2002 Tangerine Bowl

Last updated

2002 Mazda Tangerine Bowl
1234Total
Texas Tech171771455
Clemson027615
DateDecember 23, 2002
Season 2002
Stadium Florida Citrus Bowl
Location Orlando, Florida
MVPQB Kliff Kingsbury (Texas Tech)
Favorite Texas Tech by 4.5
Referee Bill Alge (MAC)
Attendance21,689
United States TV coverage
Network ESPN
Announcers Mike Tirico (play-by-play), Lee Corso and Kirk Herbstreit (analysts)
Tangerine Bowl
 < 2001   2003 > 

The 2002 Tangerine Bowl was the 13th edition of the college football bowl game formerly known as Blockbuster / Carquest / MicronPC Bowl. This was the second under the "Tangerine Bowl" moniker, a reference to the original name of the Citrus Bowl, known as the Tangerine Bowl from 1947 to 1982. It was played on December 23, 2002, and featured the Texas Tech Red Raiders and the Clemson Tigers.

Contents

Background

The Red Raiders finished 2nd in the Southern Division to Oklahoma and Texas, having lost to the former in Oklahoma and having beaten the latter at home. They were 2-5 against ranked opponents, having beaten #23 Texas A&M and #4 Texas, but losing to #12 Ohio State, #16 NC State, #11 Iowa State, #21 Colorado and #3 Oklahoma. This was the eighth bowl game for the Red Raiders in nine years. Clemson began their season with a non-conference loss to #8 Georgia 31-28. This was the first of four losses to ranked opponents, while the team finished with one more win in the regular season than the previous year. They finished fourth in the Atlantic Coast Conference behind Florida State, Virginia & Maryland, and NC State, all of whom beat Clemson. This was the ninth bowl game for the Tigers in 10 years.

Game summary

Texas Tech scored first on a 29-yard field goal from Robert Treece, giving Tech a 30 lead. Kliff Kingsbury threw a 46-yard touchdown pass to Nehemiah Glover making it 100. He threw another 19-yard touchdown pass to Mickey Peters.

In the second quarter, Taurean Henderson scored from 10 yards out, and Tech took a 240 lead. After Clemson forced a safety, Wes Welker scored on a 59-yard punt return to make it 312, Texas Tech. Robert Treece's 34-yard field goal before halftime made it 34–2 Texas Tech.

In the third quarter, Charlie Whitehurst threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to Ben Hall to make it 34–9. B. J. Symons threw a 2-yard touchdown pass to Carlos Francis to make it 419, Texas Tech.

In the fourth quarter, Clemson's Chad Jasmine scored on a 2-yard touchdown run making it 4115. Kliff Kingsbury threw a 9-yard touchdown pass to Wes Welker making it 4815. A 26-yard touchdown pass from B. J. Symons to Taurean Henderson ended up being the final score of the game.

Kliff Kingsbury threw 32-of-43 for 375 yards and three touchdowns. This was Texas Tech's first bowl win since 1995. [1]

Statistics

StatisticsTexas TechClemson
First Downs2820
Rushing Yards9141
Passing Yards464319
Total Offense555360
Passing39-52-125-56-4
Punts-Average3-29.76-38.3
Return Yards140236
Fumbles-Lost0-02-0
Penalties-Yards8-797-55

Aftermath

Texas Tech reached six more bowl games in the decade, with victories in four of them, including consecutive bowl wins in separate years, a first for the program. As for Clemson, they also reached six more bowl games in the decade, winning half of them.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">2009 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team</span> American college football season

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References

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