2004 Texas Longhorns football team

The 2004 Texas Longhorns football team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by head football coach Mack Brown and led on the field by quarterback Vince Young. Ranked third in wins in Division I-A college football history,[1] the University of Texas has traditionally been considered a college football powerhouse,[2][3] but Brown had not managed to lead the Longhorns into a Bowl Championship Series (BCS) game. The 2004 season included some controversy related to the selection of Texas as an at-large team to attend the 2005 Rose Bowl.[4] Brown coached the team to win that game with a thrilling last-second victory. The victory brought the Longhorns to 11 wins and 1 loss for the season (11–1) and it earned the Longhorns a top 5 finish in the polls.

2004 Texas Longhorns football
Rose Bowl champion
Rose Bowl, W 38–37 vs. Michigan
ConferenceBig 12 Conference
DivisionSouth
Ranking
CoachesNo. 4
APNo. 5
2004 record11–1 (7–1 Big 12)
Head coachMack Brown (7th season)
Offensive coordinatorGreg Davis (7th season)
Offensive schemeSpread
Defensive coordinatorGreg Robinson (1st season)
Base defense4–3
Home stadiumDarrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium
(Capacity: 80,092)
2004 Big 12 Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
Team W L    W L 
Northern Division
Colorado xy  4 4     8 5  
Iowa State x  4 4     7 5  
Nebraska  3 5     5 6  
Missouri  3 5     5 6  
Kansas  2 6     4 7  
Kansas State  2 6     4 7  
Southern Division
No. 3 Oklahoma xy$  8 0     12 1  
No. 5 Texas %  7 1     11 1  
Texas A&M  5 3     7 5  
No. 18 Texas Tech  5 3     8 4  
Oklahoma State  4 4     7 5  
Baylor  1 7     3 8  
Championship: Oklahoma 42, Colorado 3
  • $ BCS representative as conference champion
  • % BCS at-large representative
  • x Division champion/co-champions
  • y Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll

Schedule

DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
September 46:00 p.m.North Texas*No. 7PPVW 65–082,956[5]
September 117:45 p.m.at Arkansas*No. 7ESPNW 22–2075,671[5]
September 256:00 p.m.Rice*No. 5
  • Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium
  • Austin, TX (rivalry)
FSNW 35–1382,931[5]
October 211:30 a.m.BaylorNo. 5
  • Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium
  • Austin, TX
PPVW 44–1482,626[5]
October 911:00 a.m.vs. No. 2 OklahomaNo. 5ABCL 0–1279,587[5]
October 162:30 p.m.MissouriNo. 9
  • Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium
  • Austin, TX
ABCW 28–2082,981[5]
October 236:00 p.m.at Texas TechNo. 8TBSW 51–2155,413[5]
October 302:30 p.m.at ColoradoNo. 8ABCW 31–751,751[5]
November 66:00 p.m.No. 19 Oklahoma StateNo. 6
  • Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium
  • Austin, TX
TBSW 56–3583,181[5]
November 1311:00 a.m.at KansasNo. 6
FSNW 27–2338,714[5]
November 262:30 p.m.No. 22 Texas A&MNo. 6
  • Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium
  • Austin, TX (rivalry)
ABCW 26–1383,891[5]
January 1, 20054:00 p.m.vs. No. 13 Michigan*No. 6ABCW 38–3793,468[5]
  • *Non-conference game
  • Homecoming
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
  • All times are in Central time

[6]

Season highlights

In 2004, the Longhorns began the season with a No. 7 ranking nationally and started out with a 65–0 blowout of North Texas, setting several UT school records in the process. This was followed by a narrow 22–20 win against unranked Arkansas. They defeated Rice and Baylor 35–13 and 44–14 respectively.

This left them ranked fifth coming into the annual matchup with then No. 2 Oklahoma in the Red River Shootout. Oklahoma shut-out the Longhorns 12–0. Texas dropped to No. 9, before rebounding with wins over No. 24 Missouri 28–20, at No. 24 Texas Tech 51–21, and at Colorado 31–7.

Then Texas set a record for the largest come from-behind-win in school history, beating No. 19 Oklahoma State 56–35 after falling behind 7–35. After this performance, Texas again fell behind against Kansas but squeaked out a win 27–23. Kansas coach Mark Mangino stirred up controversy by claiming that the officials were biased in favor of Texas.

This brought UT back up to No. 5 in the rankings as they welcomed arch-rival Texas A&M to Austin and won 26–13. However, Oklahoma stood undefeated, which meant the Sooners would represent the Big 12 South in the Championship game against a much lower ranked team from the North Division. Once again, the loss to Oklahoma had kept Texas out of playing for a National or Conference Title, and had seemingly destined them to a non-Bowl Championship Series bowl as well.

