1948 Sun Bowl

The 1948 Sun Bowl matched the Texas Tech Red Raiders and the Miami (Ohio) Redskins.

1948 Sun Bowl
1234 Total
Miami 6007 13
Texas Tech 0606 12
DateJanuary 1, 1948
Season1947
StadiumKidd Field
LocationEl Paso, Texas
Attendance18,000

Background

Blackburn helped Gillman coach this game for a team that went undefeated and was champion of the Mid-American Conference. The team had four future coaches on their roster as players: Ara Parseghian (most famous for coaching Northwestern and Notre Dame), Paul Dietzel (who went on to coach LSU), and Hugh Hindman (who went on to be the Ohio State Athletic Director who fired Woody Hayes). This was their first and so far only Sun Bowl. Tech was going to their fourth bowl game in 10 years and going to their first Sun Bowl since 1938. Tech was champion of the Border Conference. The original Sun Bowl invitation had been extended to Lafayette, but was declined when the host campus refused to allow the participation of Lafayette star running back, David Showell, based on a University of Texas ban on black players.[1]

Game summary

Ara Parseghian scored for Miami on a 1-yard touchdown run to give Miami a 6–0 lead early. Tech retaliated with a Jim Conley touchdown run to make it tied at halftime. After Bill Hoover blocked a Red Raider punt, Paul Shoults gave Miami the lead with his touchdown run. Jake Speelman made the extra point this time to make it 13–6. But Tech had one more fight in them, as Bernie Winkler returned an interception 21 yards for a touchdown, as Tech looked to tie the game on the extra point. But Ernie Plank blocked the extra point kick, as Miami held on to win the game and the MAC's second straight Sun Bowl win.[2][3]

Statistics

StatisticsTexas TechMiami (Ohio)
First Downs521
Total Offense Yards277414
Rushing Yards194294
Passes Attempted1422
Passes Completed511
Passes Intercepted22
Interception Return Yardage5422
Penalties-Yards6-509-65
Punts-Average7-25.07-35.0
Fumbles-Lost1-01-1

Aftermath

Gillman left the RedHawks after this game and Blackburn took over as head coach for the 1948 season. But after a MAC championship season, he left for Gillman's Cincinnati squad. The next coach was Woody Hayes, who would lead them to the 1951 Salad Bowl before he left in 1950 for Ohio State. They would not reach another bowl game until 1962. Texas Tech would go to the Raisin Bowl the following year, the last one with Morgan as coach.

References

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