2011 Maaco Bowl Las Vegas Explained

Game Name:Maaco Bowl Las Vegas
Subheader:20th Las Vegas Bowl
Date Game Played:December 22
Year Game Played:2011
Football Season:2011
Stadium:Sam Boyd Stadium
City:Whitney, Nevada
Visitor School:Arizona State
Visitor Name Short:Arizona State
Visitor Nickname:Sun Devils
Visitor Record:6–6
Visitor Coach:Dennis Erickson
Visitor Conference:Pac-12
Visitor 1Q:0
Visitor 2Q:3
Visitor 3Q:7
Visitor 4Q:14
Home School:Boise State
Home Name Short:Boise State
Home Nickname:Broncos
Home Record:11–1
Home Rank Ap:8
Home Rank Coaches:6
Home Rank Bcs:7
Home Coach:Chris Petersen
Home Conference:Mountain West
Home 1Q:14
Home 2Q:14
Home 3Q:7
Home 4Q:21
Odds:Boise State by 13[1]
Mvp:RB Doug Martin, Boise State
Referee:David Epperley (ACC)
Attendance:35,720
Payout:1 million per team
Us Network:ESPN
Us Announcers:Chris Fowler (play-by-play)
Kirk Herbstreit (analyst)
Tom Rinaldi (Sidelines)
Ratings:2.05

The 2011 Maaco Bowl Las Vegas, the 20th edition of the game, was a postseason American college football bowl game, held on December 22, 2011, at Sam Boyd Stadium in Whitney, Nevada, as part of the 2011–12 NCAA Bowl season.

The game, televised on ESPN, was between the Arizona State Sun Devils from the Pac-12 Conference and the Boise State Broncos from the Mountain West Conference.[2]

Teams

Meeting for the second time in history, the Broncos and the Sun Devils had previously met with the then No. 5 Arizona State defeating Boise State 56–7 in Tempe, Arizona, on 5 October 1996. However, Boise State claims a three-game winning streak over Pac-12 teams, winning over Oregon twice and Oregon State in 2010 when all three teams were ranked.

Arizona State

See also: 2011 Arizona State Sun Devils football team. On 4 December 2011, the Arizona State Sun Devils accepted an invitation to represent the Pac-12. The Sun Devils entered the bowl with a 6–6 record. On 28 November, their coach Dennis Erickson was fired after the Sun Devils had four consecutive losses following a 6–2 start. However, Erickson was allowed to coach the team at the Las Vegas Bowl. The 2011 Maaco Bowl Las Vegas was ASU's first post-season appearance since the 2007 Holiday Bowl.

Boise State

See also: 2011 Boise State Broncos football team. On 4 December 2011, the Boise State Broncos accepted an invitation to represent the MWC.[3] The Broncos entered the bowl ranked #7 in the BCS standings with an 11–1 record, finishing second in the Mountain West Conference. The Broncos only loss in the season was against TCU, costing the team a chance at the BCS National Championship Game.[4] The Broncos had appeared in the Las Vegas Bowl the previous year, winning 26–3 against Utah. The 2011 Maaco Bowl Las Vegas was the final college game for Kellen Moore, the most successful quarterback in FBS history.[5]

Game summary

Despite committing three turnovers, the Boise State Broncos easily routed the Arizona State Sun Devils 56–24.

The Broncos scored quickly when Doug Martin returned a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown to make it 7–0 Broncos. Boise State went up 14–0 on a 14-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Shoemaker. The Broncos made it 21–0 in the 2nd quarter on a touchdown pass to wide receiver Matt Miller. The Sun Devils finally scored with a 32-yard Alex Garoutte field goal to cut the deficit to 21–3. Boise State responded with a pass from Matt Miller to Kyle Efaw on a trick play to make the score 28–3 going into the half.[6]

Arizona State scored quickly to begin the 2nd half when Rashad Ross returned the kickoff 98 yards for a touchdown, making it 28–10. ASU attempted an onside kick but was recovered by BSU. On their next possession, the Broncos turned the ball over on a Kellen Moore interception, but Arizona State turned it back to the Broncos on downs. Broncos then again turned it over on a fumbled snap. The Sun Devils, taking advantage of the turnover, drove to the Broncos' 1-yard line. On a 4th down play, Brock Osweiler's pass was intercepted by Jamar Taylor, who returned it 100-yards for a touchdown to put the Broncos up 35–10.[6]

In the 4th quarter, the Broncos scored 2 more touchdowns, including 1 fumble return touchdown, to make it 49–10. ASU finally got its first offensive touchdown of the game on a 21-yard pass from Osweiler to Gerell Robinson to make it 49–17. The two teams then traded touchdowns to end the game with a final score of 56–24.[6]

A few records were set at the 2011 Maaco Bowl Las Vegas. The Boise State Broncos became the first FBS team to win 50 games in a 4-year period.[7] The Broncos also set a bowl record in points scored at 56. ASU's Gerell Robinson had a bowl-record 241-yard receiving, while BSU's Doug Martin finished with 301 all-purpose yards, another Las Vegas Bowl record.[6]

Scoring summary

Source[8] [9]

Statistics

Statistics ASU BSU
First downs 2227
Rushes-yards (net)21-11 35−162
Passing yards (net) 395 298
Passes, att-comp-int 47-30-1 36–27–2
Total offense, plays – yards 68-38471–460
Time of possession28:0131:59

Notes and References

  1. "Bowl Schedule", Los Angeles Times, 7 December 2011
  2. http://www.lvbowl.com/media.php?id=96 "Boise State To Face Arizona State In 20th Edition Of Bowl"
  3. http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2011/dec/04/boise-state-and-arizona-state-play-2011-maaco-bowl/ "Boise State and Arizona State to play in 2011 MAACO Bowl Las Vegas"
  4. Huston, Brett. "Arizona St. Boise St. Preview". Yahoo Sports. 14 December 2011. Retrieved 18 December 2011.
  5. Forde, Pat. "It’s the end of a magical era for Boise State". Yahoo Sports. 22 December 2011. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20111223140711/http://scores.espn.go.com/ncf/recap?gameId=313560068 "Boise St. cruises to easy bowl win in Las Vegas against Arizona St."
  7. Miler, Ted. "Instant analysis: Boise State 56, ASU 24". ESPN. 22 December 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
  8. https://www.espn.com/college-football/boxscore?gameId=313560068 "Arizona State Sun Devils vs. Boise State Broncos box score"
  9. https://www.espn.com/college-football/playbyplay?gameId=313560068&period=0 "Arizona State Sun Devils vs. Boise State Broncos play-by-play"