1978 Gator Bowl Explained

Year Game Played:1978
Game Name:Gator Bowl
Football Season:1978
Visitor Name Short:Ohio State
Visitor Nickname:Buckeyes
Visitor School:Ohio State University
Home Name Short:Clemson
Home Nickname:Tigers
Home School:Clemson University
Visitor Record:7–3–1
Visitor Conference:Big Ten
Home Record:10 - 1
Home Conference:ACC
Visitor Coach:Woody Hayes
Home Coach:Danny Ford
Visitor Rank Ap:20
Visitor Rank Coaches:NR
Home Rank Ap:7
Home Rank Coaches:8
Visitor 1Q:0
Visitor 2Q:9
Visitor 3Q:0
Visitor 4Q:6
Home 1Q:0
Home 2Q:10
Home 3Q:7
Home 4Q:0
Date Game Played:December 29
Stadium:Gator Bowl Stadium
City:Jacksonville, Florida
Mvp:Steve Fuller (QB, Clemson) & Art Schlichter (QB, Ohio State)[1]
Referee:James M. Artley (SEC)
Attendance:72,011
Us Network:ABC
Us Announcers Link:List of announcers of major college bowl games
Us Announcers:Keith Jackson, Ara Parseghian

The 1978 Gator Bowl was a college football bowl game played between the Ohio State Buckeyes and Clemson Tigers on December 29, 1978. Clemson won the contest, 17–15. The game is most remembered for an incident in which longtime Ohio State head coach Woody Hayes punched a Clemson player after a play late in the fourth quarter with two minutes remaining, leading to Hayes being fired the next day.

Woody Hayes incident

With just over two minutes left in the game, Ohio State had the ball on the Clemson 24, trailing 17–15. Ohio State quarterback Art Schlichter threw a short pass that was intercepted by Clemson nose guard Charlie Bauman. Bauman avoided several tackles and was finally shoved out of bounds on the Ohio State sideline. After Bauman got up, Ohio State coach Woody Hayes grabbed his jersey, punched him in the throat, and had to be restrained from hitting him again. Bauman was unaffected by Hayes' attack, but the incident sparked a brief but intense bench-clearing fight between players of both teams.

Ohio State was penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct, but the referee could not explain the penalty to the crowd in the stadium or the television audience because they did not have microphones at the time, and ABC Sports television announcer Keith Jackson had not seen the punch right away. Hayes stormed onto the field and pulled on an official's shirt a few plays later, drawing another penalty for his team. Meanwhile, Clemson was able to run out the clock and preserve the 17–15 victory.[2] [3] [4]

After it became clear that Hayes had punched an opposing player, Ohio State director Hugh Hindman fired Hayes the next morning, ending his 28-season tenure as the Buckeyes head coach.[5]

Future rematches

Ohio State and Clemson would meet again in the 2014 Orange Bowl, the semifinal for the College Football Playoff in the 2016 Fiesta Bowl, and the 2019 Fiesta Bowl, with Clemson winning each time. Ohio State and Clemson met once again in the semifinal for the College Football Playoff in the 2021 Sugar Bowl, won by Ohio State, 49–28.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1978 . 2017-12-31 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180101030237/https://www.taxslayerbowl.com/1978-2/ . 2018-01-01 . dead .
  2. News: Woody adds punch to Gator Bowl. The Miami News. December 30, 1978. January 27, 2024. Newspapers.com.
  3. News: Fineman, Alex . Hayes produced champions, controversy . . 2008-11-19.
  4. Web site: Woody Hayes's last stand: The punch that ended his career.
  5. News: Woody Hayes KO'd himself in 1978 Gator Bowl . . December 27, 2004 . 2008-11-19.