1986 Sugar Bowl

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1986 Sugar Bowl
52nd Sugar Bowl
Louisiana Superdome - Unbranded - 26 July 2021.jpg
The Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, hosted the Sugar Bowl.
1234Total
Miami70007
Tennessee01414735
DateJanuary 1, 1986
Season 1985
Stadium Louisiana Superdome
Location New Orleans, Louisiana
MVP Daryl Dickey (Tennessee QB)
Favorite Miami by 8 points [1]
Referee Wendell Shelton (SWC)
United States TV coverage
Network ABC
Announcers Keith Jackson, Frank Broyles
Sugar Bowl
  1985   1987  

The 1986 Sugar Bowl was the 52nd edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Wednesday, January 1. Part of the 1985–86 bowl game season, it matched the independent and second-ranked Miami Hurricanes and the #8 Tennessee Volunteers of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). [2]

Contents

Underdog Tennessee trailed early, rallied, and won in a rout, 35–7. [3] [4] [5] [6]

Teams

Miami

The second-ranked Hurricanes were competing for another national championship; they won ten straight after dropping the opener at home to Florida. Miami's most notable win was at Oklahoma in October, which was the Sooners' only loss. [7]

Tennessee

The #8 Volunteers had two non-conference ties at home (UCLA, Georgia Tech), and a loss at Florida.

Game summary

The game kicked off shortly after 7 p.m. CST, televised by ABC, at the same time as the Orange Bowl on NBC, [2] with top-ranked Penn State and #3 Oklahoma.

Miami appeared dominant on its opening drive, capped with an 18-yard touchdown pass from Vinny Testaverde to Michael Irvin, and took the 7–0 lead into the second quarter. As the game wore on, however, Tennessee's defense began to shut down Miami's vaunted passing attack. Volunteers' quarterback Daryl Dickey threw a six-yard touchdown pass to Jeff Smith to tie the game at seven.

A drive from midfield took Tennessee to the Miami nine, where running back Jeff Powell gained eight yards but fumbled at the one, and All-American wide receiver Tim McGee recovered it in the end zone; Tennessee took the lead at 14–7, the score at halftime.

In the third quarter, Sam Henderson scored from a yard out and Tennessee led 21–7, then Powell broke for a sixty-yard run to make it 28–7. In the fourth quarter, Charles Wilson scored on a six-yard run as Tennessee won by a 35–7 margin. [3] [4] [5] [6]

Tennessee quarterback Dickey, a fifth-year senior back-up, [5] was named the game's most valuable player.

Scoring

First quarter
Second quarter
Third quarter
Fourth quarter
Source: [4]

Statistics

Statistics    Miami    Tennessee
First Downs2216
Rushes–yards30–2243–211
Passing yards237131
Passes (C–A–I)23–44–415–25–1
Total Offense74–25968–342
Return yards34105
Punts–average6–386–39
Fumbles–lost5–22–1
Turnovers62
Penalties–yards15–12011–125
Time of possession28:5931:01
Source: [4]

The 245 yards of penalties set a new Sugar Bowl record. [5]

Aftermath

Tennessee climbed to fourth in the final AP poll, while Miami fell to ninth.

References

  1. "The latest line". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. January 1, 1986. p. 36.
  2. 1 2 "Today's bowl games: Sugar". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. January 1, 1986. p. 5C.
  3. 1 2 Calabria, Pat (January 2, 1986). "This win is a Tennessee waltz". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. Newsday. p. 3B.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Vols shatter Miami's bid". Toledo Blade. Ohio. Associated Press. January 2, 1986. p. 23.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Halvonik, Steve (January 2, 1986). "Tennessee buries Hurricanes, 35-7". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 20.
  6. 1 2 Holbreich, Curt (January 2, 1986). "Tennessee crushes Miami's No. 1 hopes". Pittsburgh Press. p. D1.
  7. Holbreich, Curt (January 1, 1986). "Miami, howevers says it has earned consideration for top ranking". Pittsburgh Press. p. C12.