2010 Pinstripe Bowl Explained

Year Game Played:2010
Title Sponsor:New Era
Game Name:Pinstripe Bowl
Subheader:Inaugural Pinstripe Bowl
Football Season:2010
Visitor Name Short:Kansas State
Visitor Nickname:Wildcats
Visitor School:Kansas State University
Home Name Short:Syracuse
Home Nickname:Orange
Home School:Syracuse University
Visitor Record:7–5
Visitor Conference:Big 12
Home Record:7–5
Home Conference:Big East
Visitor Coach:Bill Snyder
Home Coach:Doug Marrone
Visitor 1Q:7
Visitor 2Q:7
Visitor 3Q:7
Visitor 4Q:13
Home 1Q:7
Home 2Q:7
Home 3Q:13
Home 4Q:9
Date Game Played:December 30
Stadium:Yankee Stadium
City:Bronx, New York
Odds:Even [1]
Referee:Todd Geerlings (Big Ten)
Attendance:38,274
Payout:2,000,000 per team
Us Network:ESPN
Us Announcers Link:List of announcers of major college bowl games
Us Announcers:Bob Wischusen and Brian Griese
Ratings:2.26
First Game Ever Played:yes

The 2010 New Era Pinstripe Bowl was the first edition of this college football bowl game, and was played at Yankee Stadium in Bronx, New York. The game started at 3:20 p.m. ET on December 30, 2010, and was telecast on ESPN. The game featured the Syracuse Orange of the Big East Conference and the Kansas State Wildcats of the Big 12 Conference. New Era Cap Company was the title sponsor of the game.[2] It ended with Syracuse defeating Kansas State, 36-34.

The game was played four days after one of the worst blizzards in New York City history, affecting travel for the teams and their fans.

Teams

Kansas State Wildcats

See also: 2010 Kansas State Wildcats football team. Kansas State officially accepted an invitation to the bowl on December 3, 2010, after completing a 7-5 regular season.[3] The bowl marked the Wildcats return to post-season for the first time since 2006. It was the 14th bowl game in school history for K-State. Coach Bill Snyder coached the Wildcats in all but two of their previous bowls.

Syracuse Orange

See also: 2010 Syracuse Orange football team.

Syracuse officially accepted an invitation to the bowl on December 3, 2010.[4] Second year head coach Doug Marrone, who grew up in the Bronx, just minutes from the old Yankee Stadium led the Orange to a 7-5 record and their first bowl game since the 2004 Champs Sports Bowl. Syracuse was required to win seven games in order to become bowl-eligible as two of their victories came over Football Championship Subdivision opponents. Only one of the victories is allowed to count toward bowl eligibility.

Game summary

Despite the cold weather, both teams had strong offensive performances, with Delone Carter rushing for 198 yards and two touchdowns, while Ryan Nassib threw for 239 yards and three touchdowns, with Marcus Sales catching all three of them for 172 yards. The game's outcome was ultimately decided by a controversial taunting penalty on Adrian Hilburn, which led to Kansas State attempting a game-tying two-point conversion from the 17-yard line. Syracuse's defense held strong, and they won the game 36-34.[5]

Controversial Taunting call

With 1:13 left in the game, Kansas State's Adrian Hilburn scored a 30-yard touchdown to pull KSU within two points of a tie. Following the score, Hilburn made a military hand salute toward the crowd and was penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct. Because of the 15-yard penalty, Kansas State had to attempt a two-point conversion from the 17-yard line. The conversion failed, accounting for the margin in the final score. The call was considered highly controversial, and according to ESPN determined the outcome of the game.[6]

Aftermath

Due to the impact from this call, the NCAA chose in the next year's rule changes to not penalize celebrating in general but to penalize only taunting.[7] The call was called "one of the most infamous plays of the college football season in 2010" and was given the name "The Bronx Salute." It later was used as an example of incorrect interpretation of the new celebration rules.[8]

Scoring

Scoring PlayScore
1st Quarter
KSU - Daniel Thomas 51-yard run (Josh Cherry kick), 14:32 KSU 7-0
SYR - Ryan Nassib 52-yard pass to Marcus Sales (Ross Krautman kick), 3:16TIE 7-7
2nd Quarter
SYR - Ryan Nassib 36-yard pass to Marcus Sales (Ross Krautman kick), 9:35SYR 14-7
KSU - Daniel Thomas 10-yard run (Josh Cherry kick), 1:51 TIE 14-14
3rd Quarter
SYR - Delone Carter 7-yard run (Ross Krautman kick), 12:11SYR 21-14
KSU - Carson Coffman 10-yard pass to Chris Harper (Josh Cherry kick), 6:34 TIE 21-21
SYR - Delone Carter 15-yard run (Ross Krautman kick missed), 2:11SYR 27-21
4th Quarter
KSU - Daniel Thomas 1-yard run (Josh Cherry kick), 11:03 KSU 28-27
SYR - Ryan Nassib 44-yard pass to Marcus Sales (Two-point conversion failed), 7:53SYR 33-28
SYR - Ross Krautman 39-yard field goal, 3:08SYR 36-28
KSU - Carson Coffman 30-yard pass to Adrian Hilburn (Two-Point Conversion Failed), 1:13SYR 36-34

Statistics

Statistics Kansas St. Syracuse
First Downs 19 23
Total offense, plays-yards 61-379 65-498
Rushes-yards (net)121 259
Passes, Comp-Att-Yds 18-25-258 13-22-239
Fumbles-Interceptions0-0 1-0
Time of Possession31:38 28:22

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Vegas Insider, December 24, 2010
  2. Richard Sandomir, It’s New York. It’s the Stadium. It’s the Pinstripe Bowl, The New York Times, March 9, 2010
  3. https://www.wsj.com/articles/AP6de67e8faf2c4b3b9440612f6bdd57b5
  4. Web site: Syracuse accepts bid to inaugural Pinstripe Bowl. 2 December 2010.
  5. News: Wall . Kevin M. . Syracuse football: Looking at the Orange’s Pinstripe Bowl history . 7 May 2023 . . 26 December 2022 . en.
  6. Web site: Adrian Hilburn 'devastated' by call. ESPN. January 1, 2013. December 31, 2010. Kieran. Darcy.
  7. Web site: Kansas State salute penalty prompts rule change. David. Just. January 1, 2013. July 11, 2011. Lubbock Avalanche-Journal.
  8. Web site: Snyder weighs in on rules change. ESPN. July 27, 2011. January 1, 2013. David. Ubben.
  9. Web site: End of Pinstripe Bowl a disgrace to the sport - CBSSports.com . 2011-04-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110813203652/http://college-football.blogs.cbssports.com/mcc/blogs/entry/24156338/26739717 . 2011-08-13 . dead .