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词条 The Kick (college football)
释义

  1. The Game

  2. The Play

  3. References

{{notability|Sport|date=September 2016}}{{refimprove|date=September 2016}}{{Infobox NCAA football single game
|Name=The Kick
|Date=September 24
|Year=1977
|Visitor School=University of Oklahoma
|Visitor Name Short=Oklahoma
|Visitor Nickname=Sooners
|Visitor Record=2–0
|Visitor AP=3
|Visitor Coaches=3
|Visitor Coach=Barry Switzer
|Visitor1=17
|Visitor2=3
|Visitor3=0
|Visitor4=9
|Home School=Ohio State University
|Home Name Short=Ohio State
|Home Nickname=Buckeyes
|Home Record=2–0
|Home AP=4
|Home Coaches=4
|Home Coach=Woody Hayes
|Home1=0
|Home2=14
|Home3=14
|Home4=0
|Type=Regular Season Game
|Stadium=Ohio Stadium
|City=Columbus, Ohio
|Referee=
|Odds=
|Attendance=88,119
|US Network=ABC
|US Announcers=
}}The Kick refers to Uwe von Schamann's last second field goal in a September 24, 1977 college football game between the Oklahoma Sooners and Ohio State Buckeyes at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio. Make or miss, his field goal attempt would have been the last play of the game. This kick turned out to be the only last-second Oklahoma win in Barry Switzer's coaching career at Oklahoma. The kick eventually went down in Sooners' lore as one of the most memorable plays in Oklahoma history. [1]

The Game

This was the first ever meeting between Ohio State and Oklahoma.

Within the first four minutes of the game, Oklahoma jumped out to a 14–0 lead. Oklahoma led 17–0 after the first quarter.

Uwe von Schamann made a field goal early in the second quarter to put the Sooners ahead 20–0. However, at that point, Oklahoma star running back Billy Sims had a nagging ankle injury and the team's starting quarterback hurt his hamstring. All of a sudden, Oklahoma couldn't move the ball, and Ohio State began to capitalize. They scored a pair of touchdowns to make it 20–14 by halftime, then scored a pair of touchdowns in the third quarter to take a 28–20 lead.

Oklahoma would score a touchdown late in the game, but the game-tying two-point conversion attempt failed.

The Play

It appeared at that point that Oklahoma was going to lose. However, Oklahoma recovered Schamann's onside kick with just enough time to set up a potential game-winning field goal. After a pass got the Sooners in von Schamann's range, Switzer called back-to-back running plays to set up the ball at mid-field. As the clock ticked down, he called time with six seconds left.

The kick would be the final play of the game. Woody Hayes called timeout to ice the kicker, but that only seemed to invigorate him: after hearing fans scream "block that kick" during the timeout, von Schamann turned to the crowd and started cheering with them. He raised his arms up and down, imploring them to be louder, then hit the 41-yd field goal with three seconds left to win it for Oklahoma 29–28.

References

1. ^The first time Oklahoma and Ohio State played was an all-timer September 14, 2016 Retrieved September 17, 2016
{{Oklahoma Sooners football navbox}}{{Ohio State Buckeyes football navbox}}{{College Football on ABC}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Kick, The}}

5 : College football games|Oklahoma Sooners football games|Ohio State Buckeyes football games|1977 in sports in Ohio|American football incidents

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