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词条 1965 Cotton Bowl Classic
释义

  1. Setting

     Arkansas  Nebraska 

  2. Game summary

  3. Aftermath

  4. References

{{Infobox NCAA football yearly game
|Game Name=Cotton Bowl Classic
|Year Game Played=1965
|Optional Subheader=
|Football Season=1964
|Date Game Played=January 1
|Stadium=Cotton Bowl
|City=Dallas, Texas
|Visitor Name Short=Nebraska
|Visitor Nickname=Cornhuskers
|Visitor Record=9–1
|Visitor AP=6
|Visitor Coaches=6
|Visitor Coach=Bob Devaney
|Visitor1=0
|Visitor2=7
|Visitor3=0
|Visitor4=0
|Home Name Short=Arkansas
|Home Nickname=Razorbacks
|Home Record=10–0
|Home AP=2
|Home Coaches=2
|Home Coach=Frank Broyles
|Home1=3
|Home2=0
|Home3=0
|Home4=7
|Attendance=75,000
|US Network=CBS
|MVP=LB Ronnie Caveness (Arkansas)
QB Fred Marshall (Arkansas)
|Different Next=1966 (Jan)
}}

The 1965 Cotton Bowl Classic was a post-season college football bowl game with national championship implications[1] between the Southwest Conference champion Arkansas Razorbacks[2] and the champions of the Big Eight Conference, the Nebraska Cornhuskers.[2] Arkansas defeated Nebraska, 10–7, in front of 75,000 spectators, to win their first national title.[3][4][5]

Setting

Arkansas

{{See also|1964 Arkansas Razorbacks football team}}

The Razorbacks stormed into Dallas after going 10-0 and winning the Southwest Conference.[2] The Hogs defeated #1 Texas, 14–13, in Austin to clinch the bowl berth, and the conference championship. Longhorn coach Darrell Royal went for two in the game and failed, giving the game, conference, bowl bid, and later the national crown to the Razorbacks.

Razorback guard Ronnie Caveness was named an All-American. Ken Hatfield again led the nation in punt return yards, with 518. Tom McKnelly scored 45 points kicking 27 extra points and 6 field goals, which tied him with LSU's Doug Moreau for fourth place nationally.

Arkansas had also entered the bowl season on a sour note, losing bowl games in 1961, 1962, and 1963.

Nebraska

{{See also|1964 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team}}

Nebraska went 9–1, losing only a 17–7 contest to Oklahoma. The Huskers previous bowl trips were split at 2–2, with the two most recent contests being Nebraska victories.

Game summary

Arkansas and Nebraska met for the first time in this game in Dallas, Texas. Arkansas' number-one rated defense was giving up only 5.7 points per game, while Nebraska's #7 offense was scoring 24.9 points per contest.

A standing room only crowd watched as the Hogs opened the scoring on a Tom McKnelly field goal in the first quarter. But, the Huskers responded in the second, with Harry Wilson punching it into the end zone from one yard out for a touchdown, giving Nebraska the lead at halftime, 7-3. The third quarter passed with no scoring. Arkansas quarterback Fred Marshall took over in the fourth quarter, engineering an 80-yard drive with little time left on the game clock. Marshall pitched to running back Bobby Burnett, who scampered in from the three-yard line for the game's final touchdown, giving Arkansas a 10-7 victory, their first in the Cotton Bowl.

{{AmFootballScoreSummaryStart|VisitorName=NEB|HomeName=ARK|state=collapsed}}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEntry
| Quarter=1
| Time=9:47
| Team=ARK
| DriveLength=42
| DriveTime=8
| Type=FG
| yards=31
| Kicker=Tom McKnelly
| Visitor=0
| Home=3
}}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEntry
| Quarter=2
| Time=7:45
| Team=NEB
| DriveLength=69
| DriveTime=10
| Type=RushTD
| yards=1
| Runner=Harry Wilson
| kickresult=good
| Kicker=Duncan Drum
| Visitor=7
| Home=3
}}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEntry
| Quarter=4
| Time=4:41
| Team=ARK
| DriveLength=80
| DriveTime=9
| Type=RushTD
| yards=3
| Runner=Bobby Burnett
| kickresult=good
| Kicker=Tom McKnelly
| Visitor=7
| Home=10
}}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEnd|Visitor=7|Home=10}}{{-}}

Aftermath

The Razorbacks were selected as national champions by the Football Writers Association of America and the Helms Athletic Foundation, after the Alabama Crimson Tide lost their bowl game against the Texas Longhorns in the Orange Bowl. Arkansas defeated Texas in Austin earlier in the season.[6][7] Because the final AP and Coaches (UPI) Polls were released before bowl games were played at the time, the Crimson Tide was selected national champions by the AP and Coaches (UPI) Polls.[8] Because of the controversy, the AP Poll decided to wait until after the bowl games to select their champion in the 1965 season. Nebraska entered the game sixth in the final AP poll, while Arkansas was second.[9]

Arkansas improved to {{winning percentage|3|4|2|record=y}} in bowls with the win, while Nebraska's record in the postseason dropped to {{nowrap|2–3.}}

Jerry Jones, the Arkansas co-captain, went on to build the stadium where the Cotton Bowl Classic is now played.

Ken Hatfield of Arkansas returned to the Cotton Bowl Classic in January 1989

as the Razorbacks' head coach; Arkansas was defeated {{nowrap|17–3}} by UCLA (quarterbacked by Troy Aikman whom Jones signed for the Dallas Cowboys.)

References

1. ^Robertson, Walter. "Porkers, Longhorns Bowling Champs." 1/2/1965. Story. The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved on February 19, 2009.
2. ^"Major Conference Champions." 1964 SWC Champions. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on July 13, 2008.
3. ^"2009 AT&T Cotton Bowl-Past Classics." History. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081230024427/http://www.attcottonbowl.com/about/history.php |date=2008-12-30 }} The official site of the 2009 Cotton Bowl Classic. Retrieved on February 19, 2009
4. ^"Arkansas 10, Nebraska 7." Summary.{{Dead link|date=August 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Retrieved on February 19, 2009.
5. ^"1964 College Football Recap." Arkansas- 1964 National Champions. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on February 19, 2008.
6. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.sportswriters.net/fwaa/awards/rice/winners/index.html |title=All-Time Grantland Rice Trophy Winners |accessdate=2007-12-31 |work=Football Writers Association of America}}
7. ^{{cite web |url=http://homepages.cae.wisc.edu/~dwilson/rsfc/history/helms.html |title=Helms Athletic Foundation/Bill Schroeder National Champions of College Football 1883-1982 |author=Kirlin, Bob |accessdate=2007-12-31}}
8. ^{{cite web |url=http://homepages.cae.wisc.edu/~dwilson/rsfc/history/CoachPolls.txt |title=Coaches' polls (UPI 1950-1990, CNN/USA Today 1991-present) |author=Kirlin, Bob |accessdate=2007-12-31| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20080105074149/http://homepages.cae.wisc.edu/~dwilson/rsfc/history/CoachPolls.txt| archivedate= 5 January 2008 | deadurl= no}}
9. ^"Final AP Top 10." 1964 AP Poll. Infoplease.com. Retrieved on July 11, 2008.
{{Cotton Bowl Classic navbox}}{{Arkansas Razorbacks bowl game navbox}}{{Nebraska Cornhuskers bowl game navbox}}

6 : 1964–65 NCAA football bowl games|Cotton Bowl Classic|Arkansas Razorbacks football bowl games|Nebraska Cornhuskers football bowl games|1965 in sports in Texas|January 1965 sports events

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