From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 2007 Valero Alamo Bowl is a college
football bowl game
that was part of the 2007–2008 bowl season of the 2007 NCAA Division
I FBS football season. It was the 15th Alamo Bowl and the first Alamo Bowl
sponsored by the Valero Energy Corporation. It
was played on December 29, 2007 in the 65,000-seat Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas and nationally televised by ESPN.
The game featured the Penn State
Nittany Lions and the Texas A&M
Aggies, who were both unranked in
the national polls. The two teams had met once in the Alamo Bowl in
1999, when Penn State shutout Texas A&M 24–0. The Aggies were
coached by interim head coach Gary Darnell, who had taken over after Dennis
Franchione resigned, and the Nittany Lions were coached by Hall of Famer Joe Paterno, who marked
the 2007 Alamo Bowl as the 500th game of his head coaching
career.
Leading
into the game
This was the Aggies' 30th bowl appearance, and their third in
the Alamo Bowl. In
their first Alamo Bowl game in 1995, the 19th-ranked Aggies
defeated the 14th-ranked Michigan Wolverines 22–20.
In their second appearance in 1999, 13th-ranked Penn State defeated
the 18th-ranked Aggies 24–0. Both the 1995 and 1999 games are two
of the five in Alamo Bowl history that attracted sellout crowds, with the
1999 game having the second largest crowd.[4]
One day after Texas A&M head coach Dennis
Franchione resigned after the Aggies' last regular season matchup against
the Texas Longhorns on November
23, 2007, A&M athletic director Bill Byrne announced defensive coordinator
Gary Darnell would
coach the Aggies' bowl game as the interim head coach.[5] Two
days later, Byrne hired Houston Texans offensive coordinator and
former Green
Bay Packers head coach Mike Sherman.[6]
Texas A&M officially accepted the invitation to play in the
Alamo Bowl on December 2, 2007 against the Penn State Nittany
Lions,[7] who
accepted their invitation two days earlier on November 30.[8]
This was the Nittany Lions' 40th bowl appearance, and their
second in the Alamo Bowl.[9] The
2007 Nittany Lions, who finished 8–4 in their regular season, are
led by 42nd-year head coach Joe Paterno, a 2007 College Football Hall of
Fame inductee. With a 22–10–1 bowl game record, Paterno is the
all-time winningest leader in bowl victories and appearances. He
also holds the record for the most undefeated FBS seasons than any other coach in college
football history. The 2007 Alamo Bowl marked Paterno's 34th bowl
game appearance and 500th game as Penn State head coach.[8]
Prior to the game, among 119 Division I-A teams,
the Aggies' rushing offense ranked 13th, and their overall offense
ranked 54th. Their total defense ranked 83rd, with a rushing
defense ranked 57th and a passing defense ranked 104th.[10] On the
other hand, the Nittany Lions have an overall offense ranked 56th,
with a 44th-ranked scoring offense. Their overall defense ranked
9th in the nation, with a 6th-ranked rushing defense and an
8th-ranked scoring defense. The defense also ranks 2nd in sacks
forced.[11]
During the week of the game, Las Vegas casinos predicted Penn State
to win by 5.5 points.[12]
A Sunday News sports writer of the Lancaster Newspapers predicted Penn
State to win 23–13.[13]
College Football News
predicted a 34–20 victory for Penn State,[14] while
WhatIfSports.com simulated the game
1,001 times and predicted Penn State to win 29–17.[15]
On December 27, 2007, two nights before the game, a Texas
A&M yell leader made a controversial
joke about Joe
Paterno at a joint pep
rally on the River Walk. The yell leader
screamed "Joe Paterno's on his death bed! And someone needs to find
him a casket!" on a microphone to an audience consisting of both
Penn State and Texas A&M fans. Penn State fans became stunned
at his remark and subsequently booed him. A&M officials
apologized to Penn State officials and sent the yell leader
home.[16][17]
Paterno responded by saying: "I think everybody has to take things
with a grain of salt. ... Some young guy went up there, trying to
be funny. Maybe he's accurate, I don't know."[18]
Paterno also expressed his indifference toward the comments, adding
"Sticks and stones will break your bones but names will never hurt
you."[19]
Game
summary
Though the game attracted the largest audience in both stadium and bowl
history,[20] it
only averaged a 2.7 television
rating, the lowest for the bowl since the first game in 1993
and a 55 percent drop from the 2006 Alamo Bowl's record-breaking
rating of 6.0. The last regular season
matchup between the New England Patriots
and the New York Giants — which was
broadcasted around the same time as the 2007 Alamo Bowl — explains
this anomaly, as the NFL game was broadcasted on
two television networks and attracted a total of 34.5 million
viewers, the most for a regular season NFL game in more than 12
years.[21]
First
quarter
Penn State won the coin toss and deferred to the second half.
The Aggies dominated the first quarter. After a quick three
and out in their first possession, they scored a touchdown on their
second possession. Penn State converted on fourth-and-short to keep
their drive temporarily alive, but they were forced to attempt a
field goal, which went wide right. Penn State muffed a kick-return
to give the Aggies possession inside the Penn State 20-yard line.
