2012 New Mexico Bowl

The 2012 Gildan New Mexico Bowl was a post-season American college football bowl game that was held on December 15, 2012, at University Stadium on the campus of the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico in the United States. The seventh edition of the New Mexico Bowl began at 11:00 a.m. MST and aired on ESPN. It featured the Nevada Wolf Pack, who represented the Mountain West Conference in their first year as a member, against the Arizona Wildcats, who represented the Pac-12 Conference. The Wolf Pack accepted their invitation with a 7–4 record in their first eleven games of the season, while the Wildcats accepted their invitation after finishing the regular season at 7–5. The bowl was the first of 35 played in the 2012–13 bowl game season.

2012 Gildan New Mexico Bowl
1234 Total
Nevada 2110143 48
Arizona 721021 49
DateDecember 15, 2012
Season2012
StadiumUniversity Stadium
LocationAlbuquerque, New Mexico
MVPOffense: Matt Scott, QB- Arizona
Defense: Marquis Flowers, LB- Arizona
FavoriteArizona by 9[1]
RefereeBrad Allen (ACC)
Attendance24,610
United States TV coverage
NetworkESPN
AnnouncersBob Wischusen (Play-by-play)
Danny Kanell (Analyst)
Kaylee Hartung (Sidelines)

Coming into the game, both teams had sound offenses and were led by their respective running backs, sophomore Ka'Deem Carey for Arizona and senior Stefphon Jefferson for Nevada, who ranked number one and number two respectively in total rushing yards during the regular season. Arizona and Nevada ranked third and fourth respectively in total offense. Both teams' defenses were ranked towards the bottom of college football. Consequently, the game was widely expected to be high-scoring.

Arizona won the game 49–48 after scoring two touchdowns in the final two minutes to come back for the victory. As expected, the game was dominated by offense; Arizona and Nevada combined for 1234 total yards and 70 first downs. Despite losing the game, Nevada possessed the ball nearly twice as long and gained twice as many rushing yards as Arizona. Arizona quarterback Matt Scott was named the game's offensive most valuable player (MVP), and teammate Marquis Flowers, a linebacker, was named the game's defensive MVP.

Teams

The New Mexico Bowl is played annually at the campus stadium of the University of New Mexico, a founding member of the Mountain West Conference which has had a tie-in since the game's establishment in 2006. 2012 was the first year of the Pac-12's tie in.[2] The game featured the nation's top rushers, Arizona's All-American Ka'Deem Carey (146.4 ypg) and Nevada's Stefphon Jefferson (141.9 ypg). It also featured Arizona quarterback Matt Scott (3,723 total offense yards) and Nevada quarterback Cody Fajardo (3,511 total offense yards).

This was the fourth meeting between these two teams. Arizona leads the all-time record 2-1-1. The last time they played was in 1941.

Arizona

The 2012 New Mexico Bowl was Rich Rodriguez's first bowl game with Arizona.

Arizona came off of a 7-5 (4-5 in conference) season in coach Rich Rodriguez's debut with the team. Arizona started their season by beating Toledo, Oklahoma State, and South Carolina State prior to getting blown out 49-0 by Oregon. Later in the season, Arizona beat USC who was ranked #9. Star running back Ka'Deem Carey had his best game of the year against Colorado totaling 366 yards to give the Wildcats their sixth win of the season. Their regular season concluded with a loss to rival Arizona State 41-34.[3]

The 2012 edition was the first appearance in the bowl for both Arizona and for the Pac-12. Arizona, seventh best in the nation in total offense (521.83 ypg), was led by quarterback Matt Scott (338.45 ypg, 3,238 yards passing), All-American running back Ka'Deem Carey who led the nation in rushing (146.42 ypg) and set a school record with his 1,757 rushing yards, good for 21 touchdowns, and wide receiver Austin Hill who totaled 1,189 yards. 2012 was the first season in Arizona's history during which they had a 3000-yard passer, a 1000-yard rusher, and a 1000-yard receiver. Senior place kicker John Bonano was named the 2012 Pac-12 Football Scholar-Athlete of the Year (Physiology major with a 3.927 GPA).

Nevada

The 2012 New Mexico Bowl was Chris Ault's last game with Nevada.

