2016 Outback Bowl Explained

Game Name:Outback Bowl
Subheader:30th Outback Bowl
Date Game Played:January 1
Year Game Played:2016
Football Season:2015
Stadium:Raymond James Stadium
City:Tampa, Florida
Visitor School:Northwestern University
Visitor Name Short:Northwestern
Visitor Nickname:Wildcats
Visitor Record:10–2
Visitor Conference:Big Ten
Visitor Rank Ap:12
Visitor Rank Coaches:12
Visitor Rank Cfp:13
Visitor Coach:Pat Fitzgerald
Visitor 1Q:0
Visitor 2Q:6
Visitor 3Q:0
Visitor 4Q:0
Home School:University of Tennessee
Home Name Short:Tennessee
Home Nickname:Volunteers
Home Record:8–4
Home Conference:SEC
Home Rank Ap:NR
Home Rank Coaches:NR
Home Rank Cfp:23
Home Coach:Butch Jones
Home 1Q:7
Home 2Q:10
Home 3Q:7
Home 4Q:21
Odds:Tennessee by 8[1]
Mvp:Jalen Hurd
Referee:Gary Patterson (ACC)
Attendance:53,202
Us Network:ESPN2/Sports USA
Us Announcers:Mark Jones, Rod Gilmore, & Quint Kessenich (ESPN2)
Mike Morgan, Doug Plank, & Rich Herrera (Sports USA)

The 2016 Outback Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on January 1, 2016, at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida. It was the 30th edition of the Outback Bowl (previously called the Hall of Fame Bowl), featuring the #13 Northwestern Wildcats from the Big Ten and the #23 Tennessee Volunteers from the SEC.[2] It was one of the 2015–16 bowl games that concluded the 2015 FBS football season, with kickoff at noon EST on ESPN2. It was sponsored by the Outback Steakhouse restaurant franchise.

Teams

Northwestern

Northwestern, ranked #13 in the nation, finished the regular season with a 10–2 record, losing two consecutive games mid-season to ranked teams, Michigan and Iowa. The Wildcats finished second in the Big Ten's western division behind Iowa. Northwestern was led by quarterback Clayton Thorson, with support from runningback Justin Jackson. Pat Fitzgerald was in his tenth year as Northwestern's head coach.[3]

Tennessee

After starting the season ranked as high as #23 in the country, Tennessee went 3–4, losing two of three close games to higher-ranked teams and having fourth-quarter leads in all four losses, before winning their last five games of the season. The Volunteers won against then-ranked #19 Georgia and lost only one game in the remainder of the SEC schedule, which was to eventual National Champion Alabama. Tennessee is led by quarterback Joshua Dobbs, with support from running backs Jalen Hurd and Alvin Kamara, as well as Evan Berry and Cameron Sutton on special teams. The Volunteers are coached by Butch Jones in his third year.[4]

Series history

In their only series game, the 1997 Florida Citrus Bowl, Tennessee won 48–28.[5]

Game summary

Scoring summary

Source: [6]

Statistics

Statistics NU UT
First downs 18 24
Plays–yards 70–261 84–420
Rushes–yards 37–132 53–226
Passing yards 129 194
Passing: Comp–Att–Int 14–33–4 16–30–0
Time of possession 25:51 34:09

Notes and References

  1. Odds, Los Angeles Times, December 10, 2015
  2. News: Stites . Adam . December 6, 2015 . 2015 Outback Bowl, Tennessee vs. Northwestern: Date, time, location and more . December 6, 2015 . . Vox Media, Inc..
  3. Web site: December 6, 2015 . Wildcats headed to 2016 Outback Bowl . December 6, 2015 . nusports.com . CBS Interactive . Evanston, Illinois.
  4. Web site: December 6, 2015 . Vols headed to Outback Bowl . December 6, 2015 . utsports.com . CBS Interactive . Knoxville, Tennessee.
  5. Web site: January 1, 1997 . 1997 Florida Citrus Bowl . December 7, 2015 . utsports.com . CBS Interactive . Orlando, Florida.
  6. Web site: 2016 Outback Bowl: Northwestern vs. Tennessee Stats . January 1, 2016 . Stat Broadcast.