From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1997 Rose Bowl Game was a postseason
college
football bowl game
between the Arizona State
Sun Devils of the Pacific-10 Conference and the Ohio State
Buckeyes of the Big Ten Conference, held on New Year’s Day
in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena,
California. The game resulted in a dramatic 20-17 victory for
the Buckeyes when Joe
Germaine led a last-minute touchdown drive. Joe Germaine was named the
Rose Bowl Player Of The Game.[1]
Teams
The Buckeyes had rolled through the regular season using a
two-quarterback system; Stanley Jackson and
Joe Germaine split
time in each game at QB. The Buckeye offensive attack was led by Outland Trophy-
and Lombardi
Award-winning tackle Orlando Pace (who would go on to be the #1
pick in the ensuing NFL Draft) and true freshman wide receiver David Boston, a
budding star. The Buckeyes’ only loss was in the regular-season finale against archrival Michigan, which spoiled
their undefeated season and national title hopes; however, OSU had
clinched a berth in the Rose Bowl one week before The Game with a
win over Indiana. The defense was led
by the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, lockdown cornerback Shawn Springs, and
true freshman middle linebacker Andy Katzenmoyer.
The Sun Devils, meanwhile, were undefeated, ranked #2 in the
nation, and had hopes of capturing the school’s first national
championship in football. Leading the way for ASU were senior
quarterback Jake
Plummer, tailback Terry Battle, and a stingy defense
led by end Derrick Rodgers and linebacker Pat Tillman. Perhaps
ASU’s most impressive 19-0 regular-season victory came against Nebraska, when ASU’s
defense held the ’Huskers scoreless.
As a side note, Buckeye coach John Cooper had
previously been the head coach at Arizona State, and had in fact
led the Sun Devils to their first Rose Bowl in 1987.
Game
summary
First
quarter
The Buckeyes scored first midway through the opening period when
quarterback Stanley Jackson
threw a nine-yard touchdown pass to true freshman wideout David Boston, capping a drive that saw
Jackson scramble for some twenty yards on
a third down. Josh Jackson’s PAT was good, making it 7-0
in favor of the Buckeyes. No other scoring ensued in the period,
and the Buckeyes led after one, 7-0.
Second
quarter
Shortly before halftime, the Sun Devils finally answered via a
25 yard pass play from Jake Plummer to Ricky Boyer, tying the
game after Robert Nycz’s extra point. Replays seemed to show that Boyer had
trapped the ball against the end zone turf, but the touchdown stood.
(Replays also seemed to show that OSU cornerback Antoine Winfield had interfered
with Boyer’s attempt to catch the ball). Neither team could manage
any more points before halftime, and the game went to the break,
still tied at 7-7.
Third
quarter
After halftime, the Sun Devils would add a 37 yard field
goal by Nycz to take a 10-7 lead on the opening drive of the
second half.
The Buckeyes countered only two plays later, when Joe Germaine hit
Dimitrious Stanley on a post pattern. ASU corner Jason Simmons
slipped and fell on the turf, and Stanley was off to the races. 72
yards and an extra point
later, the Buckeyes were back on top with a 14-10 lead.
No more scoring ensued in the third, and the teams went to the
fourth quarter with the game very much up for grabs.
Fourth
quarter
Late in the fourth quarter, the Buckeyes looked to put the game
away. Pepe Pearson
broke a long run, leading the Buckeyes from inside their own five
yard line deep into ASU territory. However, the drive stalled only
three plays later, and OSU had to settle for a Josh Jackson field
goal attempt.
That was not to be, as ASU’s Brent Burnstein blocked the kick. ASU
Defensive end Derrick Rodgers
took what appeared to be a lateral and ran the ball into the end
zone, but the play was called back: Rodgers had taken an illegal
forward lateral. The Sun Devils, however, had the ball
with less than five minutes to play.
Jake Plummer, who had built a reputation over his college career
for leading late comeback drives, did just that. The key play was a
fourth down conversion when Plummer hit wideout Lenzie Jackson
for a big gain. With just over a minute remaining, Plummer scrambled for eleven yards
and a touchdown on third-and-goal, and ASU took the lead,
17-14.
However, Germaine was not done. He led the Buckeyes on a remarkable
last-minute
drive. Dimitrious Stanley caught two third-down passes from
Germaine, and then, with the help of two pass interference
penalties against ASU, the Bucks had the ball on the Devils’ five
yard line. Germaine then flipped a pass to the aforementioned
Boston, who was left undefended on a zig-out route — ASU redshirt freshman corner Courtney Jackson
had blown the coverage. Boston walked into the end zone untouched,
and the Buckeyes, with 19 seconds left, retook the lead, 20-17. On
the next play, Burnstein blocked Josh Jackson’s extra point,
leaving the Sun Devils within a field goal.
Ultimately, Lenzie Jackson would be tackled in bounds by OSU’s
Antoine Winfield after catching a pass from Plummer on the second
play of the ensuing drive, and time ran out. The Buckeyes had won
the Rose Bowl — their first victory since Archie Griffin’s sophomore season.
Scoring
summary
- First quarter
- Ohio State - David Boston 9 yard pass from
Stanley Jackson (Josh Jackson kick) - OSU 7, ASU 0
- Second quarter
- Arizona State - Ricky Boyer 25 yard pass from
Jake Plummer (Robert Nycz kick) - ASU 7, OSU 7
- Third quarter
- Arizona State - Nycz 37 yard field goal - ASU
10, OSU 7
- Ohio State - Dimitrious Stanley 72 yard pass
from Joe Germaine (J. Jackson kick) - OSU 14, ASU 10
- Fourth quarter
- Arizona State - Plummer 11 yard run (Nycz
kick) - ASU 17, OSU 14
- Ohio State - Boston 5 yard pass from Germaine
(kick blocked) - OSU 20, ASU 17
Aftermath
The Buckeyes would finish #2 in the nation after winning their
first Rose Bowl since January 1, 1974, handing the Sun Devils their
only loss and preventing them from winning at least a share of the
national title. The previously-third-ranked Florida Gators would end up
winning the national championship after defeating the
then-top-ranked Florida State
Seminoles 52-20 in the Sugar Bowl. FSU had defeated the Gators
earlier in the season by a score of 24-21. Had the Sun
Devils won the game, they would likely have been the AP National
Champions. Buckeye quarterback Joe Germaine, who was named the
game’s Most Valuable Player, would go on to be named the Big Ten’s
Most Valuable Player during his senior season of 1998. Many of the
players on both teams’ rosters would go on to pro careers: notably,
Jake Plummer, Pat Tillman, Derek Smith, Jason Simmons, Steve Bush, and Derrick Rodgers
of Arizona State, and Mike Vrabel, Shawn Springs, Orlando Pace, Antoine Winfield, Rob Kelly and Damon Moore of Ohio
State.
References
External
links
| Arizona
State Sun Devils bowl games |
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| Ohio State Buckeyes bowl
games |
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