1948 Gator Bowl

The 1948 Gator Bowl was the third edition of the Gator Bowl and featured the Georgia Bulldogs representing the University of Georgia and the Maryland Terrapins representing the University of Maryland. It was the first-ever meeting of the two teams.[2]

1948 Gator Bowl
1234 Total
Maryland 07130 20
Georgia 00713 20
DateJanuary 1, 1948
Season1947
StadiumGator Bowl
LocationJacksonville, Florida
MVPLu Gambino
Attendance16,666[1]

In the second quarter, Maryland scored first with a 35-yard touchdown run by running back Lu Gambino. On the first possession of the second half, Georgia quarterback John Rauch engineered an 87-yard drive culminating in a one-yard quarterback keeper for a touchdown. Maryland responded with an 80-yard drive of their own and another Gambino touchdown. Georgia fumbled on their own 40-yard line and Maryland recovered. The Terrapins capitalized with a 24-yard John Barone pass to Gambino for a third touchdown. In the fourth quarter, Georgia running back Joe Geri ran it from the one-yard line for a score. Rauch threw a nine-yard touchdown pass to John Donaldson, but Georgia missed the extra point. The final result was a 20–20 stalemate.[3][4]

Lu Gambino was named the 1948 Gator Bowl Most Valuable Player.[1][3] He rushed for 165 yards and recorded all three of Maryland's touchdowns.[3] His rushing yardage would stand as a school bowl game record for 60 years, until broken in 2008.[5] John Rauch's 58-yard pass to Billy Henderson remained a Gator Bowl record for over 60 years.[6]

References

  1. Bowl Results (PDF), 2004 Maryland Gator Bowl Guide, p. 56, 2004, retrieved January 29, 2009.
  2. Maryland vs Georgia, 1869–2007, Stassen College Football Information, retrieved January 18, 2009.
  3. The 3rd Annual Gator Bowl - Historical Box Scores Archived July 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, The Gator Bowl Association, retrieved January 18, 2009.
  4. Georgia's Bowl History (PDF), 2006 Georgia Bulldogs Football Media Guide, University of Georgia, 2006, retrieved January 14, 2009.
  5. Patrick Stevens, Scott finally gets chance, The Washington Times, December 31, 2008, retrieved January 14, 2009.
  6. Magill: Rauch's dedication to game never waned Archived January 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Athens Banner-Herald, June 17, 2008, retrieved January 18, 2009.
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