1970 Orange Bowl

The 1970 Orange Bowl was the 36th edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, on Thursday, January 1. The final game of the 1969–70 bowl game season, it matched the independent and second-ranked Penn State Nittany Lions and the #6 Missouri Tigers of the Big Eight Conference.

1970 Orange Bowl
36th edition
1234 Total
Penn State 10000 10
Missouri 0300 3
DateJanuary 1, 1970
Season1969
StadiumOrange Bowl
LocationMiami, Florida
MVPChuck Burkhart (PSU QB)
Mike Reid (PSU DT)
FavoriteMissouri by 3 points[1]
RefereePaul Bertha (ECAC)
(split crew between
ECAC and Big Eight)
Halftime showBryce Wetwiski
Attendance77,282
United States TV coverage
NetworkNBC
AnnouncersJim Simpson, Al DeRogatis

A slight underdog,[1] Penn State scored early and won, 10–3.[2][3][4]

Teams

Penn State

The Nittany Lions entered the game on a 21-game winning streak, and were unbeaten in their last 29 games. This was Penn State's second straight Orange Bowl appearance, after they declined an invitation to play top-ranked Texas in the Cotton Bowl.

Missouri

Missouri was co-champion of the Big Eight for the first time since 1960; through 2019, this remains their most recent conference championship. This was Missouri's third Orange Bowl appearance in ten years; the most recent was nine years earlier.

Game summary

This was the sixth straight year for a night kickoff at the Orange Bowl, following the Rose Bowl.

A field goal by Mike Reitz gave the Nittany Lions an early lead. After the ensuing kickoff, the Tigers' Joe Moore was hit in the backfield and fumbled on the first play and Penn State recovered. On the next play, quarterback Chuck Burkhart threw a 28-yard touchdown pass to halfback Lydell Mitchell, giving them a 10–0 lead in the first quarter. Missouri had more turnovers (nine, including seven interceptions) than points (a field goal from 33 yards by Henry Brown, scored in the second quarter).

The second half was scoreless and it rained in the fourth quarter. Missouri threatened late, with a first down at the Penn State fifteen with less than two minutes remaining, but resulted in the seventh interception on third down, returned from the two to across midfield. Penn State clinched their second straight undefeated season, but due to Texas' victory in the Cotton Bowl earlier in the day, the Longhorns were declared national champions.[2][3][4][5]

Scoring

First quarter
  • Penn State – Mike Reitz 29-yard field goal
  • Penn State – Lydell Mitchell 28-yard pass from Chuck Burkhart (Reitz kick);
Second quarter
  • Missouri – Henry Brown 33-yard field goal
Third quarter
No scoring
Fourth quarter
No scoring
Source:[2][3][4][6]

Statistics

StatisticsPenn State  Missouri  
First Downs1213
Rushes–yards54–5743–189
Passing yards187117
Passes (C–A–I)12–26–16–28–7
Total Offense80–24471–306
Punts–average12–43.16–44.7
Fumbles–lost0–04–2
Turnovers19
Penalties–yards5–403–25
Source:[2][3][4][6]

Aftermath

The Nittany Lions returned to the Orange Bowl four years later. Missouri head coach Dan Devine left after the following season for the NFL's Green Bay Packers, and the Tigers haven't appeared in a major bowl since. (NOTE: Missouri played in the Fiesta Bowl in 1972 and the Cotton Bowl in 2008 and 2014, but those were not considered major bowls at the time played. The Fiesta and Cotton bowls became part of the College Football Playoff rotation in 2014.)

This was the last Orange Bowl played on natural grass for seven years; the stadium installed artificial turf (Poly-Turf) prior to the next season.

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References

  1. "Lion string in jeopardy". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. January 1, 1970. p. 13.
  2. "Penn State whips toothless Tigers, 10-3". Lawrence Daily Journal-World. (Kansas). Associated Press. January 2, 1970. p. 14.
  3. Musick, Phil (January 2, 1970). "Burkhart has last laugh on Mizzou". Pittsburgh Press. p. 28.
  4. Abrams, Al (January 2, 1970). "Penn State wins 10-3 thriller". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 15.
  5. http://game.orangebowl.org/orange-bowl-history/the-history-of-the-orange-bowl/1970s/1970/
  6. "Game-by-game recaps: 1970" (PDF). 2019 Capital One Orange Bowl media guide. January 2019. p. 34.
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