However, Brown began lobbying the voters in the two polls based on human voters (one on college football coaches, the other on Associated Press (AP) writers) to place the Longhorns high enough in the rankings to ensure they received a Bowl Championship Series (BCS) bowl-bid. The rules of the BCS were such that Texas might get left out of the eight chosen teams even though they ranked fifth nationally. The No. 4 California Golden Bears won their final regular season game 26–16 over 24-point underdog Southern Miss. Cal did not try to run-up the score at the end of the game.[7][8][9] Several AP voters were besieged by fan emails and phone calls attempting to sway their votes, apparently spurred from Brown's pleas to rank Texas ahead of other "less deserving teams."[10][11] Nine of the 65 AP voters switched Texas ahead of Cal, and three of them were from Texas.[12] In the coaches poll, four voters moved Cal down to No. 7 and two to No. 8, when the week before none had them lower than No. 6. Meanwhile, two coaches moved Texas up to No. 3 when the team did not play that week.[13][14] The Los Angeles Times wrote that accusations were raised about coaches manipulated voting, but the individual coaches votes were not released to prove or disprove the allegations.[15] The AP Poll makes its voters' records public.[16] No. 6 Texas gained 23 points on No. 4 Cal in the AP poll, and the fifth-ranked Longhorns closed 43 points on the fourth-ranked Bears in the coaches poll. That allowed Texas to earn a BCS berth, finishing .0129 points ahead of Cal in the BCS standings after being .0013 points behind.[12] In part because of the controversy with Texas' and Cal's BCS ranking, the AP poll withdrew from the BCS after the season.[10] This lobbying effort and ensuing result led to criticism of Brown for playing politics to get his team into a top bowl. Thus, he was no longer criticized for failing to get into a top bowl, he was criticized for doing so (and the way he had done it).

Rose Bowl

#12/13 Michigan vs. #5/6 Texas
Rose Bowl
1 234Total
Michigan 0 14176 37
Texas 7 7717 38

The appearance in the "Grand-daddy" of all bowl games was the first visit by the Longhorns, due mainly to the fact that the Rose Bowl traditionally pitted the winner of the Pac-10 against the winner of the Big Ten. Texas' opponent was Michigan, whom Texas was playing for the very first time. Texas and Michigan each had over 100 years of football history. The meeting of the two teams set a college football record for the most games played collectively by two opponents before facing each other for the first time.[17]

Texas won the game 38–37 on a last second field goal kick by Longhorn Dusty Mangum in what had been called one of the greatest Rose Bowl games of all time.[18] It was the only time in the history of the Rose Bowl that the game has been decided as time expired off the clock. Vince Young set several Rose Bowl records and also won the Rose Bowl MVP award.[18]

After the season

In the NFL Draft that followed, three Longhorns were drafted – RB Cedric Benson went 4th overall to Chicago Bears and Derrick Johnson went 15th overall to the Kansas City Chiefs. TE Bo Scaife was picked in the 6th round by the Tennessee Titans and would be later reunited with quarterback Vince Young

With the exception of these players, most of the team returned to play for the 2005 Texas Longhorns football team, including redshirt sophomore quarterback Vince Young. Therefore, expectations were high coming into the 2005 season. At the trophy presentation in Pasadena, Vince Young had proclaimed, "We'll be back!", referencing the fact that the Rose Bowl was the host for the next year's BCS National Championship.

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See also

  • BCS controversies

References

  1. Wieberg, Steve (December 2, 2005). "Brown has Texas savoring the possibilities" (PDF). USA Today. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 7, 2005. Retrieved June 27, 2006.
  2. "2004–2005 NCAA football tickets". Archived from the original on June 30, 2006. Retrieved June 27, 2006.
  3. Fitt, Aaron. "It's not about Mack". The Daily Tarheel. Archived from the original on February 13, 2008.
  4. "Roses are red, Texas is in – Last-minute changes to standings send Longhorns to the Rose Bowl". The Daily Texan. December 6, 2004. Retrieved July 30, 2006.
  5. "Cumulative Season Statistics". University of Texas at Austin Department of Athletics. Archived from the original on November 4, 2011. Retrieved October 16, 2011.
  6. MackBrown-TexasFootball.com – Official website of the Texas Longhorns – Texas Football Archived November 1, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  7. "Cal hoping for first Rose Bowl in 50 years". ESPN. Associated Press. December 4, 2004. Archived from the original on December 6, 2011.
  8. Springer, Steve (December 5, 2004). "Cal Elects Not to Put Its Rose Pedal to the Metal". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on December 6, 2011.
  9. Whiteside, Kelly (November 29, 2004). "California bears burden of making point that it's BCS-worthy". USA Today. Archived from the original on December 6, 2011.
  10. Klemz, Patrick (January 17, 2005). "AP removes poll from BCS formula". The Badger Herald. Associated Press. Archived from the original on December 6, 2011.
  11. "Paper protests Texas' lobbying for BCS bowl". ESPN. December 10, 2004. Archived from the original on December 7, 2011.
  12. Tafur, Vittorio (December 7, 2004). "Texas Talks a Better Game Than Cal Plays". The New York Times. Archived from the original on December 6, 2011.
  13. Mandel, Stewart (December 7, 2004). "The real problem with the Rose decision". SI.com. Archived from the original on December 6, 2011.
  14. Whiteside, Kelly (December 5, 2004). "Nothing coming up roses for Cal". USA Today. Archived from the original on December 7, 2011.
  15. Dufrense, Chris (December 9, 2004). "Final Word on BCS: Enough". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on December 6, 2011.
  16. "Commissioner wants vote to be public". ESPN. Associated Press. December 7, 2004. Archived from the original on December 6, 2011.
  17. Heinauer, Laura (December 12, 2004). "A Tale of Two Cities – Just what do Austin and Ann Arbor have in common? – Michigan fans, like Texas rivals, are passionate about football". Austin American-Statesman. Retrieved March 13, 2007.
  18. Frisbie, Bill (January 2, 2006). "Hollywood ending!". College Football News. Archived from the original on August 14, 2007. Retrieved December 13, 2006.
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