers and the Demon Deacons, and was their third overall meeting. LSU led the series2–0 heading into the game.

The teams' first meeting was in 1960, when the Tigers defeated the Demon Deacons 16–0. The teams also played in 1978, with LSU prevailing 13-11 at Baton Rouge.

LSU entered the matchup looking to end a four-game bowl skid, dating to a 33-15 decision overIowa State in the1971 Sun Bowl.

Finale for "Cholly Mac"

[edit]

The game was the last for LSU coachCharles McClendon, who was stepping down after 18 seasons at the helm of the Bayou Bengals.Bo Rein was named McClendon's successor 22 days prior to the bowl.

Ironically, Rein coachedNorth Carolina State to victory over Wake Forest en route to the 1979 ACC championship. The Wolfpack, however, did not play in a bowl game, while three other ACC teams which finished below NC State (Wake Forest, Clemson and North Carolina), did.

McClendon had been at LSU since 1955. He was defensive coordinator underPaul Dietzel from 1955–61, helping the Tigers win the national championship in1958. Dietzel left to coachArmy following the1961 season.

In 1978, Dietzel returned to LSU as its athletic director. He was fired in February 1982 after the LSU Board of Supervisors discovered gross financial mismanagement within the school's athletic department under Dietzel's watch.

Game summary

[edit]

Scoring summary

[edit]
Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPLSUWF
19:0812805:52LSUDavid Woodley 13-yard touchdown run, Don Barthel kick good70
14:146352:44LSUDavid Woodley 3-yard touchdown run, Don Barthel kick good140
23:285911:39LSUJerry Murphree 19-yard touchdown reception from David Woodley, Don Barthel kick good210
22:53440:26LSU31-yard field goal by Don Barthel240
20:006400:45WF43-yard field goal by Phil Denfeld243
311:458803:15WFWayne Baumgardner 19-yard touchdown reception from Jay Venuto, Frank Harnisch kick good2410
412:17673:07LSU41-yard field goal by Don Barthel2710
48:326421:57LSUSteve Ensminger 3-yard touchdown run, Don Barthel kick good3410
"TOP" =time of possession. For other American football terms, seeGlossary of American football.3410

[1][4]

Statistics

[edit]
Statistics[4]LSUWF
Plays–yards81–49664–263
Rushes–yards55–22334–30
Passing yards273233
Passing: Comp–Att–Int26–16–130–15–4

Aftermath

[edit]

LSU and Wake Forest have not played each other in football since this game.

The victory gave McClendon a final record of 137-59-7. He still holds LSU records for longest tenure and most victories. He was named Executive Director of theAmerican Football Coaches Association in 1980 after serving as its president in 1979. Following his death in 2001, LSU's football practice fields were named in McClendon's honor.

No LSU coach after McClendon lasted longer than five seasons untilLes Miles, who coached 11 full seasons (2005–15). Miles was fired after four games of the2016 season.

Bo Rein perished in a plane crash on January 10, 1980. Former LSU All-AmericanJerry Stovall, the runner-up for theHeisman Trophy in 1962, McClendon's first year as head coach, was named Rein's successor.

Paul Dietzel was fired as LSU's athletic director in early 1982. The LSU Board of Supervisors cited mismanagement of athletic department finances as the reason for Dietzel's dismissal.

LSU has returned to Orlando three times to play in the Tangerine Bowl's successor, theCitrus Bowl. The Tigers lost 30-25 toIowa in2005 and 19-17 toPenn State in2010 and 21-17 toNotre Dame in2018, while defeatingLouisville 29-9 inDecember 2016.

Wake Forest did not return to a bowl game until the1992 Independence Bowl. The Demon Deacons have played in only one bowl in Florida since this game, the2007 Orange Bowl, which they lost 24-13 to Louisville.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefGreene, Jerry (December 23, 1979)."Tigers claw Wake 34-10".Orlando Sentinel. RetrievedMarch 18, 2017 – via newspapers.com.
  2. ^"Wake Forest to get Tangerine Bowl Bid".news.google.com. RetrievedDecember 19, 2015.
  3. ^"Citrus Bowl".sports-reference.com. RetrievedDecember 19, 2015.
  4. ^ab"1979 Tangerine Bowl Bid"(PDF).lsusports.net. RetrievedDecember 19, 2015.
Formerly known as the Tangerine / Florida Citrus / Capital One Bowl
History & conference tie-ins
Tangerine Bowl
Florida Citrus Bowl
Capital One Bowl
Citrus Bowl
  • There were games in January and December of 1958, 1960, and 2016. As a result, there were no games in 1959, 1986 or 2017.

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

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