2004 Silicon Valley Football Classic Explained

Year Game Played:2004
Game Name:Silicon Valley Football Classic
Football Season:2004
Visitor Name Short:Troy
Visitor Nickname:Trojans
Visitor School:Troy University
Home Name Short:Northern Illinois
Home Nickname:Huskies
Home School:Northern Illinois University
Visitor Record:7–4
Home Record:8–3
Visitor Coach:Larry Blakeney
Home Coach:Joe Novak
Visitor 1Q:14
Visitor 2Q:0
Visitor 3Q:0
Visitor 4Q:7
Home 1Q:14
Home 2Q:10
Home 3Q:3
Home 4Q:7
Date Game Played:December 30
Stadium:Spartan Stadium
City:San Jose, California
Mvp:RB DeWhitt Betterson (Troy)
S Lionel Hickenbottom (NIU)
KR Dustin Utschig (NIU)
Referee:Joe Rider (ACC)
Payout:720,000
Us Network:ESPN2
Us Announcers Link:List of announcers of major college bowl games
Us Announcers:Pam Ward (play-by-play)
Mike Tomczak (analyst)
Dave Ryan (sidelines)
Last Game Ever Played:yes

The 2004 Silicon Valley Football Classic was a post-season college football bowl game between the Troy Trojans and the Northern Illinois Huskies on December 30, 2004, at Spartan Stadium in San Jose, California. It was the fifth and final time the Silicon Valley Football Classic was played and the final game of the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season for both teams. Northern Illinois defeated Troy 34-21.[1]

Background

For the 2004 bowl season the Silicon Valley Classic had contractual tie-ins with the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) and the Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10); neither conference had enough bowl-eligible teams. In previous years the SVC had an agreement to take the Pac-10's No. 6 team, but was displaced by the new Emerald Bowl and had to settle for No. 7, if one existed.[2] Organizers obtained permission from the Pac-10 to look elsewhere, and on November 16 announced an agreement with the Mid-American Conference, which had five bowl-eligible teams but as yet only two bowls.[3]

Since the beginning of the bowl in 2000, the Fresno State Bulldogs represented the WAC. Although the SVC invited Fresno State back, the Bulldogs opted for the MPC Computers Bowl, where they would face #18-ranked Virginia from the ACC. Left without a WAC team, organizers turned to the Troy Trojans of the Sun Belt Conference. Troy had never played in a bowl game before, having just moved up to Division I in 2001 and joined the Sun Belt in 2004.[4]

Game summary

Rain could not stop the Huskies from scoring 34 straight points after trailing 14-0 early in the first quarter. Northern Illinois rushed for 213 yards (as opposed to Troy's 170) while passing for 146 yards to the 122 yards of the Trojans. NIU had the ball for 32:08 of the game. Josh Hadli threw 8-of-24 for 146 yards while rushing for 11 yards on 5 carries. For Troy, DeWhitt Betterson rushed for 150 yards on 25 carries.[5]

Notes and References

  1. News: Huskies score 34 straight points . . December 30, 2004 . 2010-01-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110519073050/http://scores.espn.go.com/ncf/recap?gameId=243652653. dead. May 19, 2011.
  2. News: EMERALD BOWL: A gem in the rough? Time may be right for bowl success in S.F. . . November 25, 2004 . 2010-01-21 . Jake . Curtis .
  3. News: Mid-American Conference strikes deal to get third bowl . . November 16, 2004 . 2010-01-21 .
  4. News: Huskies, Trojans basking in bowl attention . . 2010-01-21 .
  5. Web site: 2016 Huskie Football Media Guide . Northern Illinois University Athletics.