1968 Sugar Bowl Explained

Year Game Played:1968
Game Name:Sugar Bowl
Subheader:34th edition
Football Season:1967
Visitor Name Short:Wyoming
Visitor Nickname:Cowboys
Visitor School:University of Wyoming
Visitor Record:10–0
Visitor Conference:WAC
Visitor Coach:Lloyd Eaton
Visitor Rank Ap:6
Visitor Rank Coaches:5
Visitor 1Q:0
Visitor 2Q:13
Visitor 3Q:0
Visitor 4Q:0
Home Name Short:LSU
Home Nickname:Tigers
Home School:Louisiana State University
Home Record:6–3–1
Home Conference:SEC
Home Coach:Charles McClendon
Home 1Q:0
Home 2Q:0
Home 3Q:7
Home 4Q:13
Date Game Played:January 1
Stadium:Tulane Stadium
City:New Orleans, Louisiana
Mvp:Glenn Smith (LSU RB)
Odds:LSU by 7 [1]
Referee:James M. Artley (SEC);
split crew: SEC, WAC)
Attendance:78,963
Us Network:NBC
Us Announcers Link:List of announcers of major college bowl games
Us Announcers:Charlie Jones
Elmer Angsman

The 1968 Sugar Bowl was the 34th edition of the college football bowl game, played at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Monday, January 1. The unranked LSU Tigers of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) rallied to top the undefeated and sixth-ranked Wyoming Cowboys of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC), 20–13.[2] [3] [4]

Entering the bowl season, Wyoming was the only undefeated team in the nation among major schools,[5] but LSU was favored by a touchdown, largely because it had faced a tougher schedule than the Cowboys and virtual home field advantage, as the Tigers were playing just 80miles from their campus.[1]

Teams

See main article: 1967 NCAA University Division football season.

Wyoming

See main article: 1967 Wyoming Cowboys football team.

LSU

See main article: 1967 LSU Tigers football team.

Game summary

The first game of a major bowl tripleheader (Rose, Orange) on NBC, it kicked off at 1 pm CST. Following morning rains, the game was played on soggy natural turf in clammy temperatures.

After a scoreless first quarter, Wyoming drove eighty yards and scored on a one-yard sweep run from halfback Jim Kiick; Jerry DePoyster added field goals of 24 and 49 yards and the Cowboys led at halftime.

In the third quarter, LSU running back Glenn Smith came off of the bench and scored on a one-yard touchdown run, making the score In the fourth quarter, Tiger quarterback Nelson Stokley completed touchdown passes of eight and fourteen yards to end Tommy Morel as LSU rallied for a The last score occurred with more than four minutes remaining; quarterback advanced the Cowboys deep into LSU territory, but Wyoming flanker Gene Huey was tackled in-bounds on the five-yard line and

Smith, a third-string sophomore from New Orleans' Holy Cross High School, entered the game late in the third quarter and was named the game's most valuable player.[4]

Scoring

First quarter

No scoringSecond quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

[3] [4]

Statistics

Statistics Wyoming LSU
First downs2012
Rushing yards48–16748–151
Passes14–24–46–20–1
Passing yards23991
Total offense72–40668–242
Punts–average4–49.09–37.1
Fumbles lost10
Turnovers51
Penalities–yards5–653–25

[3] [4]

Aftermath

This was the only victory for the Southeastern Conference (SEC) this bowl season: Ole Miss lost the Sun Bowl, Alabama the Cotton, and Tennessee the Orange.

LSU's next major bowl appearance was three years later in the Orange Bowl. They did not return to the Sugar Bowl until 1985, and their next major bowl win was the 2002 Sugar Bowl.

This remains Wyoming's only New Year's Day bowl appearance.

Notes and References

  1. News: New Year's bowl crowds to total 325,000 . Pittsburgh Press . UPI . December 31, 1967 . 2, part 4.
  2. News: LSU rallies in Sugar Bowl to spoil Wyoming dream . Victoria Advocate . (Texas) . Associated Press . January 2, 1968 . 15.
  3. News: Tigers upset Wyoming . Eugene Register-Guard . (Oregon) . Associated Press . January 2, 1968 . 2B.
  4. News: LSU digs down deep pulls out gem in Sugar . Pittsburgh Press . UPI . January 2, 1968 . 36.
  5. News: Wyoming gets bid; Cowboys' 10–0 year brings Sugar berth. February 13, 2017. The Bulletin . Bend, Oregon . UPI. November 21, 1967. 10.