The Wolf Pack came off their inaugural season as a member of the Mountain West, during which they compiled a conference record of 4-3, good for fifth place in the conference. They began their season by defeating rival California 31-24. After losing to South Florida by a single point, Nevada won five consecutive games to achieve bowl eligibility. The Wolf Pack then dropped three of their final four to bring their record to 7-5.[3] After defeating the New Mexico Lobos to improve their record to 7-4, the Wolf Pack accepted an invitation to the New Mexico Bowl.[4]

Nevada coach Chris Ault was one of three members of the College Football Hall of Fame to lead a team into a bowl game, along with Barry Alvarez (Wisconsin interim coach) and Steve Spurrier (South Carolina). Nevada's senior receiver Brandon Wimberly had caught a pass in all 39 games of his college career.[2] This was the Wolf Pack's second New Mexico Bowl; they had previously played in the 2007 edition (then as a member of the Western Athletic Conference), losing to the hometown New Mexico Lobos by a score of 23-0.

Pregame buildup

This was the first bowl of the 2012-13 College Football Bowl season.[5] Prior to 2012, the teams had not met since 1941 despite their close proximity. In 1941, Arizona beat Nevada 26–7.[6] Overall, the series record prior to the game was 1–1–1.[2] Arizona, who had appeared in a bowl game in four of the previous five seasons, made the Pac-12's first appearance in the New Mexico Bowl.[2] Nevada made its eighth consecutive bowl appearance and second all-time in the New Mexico Bowl.[2]

Offense

Coming into the game, Arizona and Nevada were two of the top offenses in the country, ranking 7th and 10th in yards per game respectively.[7] There was also significant hype surrounding the game because it featured two of the best running backs in the country, Ka'Deem Carey for Arizona, and Stefphon Jefferson for Nevada.[8] Carey was ranked number one in the country in total rushing yards, while Jefferson was ranked number two.[9] The duo were also prolific scorers; Jefferson was second in the country in rushing touchdowns with 25 and Carey was third with 24.[10] The game was widely expected to be a shoot-out,[6][11] as both teams were in the top-20 scoring offenses in the regular season.[12]

Defense

There were very low expectations for the defenses; the over/under was set at 75.5 total points.[6] During the regular season, both defenses were ranked in the bottom 30 (out of 120) in points allowed.[13] Despite having three players on the All-Mountain West team,[14] Nevada allowed opponents to convert third downs 47.2% of the time (107th in the country).[6] Arizona was led defensively during the regular season by Jake Fischer, who accumulated 119 total tackles, while Nevada was led by Albert Rosette who totaled 135 regular season tackles.[15]

Game summary

The 2012 New Mexico Bowl was played at University Stadium.

First quarter

Nevada methodically moved down the field on their first drive and scored first on a 16-yard run by Stefphon Jefferson to cap off an 8-play, 75-yard drive. Later in the quarter, the Wolf Pack took a 14-0 lead following a 17-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Cody Fajardo to Zach Sudfeld. Arizona fumbled on the ensuing kickoff. On the first play of their drive, Nevada took a 21-0 lead on a 28-yard touchdown pass to Sudfeld.[16] All-American running back Ka'Deem Carey finally got Arizona on the board with a 21-yard touchdown run late in the first quarter.[17][18][19]

Second quarter

In the second quarter, Arizona outscored Nevada 21-10. Taking advantage of two Nevada turnovers, an interception thrown by Cody Fajardo and a fumble by Stefphon Jefferson, Arizona was able to tie the game at 21 with one-yard touchdown runs by Matt Scott and Carey, respectively. Nevada regained the lead on a 14-yard rushing touchdown by Jefferson, but Arizona tied the game once again on a 9-yard Carey touchdown run, his third of the game. Nevada enjoyed a three-point lead at the half after a 27 field goal by Allen Hardison capped off a 16-play, 65-yard drive and made the score 31-28.[17][18][19]

Third quarter

After kicking off to start the game, Arizona got the ball first in the second half. Their first drive went three-and-out. After a 51-yard punt, Nevada took over at their own 11-yard line. They put together an 11-play, 89-yard drive that culminated with a 33-yard touchdown pass from Cody Fajardo to Richy Turner.[18] During the course of throwing the touchdown pass, Fajardo hurt his hand and was seen shaking it on his way to the end zone to celebrate the score. He returned for Nevada's next offensive drive.[20] Arizona's next drive got them into Nevada territory, but an interception thrown by Matt Scott ended any hopes of scoring. Nevada took the field and drove 84 yards down the field on 15 plays. Near the end of the drive once Nevada was inside the 10-yard line, Fajardo ran the ball for a gain of three yards. During the course of the play, he took a hit to the head from an Arizona defender. He exited the game for one play, but subsequently returned on that drive and scored a one-yard rushing touchdown.[20] Arizona was held scoreless in the quarter, and heading into the final quarter of regulation, Nevada possessed a 45-28 lead.[21]

