2011 Belk Bowl

The 2011 Belk Bowl, the 10th edition of the game, was a post-season American college football bowl game, held on December 27, 2011, at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina as part of the 2011–12 NCAA Bowl season.

2011 Belk Bowl
1234 Total
Louisville 7377 24
NC State 714100 31
DateDecember 27, 2011
Season2011
StadiumBank of America Stadium
LocationCharlotte, North Carolina
MVPMike Glennon
FavoriteNC State Wolfpack by 1[1]
RefereeBill Athan (WAC)
Attendance58,427
PayoutUS$1 million per team
United States TV coverage
NetworkESPN
AnnouncersBob Wischusen (Play-by-Play)
Brian Griese (Analyst)
Shannon Spake (Sidelines)
Nielsen ratings2.22

The game was telecast at 8:00 p.m. ET on ESPN, and featured the NC State Wolfpack from the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Louisville Cardinals from the Big East Conference.

Previously known as the Meineke Car Care Bowl in 2010, the 2011 contest was the first under its new name and sponsorship agreement with Belk, the Charlotte-based department store chain.

Louisville-NC State is expected to become a yearly game as in 2014 Louisville will join the ACC and is expected to replace Maryland in the Atlantic Division (where NC State plays).

Teams

Louisville

Louisville advanced to its second straight Bowl game under second year head coach Charlie Strong. It is the first time the Cardinals have advanced to back-to-back bowl games since 200506, their first two years as members of the Big East. Louisville enters the game with a record of 7–5, and having gone 5–2 in Big East play. The Cardinals experienced an up-and-down season. They started out 1–1 before going on the road and beating their hated in-state rival Kentucky 24–17 for the first time in 4 tries, in a game where highly touted freshman quarterback Teddy Bridgewater made his debut, filling in midway through for the injured Will Stein. Louisville lost three straight to drop to 2–4, before winning three straight to go to 5–4. One notable event occurred midway through the Cards' 16–14 win over Rutgers, in which senior cornerback Anthony Conner broke his neck and was carted off the field. Louisville became Bowl-eligible on November 19, in a 34–20 win at Connecticut.

NC State

Scoring summary

Source[2]

Scoring Play Score
1st Quarter
NCS – T. J. Graham 6 Yd Pass From Mike Glennon (Niklas Sade Kick), 5:39 NCS 7–0
UL – Teddy Bridgewater 8 Yd Run (Chris Philpott Kick), 1:06 Tie 7-7
2nd Quarter
UL – Chris Philpott 32 Yd Field Goal, 6:07 UL 10-7
NCS – Tobais Palmer 35 Yd Pass From Mike Glennon (Niklas Sade Kick), 4:03 NCS 14-10
NCS – T. J. Graham 68 Yd Pass From Mike Glennon (Niklas Sade Kick), 1:35 NCS 21-10
3rd Quarter
NCS – Niklas Sade 34 Yd Field Goal, 8:04 NCS 24-10
NCS – David Amerson 65 Yd Interception Return (Niklas Sade Kick), 6:39 NCS 31-10
UL – Nate Nord 2 Yd Pass From Teddy Bridgewater (Chris Philpott Kick), 2:00 NCS 31-17
4th Quarter
UL – Josh Bellamy 2 Yd Pass From Teddy Bridgewater (Chris Philpott Kick), 3:55 NCS 31-24

Statistics

StatisticsULNC State
First Downs1819
Rushes-yards (net)35–11728–65
Passing yards (net)274264
Att-Comp-Int43–24–333–21–1
Total yards391329
Time of Possession31:5028:10
gollark: Yes, let alone `is not`.
gollark: Python's == is also nontransistive in some situations, though.
gollark: Ugh. Yes.
gollark: `is` tests object identity (in CPython, "same memory location") or something and not, well, actual equality, so it's just bizarre and esoteric and does *not* need its own operators.
gollark: I'm aware `is not` is a single operator. It's just vaguely weird.

References

  1. Bowl Schedule, Los Angeles Times, December 7, 2011
  2. Louisville Cardinals vs. North Carolina State Wolfpack box score. ESPN. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.