Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

1981 Holiday Bowl

College football game From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

The 1981 Holiday Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 18 in San Diego, California. It was part of the 1981 NCAA Division I-A football season, and was the fourth edition of the Holiday Bowl.[3] The Friday night game was the third of sixteen games in this bowl season and featured the #20 Washington State Cougars of the Pac-10 Conference, and the 14th-ranked BYU Cougars, champions of the Western Athletic Conference.[4][5][6][7][8]

Quick facts Holiday Bowl, Total ...

It was the first bowl appearance in 51 years for Washington State,[9] who used a two-quarterback system: junior Clete Casper was the passer and sophomore Ricky Turner the runner.[10] Meanwhile, it was the fourth straight year in the Holiday Bowl for BYU. BYU's quarterback was consensus All-American and future Super Bowl champion Jim McMahon, the fifth overall pick of the 1982 NFL draft. He was backed up by sophomore Steve Young, a future member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and also a Super Bowl champion.

Remove ads

Game summary

Summarize
Perspective

Favored BYU scored first on a 35-yard pass from McMahon to Dan Plater, the only scoring of the first quarter. McMahon threw a 7-yard pass to Gordon Hudson to increase BYU's lead to 14–0. Washington State got on the board after quarterback Turner scored on a two-yard run. BYU's Kurt Gunther kicked a 20-yard field goal and Waymon Hamilton ran in from a yard out to give BYU a 24–7 lead at halftime.[5][6][7]

Early in the third quarter, BYU cornerback Tom Holmoe intercepted a Casper pass and returned it 35 yards for a touchdown, but WSU scored three unanswered touchdowns. Running back Matt LaBonne scored on an 18-yard run, Robert Williams scored on a 5-yard run, and Turner scored again on a 13-yard run to close the BYU lead to three points (31–28) at the end of the third quarter.[5][6][7]

McMahon fired an 11-yard touchdown pass to Scott Pettis to take the lead back to ten points at 38–28. WSU fullback Mike Martin scored from a yard out and Turner added a 2-point conversion to close the gap to two points (38–36) with five minutes remaining. Late in the game, McMahon fumbled a third-down snap but picked up the ball and ran for a first down that helped to clinch the victory for BYU.[11]

The players of the game, both from BYU, were McMahon and middle linebacker Kyle Whittingham,[6] the future head coach at Utah. BYU evened its record in the bowl at 2–2,[3][8] and played in the next three.

BYU moved up one spot to thirteenth in the final AP poll, and Washington State slipped out of the top twenty;[12] their next bowl appearance was seven years later.

Remove ads

Scoring

First quarter

  • BYU – Dan Plater 35 pass from Jim McMahon (Kurt Gunther kick)

Second quarter

  • BYU – Gordon Hudson 4 pass from McMahon (Gunther kick)
  • WSU – Ricky Turner 4 run (Ward Leland kick)
  • BYU – Field goal, Gunther 20
  • BYU – Waymon Hamilton 1 run (Gunther kick)

Third quarter

  • BYU – Tom Holmoe 35 interception return (Gunther kick)
  • WSU – Matt LaBomme 18 run (Pat Beach pass from Clete Casper)
  • WSU – Robert Williams 5 run (pass failed)
  • WSU – Turner 13 run (Leland kick)

Fourth quarter

  • BYU – Scott Pettis 11 pass from McMahon (Gunther kick)
  • WSU – Mike Martin 1 run (Turner run)
Source:[5][6][7]
Remove ads

Statistics

More information Statistics, WSU ...
Source:[5][6][7]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads