1988 Freedom Bowl Explained

Year Game Played:1988
Game Name:Freedom Bowl
Subheader:Freedom Bowl V
Football Season:1988
Visitor Name Short:BYU
Visitor Nickname:Cougars
Visitor School:Brigham Young University
Home Name Short:Colorado
Home Nickname:Buffaloes
Home School:University of Colorado
Visitor Record:8 - 4
Visitor Conference:WAC
Home Record:8 - 3
Home Conference:Big 8
Visitor Coach:Lavell Edwards
Home Coach:Bill McCartney
Visitor Rank Ap:NR
Visitor Rank Coaches:NR
Home Rank Ap:NR
Home Rank Coaches:20
Visitor 1Q:7
Visitor 2Q:0
Visitor 3Q:7
Visitor 4Q:6
Home 1Q:7
Home 2Q:7
Home 3Q:0
Home 4Q:3
Date Game Played:December 29
Stadium:Anaheim Stadium
City:Anaheim, California
Odds:Colorado by 3 points
Attendance:35,941
Us Network:Mizlou
Us Announcers Link:List of announcers of major college bowl games
Us Announcers:Mike Haffner, Jim Grabowski

The 1988 Freedom Bowl in Anaheim, California, pitted former Mountain States Conference rivals BYU and Colorado for the first time in a bowl game. It was only the second time the two teams met one another in football since the Buffaloes joined the Big Eight forty years earlier; the Buffaloes were favored in this bowl by three points.[1]

BYU (8–4, 5–3 WAC, third) came into the game in a bit of a tailspin after losing three of its final four regular season games.[2] Colorado (8–3, 4–3 Big 8, fourth) was a program on the rise, but a year away from becoming a fixture in the top ten.

Game summary

BYU fell into an early hole after a pair of one-yard touchdown runs from halfback Eric Bieniemy gave Colorado a 14–7 lead at halftime. The Cougars rallied in the second half after backup quarterback Ty Detmer was inserted into the game. Detmer completed 11-of-19 passes for 129 yards in the second half. Trailing 17–14 in the fourth quarter, BYU eventually won the game on a pair of field goals - from 31 and 35 yards - by placekicker Jason Chaffetz,[3] [4] a future congressman.

In the stats department, BYU ran for 152 yards on 42 carries while the Buffaloes ran for 273 yards on 60 carries. In passing, BYU had 168 yards on 15-of-28 combined, with one interception. Colorado was 5-for-16 with 64 yards and two interceptions.[5] [6] [7]

Aftermath

The bowl game served as a springboard for both programs over the next couple of seasons. Colorado went undefeated in the regular season in 1989, but lost the Orange Bowl; they claimed a split national championship in 1990, while Detmer won the Heisman Trophy the same year and led BYU to a top-ten ranking at two different points.

Notes and References

  1. News: The latest line . Pittsburgh Post=Gazette . December 29, 1988 . 12.
  2. News: Cougars, Buffaloes both have plenty of questions Freedom Bowl will answer . Deseret News . (Salt Lake City, Utah) . Robinson . Doug . December 29, 1988 . D1.
  3. News: BYU edges Colorado in Ty-pical fashion . Deseret News . (Salt Lake City, Utah) . Robinson . Doug . December 30, 1988 . D1.
  4. News: BYU's Detmer decks CU, 20-17 . Lawrence Daily Journal-World . (Kansas) . Associated Press . December 30, 1988 . 4D.
  5. Web site: Colorado v. BYU – Freedom Bowl Blues – CU at the Game.
  6. Web site: BYU Bowl Games | the Official Site of BYU Athletics . 2015-08-03 . 2015-07-15 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150715064906/http://byucougars.com/m-football/byu-bowl-games-15 . dead .
  7. Web site: Comeback win helped Cougs return to championship form. Deseret News. 20 December 2006.