ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -Lloyd Carr went out a winner.
Chad Henne threw for 373 yards and three touchdowns, Mike Hart ran for 129 yards and two scores and Michigan upset No. 9 Florida 41-35 Tuesday in the Capital One Bowl to win their first bowl game since 2003.
Henne, Adrian Arrington and Mario Manningham torched Florida’s secondary all game. Arrington caught nine passes for 153 yards and two touchdowns, and Manningham added five catches for 78 yards and a score.
The Gators (9-4) kept it close thanks to four turnovers and big plays by Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow and Percy Harvin, who ran 13 times for 165 yards and a TD, and caught nine passes for 77 yards and a score.
Florida failed to convert a fourth-down play at its 25 yard line, and K.C. Lopata’s 41-yard field goal put Michigan (9-4) ahead 41-35 with 2:21 remaining.
The Gators got another shot, but Tebow threw four straight incompletions to end any chance of a comeback.
The Wolverines dumped a bucket of water on Carr in the closing seconds, then players started jumping up and down and dancing around their retiring coach.
Playing with a broken bone in his non-throwing hand and facing constant blitzes, Tebow was 17-of-33 passing for 154 yards and three touchdowns. He also ran 16 times for 57 yards.
Cotton Bowl
No. 7 Missouri 38, No. 25 Arkansas 7
DALLAS (AP) – Missouri made its case for having deserved a chance in one of the elite bowl games, routing Darren McFadden and Arkansas in the Cotton Bowl to cap a magical season.
The biggest surprise is that the damage was done by running back Tony Temple, not quarterback Chase Daniel, a Heisman Trophy finalist like McFadden.
Temple, a 5-foot-9 senior who is often overlooked in Missouri’s pass-heavy offense, broke long-standing Cotton Bowl records with 281 yards and four touchdowns. Both records fell on his last run, a spinning, tackle-breaking, 40-yarder into the end zone.
Mizzou (12-2) was ranked No. 1 after beating Kansas in the regular-season finale, then lost badly to Oklahoma in the Big 12 title game.
Arkansas played like a team ready to move on to next season.
The No. 25 Razorbacks (8-5) made a horrible impression on incoming coach Bobby Petrino, from the defense allowing the most yards rushing by a single player to the sloppiness of five turnovers.
Outback Bowl
No. 16 Tennessee 21, No. 18 Wisconsin 17
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) – Erik Ainge threw for 365 yards and two touchdowns to keep No. 18 Wisconsin from joining Michigan as the only Big Ten teams to beat SEC opponents in bowl games three consecutive seasons.
Ainge completed 25 of 43 passes without a turnover to win MVP honors and help the No. 16 Vols (10-4) erase unpleasant memories of a 10-point loss to Penn State in last year’s Outback game.
Antonio Wardlow sealed Tennessee’s first 10-win season since 2004 when he intercepted Tyler Donovan’s deep throw intended for Paul Hubbard in the end zone in the final minute.
Receiver Gerald Jones took a direct snap from center and scored on a 3-yard run, then Ainge tossed TD passes of 29 yards to Josh Briscoe and 31 yards to Brad Cottam to help Tennessee build a 21-7 lead.
Donovan’s 4-yard TD to Andy Crooks trimmed Wisconsin’s deficit to 21-14 at the half. The Badgers (9-4) pulled within four on Taylor Mehlhaff’s 27-yard field goal in the closing seconds of the third quarter.
Donovan completed 14 of 24 passes for 155 yards. P.J. Hill returned to Wisconsin’s offense after sitting out two games and missing part of two others, running for 132 yards on 16 carries.
Gator Bowl
Texas Tech 31, No. 21 Virginia 28
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) – Alex Trlica kicked a 41-yard field goal with 7 seconds left to give Texas Tech a come-from-behind victory over the No. 21 Cavaliers in a wild Gator Bowl.
Tech overcame pivotal penalties and a fumble to come back from a 28-14 fourth quarter deficit. Its aggressive pass offense couldn’t score much for three quarters, but Graham Harrell still managed to completed 44 of 69 passes for 407 yards, all records, plus three TDs.
The comeback started when Harrell found Michael Crabtree for a touchdown – despite an interference call.
Tech scored its next touchdown after knocking the ball out of backup Virginia quarterback Peter Lalich’s hands at the 4 yard line. Tech recovered and Aaron Crawford’s 4-yard run a play later tied it at 28.
The Red Raiders overcame a tremendous effort by Virginia tailback Mikell Simpson, who ran for 170 yards on 20 carries – including a NCAA bowl-record 96-yard TD run – and caught another touchdown.
Virginia’s offense wasn’t the same after losing Jameel Sewell at the start of the fourth quarter. His statistics weren’t outstanding – 14-of-23 passing for 78 yards and a TD – but he commanded the offense well.
MORE
Add A Comment