1973 Tangerine Bowl

The 1973 Tangerine Bowl was a college football postseason bowl game that featured the Florida Gators and the Miami Redskins (located in Oxford, Ohio and now nicknamed the RedHawks). Played in Gainesville, Florida, this game is the only time that the Tangerine Bowl (now the Citrus Bowl) was not played in Orlando.

1973 Tangerine Bowl
1234 Total
Miami 30103 16
Florida 0007 7
DateDecember 22, 1973
Season1973
StadiumFlorida Field
LocationGainesville, Florida
MVPChuck Varner, Miami (back)[1]
Brad Cousino, Miami (lineman)[1]
Attendance37,234[1]

Background

Teams

Miami completed a perfect regular season with a Mid-American Conference championship, their first since 1965. This was their first bowl game appearance since the 1962 Tangerine Bowl. Florida's season started with two wins, but they lost their next four games (two to ranked opponents), before a five-game winning streak gave the Gators their first season over .500 since 1970. While they finished tied for fifth in the Southeastern Conference, they appeared in their first bowl game since the 1969 Gator Bowl.

Venue

In early 1973, construction improvements were planned for the game's normal venue, the Tangerine Bowl stadium in Orlando, to expand from 17,000 seats to 51,000 seats. But construction was stalled due to legal concerns in the summer, with the improvements being delayed. Miami (of Ohio) and East Carolina were planned to be the two teams invite, but East Carolina declined their interests, and the officials decided to move the game to the University of Florida's stadium in Gainesville and invite them, which they accepted. The participants were greeted with a near-record low temperature on game day of 35 °F (2 °C) at kickoff and 25 °F (−4 °C) by the end of the game.

Game summary

After little scoring, and with Miami ahead 6–0 late in the third quarter, Florida fumbled a kickoff, which Miami recovered deep in Florida territory. Two plays later, Miami had a touchdown, which proved to be the deciding score of the game. Chuck Varner of Miami rushed for 157 yards on 28 carries and was named the game's outstanding back, while his teammate Brad Cousino was named outstanding lineman.[1][2]

Scoring summary

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP MU FLA
1 5:54 29 MU 26-yard field goal by Dave Draudt 3 0
3 2:28 MU 45-yard field goal by Dave Draudt 6 0
3 2:08 2 8 MU Chuck Varner 3-yard touchdown run, Dave Draudt kick good 13 0
4 3 31 FLA Nat Moore 1-yard touchdown run, John Williams kick good 13 7
4 MU 27-yard field goal by Dave Draudt 16 7
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 16 7

[1]

Aftermath

The Redskins went to three straight Tangerine Bowls while winning four straight MAC titles, going 42–1–1 in that 4-year span. The Gators began a bowl streak, qualifying for a bowl for the next three seasons. The Tangerine Bowl returned to Orlando the following year, with renovations approved.

Statistics

StatisticsFloridaMiami
First Downs1214
Rushing Yards90239
Passes Attempted218
Passes Completed91
Passes Intercepted40
Passing Yards996
Penalties-Yards3-273-39
Punts-Average6-34.310-33.3
Fumbles-Lost4-32-1
gollark: Well, you partly were, but whatever.
gollark: Especially since we don't *want* attack.
gollark: And it ***IS*** flawed. Why? Because it makes defense harder than attack.
gollark: Don't just say "It's good because it's been around for ages".
gollark: Argument to tradition.

References

  1. Clark, Bill (December 23, 1973). "Yes, Gators, Miami Is For Real, 16-7". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved March 17, 2017 via newspapers.com.
  2. http://floridagators.com/news/2015/12/24/harry_1224152745.aspx
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