Fourth quarter

Arizona came into the fourth quarter trailing Nevada by 17 points. Arizona was able to cut the lead to 45-35 on a 63-yard touchdown pass from Scott to Austin Hill soon after the 4th quarter began. Nevada then took a 48-35 lead on a 25-yard field goal from Hardison, for a 13-point lead with only 1:44 left in regulation time.[22] Arizona, with no timeouts and needing two scores to win the game, was able to cut the lead down to 48-42 with only 42 seconds left in regulation on a short touchdown pass from Scott to Hill. After Marquis Flowers successfully recovered the onside kick,[23] Arizona quickly scored with another short Scott touchdown pass, this time to Tyler Slavin, to take tie the game at 48 with only 19 seconds left in regulation.[24] Prior to the extra point attempt, Nevada coach Chris Ault called his final timeout to try to ice kicker John Bonano.[25] The tactic was unsuccessful, as Bonano made the extra point to give Arizona a one-point lead. The final 19 seconds of the game were the only time that Arizona led.[26] Arizona held on to the lead after Arizona's Flowers intercepted a Fajardo pass with a few seconds remaining in the game.[17][18][19]

Scoring summary

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Nevada Arizona
1 12:12 8 75 2:48 Nevada Stefphon Jefferson 16-yard touchdown run, Allen Hardison kick good 7 0
1 4:43 8 48 3:15 Nevada Zach Sudfield 17-yard touchdown reception from Cody Fajardo, Hardison kick good 14 0
1 4:29 1 28 0:14 Nevada Sudfeld 28-yard touchdown reception from Fajardo, Hardison kick good 21 0
1 1:52 11 72 2:37 Arizona Ka'Deem Carey 21-yard touchdown run, John Bonano kick good 21 7
2 12:46 9 71 2:20 Arizona Matt Scott 1-yard touchdown run, Bonano kick good 21 14
2 10:23 8 59 1:21 Arizona Carey 1-yard touchdown run, Bonano kick good 21 21
2 5:57 11 76 4:26 Nevada Jefferson 14-yard touchdown run, Hardison kick good 28 21
2 4:22 6 75 1:35 Arizona Carey 9-yard touchdown run, Bonano kick good 28 28
2 0:02 16 65 4:22 Nevada 27-yard field goal by Hardison 31 28
3 9:19 11 89 4:13 Nevada Richy Turner 33-yard touchdown reception from Fajardo, Hardison kick good 38 28
3 1:33 15 88 6:26 Nevada Fajardo 1-yard touchdown run, Hardison kick good 45 28
4 14:44 7 89 1:49 Arizona Austin Hill 63-yard touchdown reception from Scott, Bonano kick good 45 35
4 1:48 10 29 4:27 Nevada 25-yard field goal by Hardison 48 35
4 0:46 6 75 1:06 Arizona Hill 2-yard touchdown reception from Scott, Bonano kick good 48 42
4 0:19 3 51 0:22 Arizona Tyler Slavin 2-yard touchdown reception from Scott, Bonano kick good 48 49
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 48 49

Statistics

StatisticsNevadaArizona
First Downs3931
Total offense, plays - yards105-65983-578
Rushes-yards (net)73-40336-196
Passing yards (net)256382
Passes, Comp-Att-Int22-32 -228-47-2
Time of Possession39:1020:50

Individual statistics

Passing
TeamNameComp./Att.YardsTouchdownsInterceptions
ARIMatt Scott27/4536932
NEVCody Fajardo22/3125532
Rushing
TeamNameAttemptsYardsTouchdowns
ARIKa'Deem Carey281723
ARIMatt Scott6211
ARIDaniel Jenkins160
NEVStefphon Jefferson341802
NEVCody Fajardo221401
NEVNick Hale14730
Receiving
TeamNameReceptionsYardsTouchdowns
ARIAustin Hill81752
ARIGaric Wharton7840
ARIDavid Richards5530
ARIDan Buckner2320
ARITyler Slavin3231
NEVRichy Turner6961
NEVBrandon Wimberly7570
NEVZach Sudfeld2452
NEVAaron Bradley3340
NEVJoseph Huber1130

Aftermath

On December 28, 2012, nearly two weeks after the bowl game, Nevada head coach Chris Ault announced that he would retire from his position as head football coach at Nevada.[27][28] Son of former National Football League executive Bill Polian[29] Brian Polian was subsequently signed a five-year contract to be the new head coach of the Wolf Pack on January 7, 2013.[30]

gollark: Kind of, maybe, depending how you define it.
gollark: Inasmuch as converting analog input from a microphone into different frequencies through some analog process actually counts as encoding, I guess.
gollark: You have to have *some* encoding step to translate your data into radio signals.
gollark: Or possibly some other SDRs.
gollark: I vaguely remember reading about RTL-SDRs being used to reverse-engineer (partly) LoRa and some satellite phone encoding.