A&M lined up in an unbalanced look and scored another touchdown
on a run up the middle. Both touchdowns were scored by Mike Goodson,
equaling his total for the rest of the 2007 season. A&M gained
96 yards of total offense in the first quarter compared
to 89 for Penn State.[22]
Second
quarter
The Nittany Lions roared back in the second quarter. Their
second quarter resurgence was not new as the Lions outscored their
opponents 131-21 in the second quarter alone.]---> With just
over eleven minutes left in the half, Penn State faced
fourth-and-three at the Texas A&M 30-yard line. Anthony Morelli
threw a pass to Deon
Butler for a touchdown. The play was reviewed for more than
six minutes and allowed to stand as called on the field. An
Aggie fumble led to a second Penn State touchdown which tied
the score at 14–14. On that score, Daryll Clark dove towards the end zone and
lost possession of the ball, but the on-field official ruled that
he still had the ball when he crossed the plane of the goal line.
The play was not reviewed. Penn State drove inside the A&M
10-yard line but settled for a Kevin Kelly field goal with 19
seconds remaining in the half. The half-time score was 17–14 Penn
State. The Nittany Lions outgained the Aggies 155 yards to 32
in the second quarter.
Third
quarter
In the third quarter, A&M made a field goal and Penn
State answered with a touchdown, extending their lead to 24–17.
Fourth
quarter
In the fourth quarter, with Penn State still leading 24–17,
the Aggies were facing fourth-and-inches close to the Penn State
one-yard line. Instead of giving the ball to Jorvorskie
Lane, who is typically very effective in short-yardage
situations, the Aggie coaching staff elected to run an option play
to the right side.[23] The
Penn State defense was ready for it and quarterback Stephen McGee went
down for a loss. Lane was visibly upset that he was not used on the
play; he walked away from his teammates and was seen on the
sidelines with tears running down his face.[24][25] Penn
State took over on downs but the Aggies forced a punt. A&M got
the ball back near their 40-yard line with less than three minutes
to play in the game. The drive led the Aggies to punt on
fourth-and-twenty with 2:09 remaining. The ball went into the end
zone for a touchback so Penn State took over on their 20-yard line.
Penn State ran out the clock to preserve the win at 24–17.
| Scoring summary |
| Quarter |
Time |
Drive |
Team |
Scoring Information |
Score |
| Length |
Time |
PSU |
TAMU |
| 1 |
04:22 |
70 |
4:29 |
TAMU |
Mike Goodson 1-yard
touchdown run, Richie Bean kick good |
0 |
7 |
| 1 |
04:10 |
16 |
0:06 |
TAMU |
Mike Goodson 16-yard
touchdown run, Matt Szymanski kick good |
0 |
14 |
| 2 |
11:06 |
65 |
2:53 |
PSU |
Deon Butler 30-yard
touchdown reception from Anthony Morelli,
Kevin Kelly kick good |
7 |
14 |
| 2 |
09:02 |
11 |
0:05 |
PSU |
Daryll Clark 11-yard
touchdown run, Kevin Kelly kick good |
14 |
14 |
| 2 |
00:19 |
78 |
3:48 |
PSU |
25-yard field goal by Kevin
Kelly |
17 |
14 |
| 3 |
03:57 |
78 |
8:45 |
TAMU |
38-yard field goal by Matt
Szymanski |
17 |
17 |
| 3 |
00:19 |
84 |
3:31 |
PSU |
Evan Royster 38-yard
touchdown run, Kevin Kelly kick good |
24 |
17 |
|
24 |
17 |
|
References
- ^
"MySA.com: Big 12".
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2008-10-27.
- ^ Fox, David (2007-12-13). "Rivals.com Bowl Viewer's
Guide". Rivals.com. http://collegefootball.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=750671. Retrieved
2007-12-17.
- ^
Thayer Evans (Published: December 30,
2007). "Paterno Has Last Laugh
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2008-10-27.
- ^ "2006Alamo Bowl Media
Guide". The San Antonio Bowl Association. pp. 1–22. http://www.alamobowl.com/pdf/mg06_1-of-3.pdf. Retrieved
2007-12-02.
- ^
Texas A&M Athletics
(2007-11-24). "Darnell Named Interim Head
Football Coach". Press release. http://www.aggieathletics.com/pressRelease.php?SID=&PRID=13659. Retrieved
2007-11-24.
- ^
Duncan, Chris (2007-11-26). "Texas A&M hires Sherman
to replace Franchione". Associated Press (Houston
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2007-11-26.
- ^
Texas A&M Athletics
(2007-12-02). "Texas A&M Accepts Valero
Alamo Bowl Bid". Press release. http://www.aggieathletics.com/pressRelease.php?SID=&PRID=13686. Retrieved
2007-12-02.
- ^ a
b
"Penn State picked to play in
Alamo Bowl". Philadelphia Daily News. 2007-12-01. http://www.philly.com/dailynews/sports/20071201_Penn_State_picked_to_play_in_Alamo_Bowl.html. Retrieved
2007-12-12.
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History". College Football Data Warehouse. http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_ia/bigten/penn_state/bowl_history.php. Retrieved
2007-12-12.
- ^
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2007-12-12.
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2007-12-23.
- ^
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2007-12-23.
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2007-12-23.
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2007-12-23.
- ^
Davis, Brian (2007-12-28). "Texas A&M red-faced over
Yell Leader's comments". Dallas Morning News. http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/spt/colleges/texasam/stories/122807dnspoamside.5bf3b706.html. Retrieved
2007-12-28.
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2007-12-28.
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"Lane not on field in key
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External
links
| Texas A&M Aggies bowl
games |
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