References

  1. Bowl Schedule, Los Angeles Times, December 8, 2012
  2. "New Mexico Bowl Preview Capsule". Washington Times. Associated Press. 14 December 2012. Retrieved 22 December 2012.
  3. Fischer, Bryan. "Game Preview: New Mexico Bowl". Pac-12 Bowl Central. Pac-12 Conference. Retrieved 22 December 2012.
  4. "Nevada To Compete in the Seventh Annual New Mexico Bowl". New Mexico Bowl. November 25, 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-12-03. Retrieved November 25, 2012.
  5. "Bowl kick off: Wild 'Zona win". The New York Post. Associated Press. 16 December 2012. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
  6. Ellis, Zac. "Arizona-Nevada New Mexico Bowl preview". College Football - Zac Ellis - SI.com. Time Inc. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  7. "2012 NCAA Division I-A College Football Team Statistics Leaders for Total". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  8. Miller, Dave. "New Mexico Bowl preview: Arizona vs. Nevada". National Football Post. Reign Net Media. Archived from the original on 2012-12-17. Retrieved 22 December 2012.
  9. "2012 NCAA Division I-A College Football Individual Statistics Leaders for Rushing". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  10. "2012 NCAA Division I-A College Football Individual Statistics Leaders for Scoring". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  11. Gemmell, Kevin. "New Mexico Bowl keys". Pac-12 Blog - ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  12. "College Football - Statistics by Team (Offense)". Rivals.com. Yahoo! Inc. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  13. "College Football - Statistics by Team (Defense)". Rivals.com. Yahoo! Inc. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  14. "Mountain West Announces 2012 Football All-Conference Teams and Individual Honors". Mountain West Conference Official Athletic Site. CBS Interactive. 4 December 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-05-31. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  15. "Total Tackles". NCAA.com. NCAA. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  16. "Arizona overcomes Nevada 49-48 in New Mexico Bowl". CBS News. CBS Interactive Inc. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  17. Arizona scores twice in final 46 seconds, stuns Nevada. ESPN. 15 December 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  18. Nevada Wolf Pack vs. Arizona Wildcats play by play. ESPN. 15 December 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  19. Nevada Wolf Pack vs. Arizona Wildcat box score. ESPN. 15 December 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
  20. Kirk, Jason. "Cody Fajardo hit: Nevada quarterback takes headshot in New Mexico Bowl". SBNation.com. Vox Media, Inc. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  21. "Arizona beats Nevada in New Mexico Bowl". The San Francisco Chronicle. Associated Press. 15 December 2012. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  22. "Recap: Arizona vs. Nevada". The Charlotte Observer. 15 December 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  23. Gemmell, Kevin. "Instant Analysis: Arizona 49, Nevada 48". College Football Nation Blog - ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved 25 December 2012.
  24. "New Mexico Bowl: Matt Scott throws 2 TD pass in final 42 seconds as Arizona Wildcats beat Nevada Wolf Pack". College Football News - FOX Sports on MSN. Fox Sports Interactive Media. Retrieved 22 December 2012.
  25. Hinxman, Dan (15 December 2012). "Collapse epitomizes frustrating season for Wolf Pack football team". Reno Gazette-Journal. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
  26. Rodriguez, Kenn. "Game recap: New Mexico Bowl - Arizona 49, Nevada 48". Mountain West Connection - SB Nation. Vox Media, Inc. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  27. "Nevada coach Chris Ault retires". College Football - SI.com. Time, Inc. Retrieved 29 December 2012.
  28. "Nevada Football Coach Chris Ault Retires". The New York Times. Associated Press. 28 December 2012. Retrieved 29 December 2012.
  29. "Brian Polian Biography". Texas A&M Official Athletic Site - AggieAthletics.com. Texas A&M University. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  30. "Brian Polian Bio". University of Nevada Official Athletic Site. CBS Interactive. 7 January 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
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