2016 Heart of Dallas Bowl

Last updated

2016 Zaxby's Heart of Dallas Bowl
7th Heart of Dallas Bowl
1234OTTotal
Army121270738
North Texas71473031
DateDecember 27, 2016
Season 2016
Stadium Cotton Bowl
Location Fair Park
Dallas, Texas
MVP Ahmad Bradshaw (QB, Army) [1]
Favorite Army by 9.5 [2]
Referee Hubert Owens (SEC)
Attendance39,117
Payout US$1,100,000 [3]
United States TV coverage
Network ESPN, RedVoice, LLC
Announcers Allen Bestwick, Mike Bellotti, Kris Budden (ESPN)
Brian Estridge, John Denton, Rob Best, Landry Burdine (RedVoice)
Heart of Dallas Bowl
 < 2015   2017 > 

The 2016 Heart of Dallas Bowl was a postseason American college football bowl game played on December 27, 2016, at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas. The seventh edition of the Heart of Dallas Bowl, the game featured the Army Black Knights, an independent, and the North Texas Mean Green of Conference USA. It was one of the 2016–17 bowl games that concluded the 2016 FBS football season. Sponsored by fast food restaurant Zaxby's, the game was officially known as the Zaxby's Heart of Dallas Bowl. Broadcast on ESPN, Army defeated North Texas by a score of 38–31.

Contents

Teams

The game featured the Army Black Knights, an FBS independent, and the North Texas Mean Green from Conference USA. This was the sixth meeting between the schools, with Army entering the game leading the all-time series 4–1. They first met on the football field in 1996, and later met in 1997, 2009, and 2010, all of which were won by Army. North Texas achieved their first victory in the series in their fifth meeting, which came earlier in the regular season on October 22, 2016. [4] It was the first postseason meeting between the two teams.

Army

After a disappointing 2–10 campaign the year prior, [5] Army looked to return to winning ways in head coach Jeff Monken's third season. Army's season opened on the road in Philadelphia, where they defeated Temple to win their first season-opening road game since 2010. [6] [7] The Black Knights' home opener came the following week, when they hosted and defeated Rice, by a score of 31–14. [8] The following week, Army was back on the road for the start of a three-game away stretch, the first game of which came at UTEP, whom they defeated to achieve their first 3–0 start to a season since 1996. [9] The next two games were not so kind, however; the Black Knights faltered both in games at Buffalo, by three points in overtime, [10] and, after a bye week, at Duke, by seven points. [11] Army improved to 4–2 the next week at home, with their defeat of Lafayette, from the FCS's Patriot League. [12] The following week, they matched up with eventual bowl game foe North Texas, to whom they lost by seventeen points. [13] Army's first and only Power Five win came the next week, as they traveled to Winston-Salem and defeated Wake Forest by eight. [14]

Now sitting at 5–3, they needed to win one of their next two games to ensure bowl eligibility, however they lost both of those games, to Air Force [15] and Notre Dame, [16] respectively, putting them at 5–5 with two contests to go. Army achieved their sixth win of the season on November 19, with a 60–3 victory against Morgan State, [17] but as this was their second win of the year against an FCS opponent, it did not count towards their bowl eligibility (as only one FCS win per year can count towards the six wins traditionally required to be bowl eligible). Ordinarily, this would have meant that Army would be ineligible for postseason play, but as there were eighty bowl slots that were not all able to be filled, 5-win teams were admitted to postseason play based on Academic Progress Rates (APR). [18] Because of this, Army accepted their invitation to play in the Heart of Dallas Bowl on December 4. [19] Incidentally, the Black Knights would go on to upset No. 25 Navy in the Army–Navy Game just six days later, in their first win over the Midshipmen since 2001, thereby granting them enough wins to be traditionally bowl eligible anyway. [20]

This was Army's sixth bowl appearance in school history, their first since the 2010 Armed Forces Bowl. This was also their first appearance in the Heart of Dallas Bowl. [21]

North Texas

North Texas entered 2016 under the leadership of new head coach Seth Littrell, who was brought in to lead the program after the Mean Green finished 2015 with a record of 1–11. [22] The Mean Green opened the season with a Safeway Bowl matchup against SMU, in which they fell 21–34. [23] [24] They rebounded the next week, defeating Bethune–Cookman by three touchdowns. [25] Their only Power Five game of the season saw them travel to No. 23 Florida, where they were shut out. [26] They pulled back up to .500 with their week four win at Rice, a win that took two overtimes to complete. [27] Again they faltered, this time against Middle Tennessee at home. Now 2–3, North Texas improved their record by doubling their win total over the following three weeks: they defeated Marshall at home, [28] and then traveled to West Point and defeated Army following a bye week. [13]

The next three weeks were not as kind to the Mean Green. A road game against UTSA, [29] a home tilt against Louisiana Tech, [30] and a road matchup with Western Kentucky all resulted in losses for North Texas, [31] putting them at a precarious 4–6. Faced with two remaining regular season games, UNT needed to win both in order to become bowl eligible. They faced Southern Miss in their last home game of the season, and it was a game that resulted in a much-needed six-point win for the Mean Green. [32] Needing a win in their last regular season game against UTEP, North Texas fell behind 7–31 in the second quarter and was never able to recover, losing 24–52. [33] The result of this, as a post-game Associated Press report put it, was that North Texas was "knocked...out of bowl eligibility." [34] However, this did not end up being the case. As was the case with Army (who had a 5–6 record when they were invited), 5–7 North Texas, despite having a losing record, was extended an invitation due to the lack of teams to fill all eighty bowl slots, and their high APR scores. [18] [35] They accepted said invitation on December 4, booking their trip to Dallas for a rematch with the Black Knights. [36]

This was North Texas's ninth bowl appearance in school history, and their second appearance in the Heart of Dallas Bowl. Their last appearance in the game, and their last bowl appearance overall, was in the 2014 Heart of Dallas Bowl played at the conclusion of the 2013 season. [37]

Game summary

Scoring summary

Scoring summary
QuarterTime Drive TeamScoring informationScore
Plays Yards TOP ARMYNT
19:1811755:42ARMYDarnell Woolfolk 5-yard touchdown run, Blake Wilson kick no good60
16:356662:37NTJeffery Wilson 22-yard touchdown run, Trevor Moore kick good67
14:563761:34ARMYTyler Campbell 70-yard touchdown run, 2-point run failed (Kell Walker run)127
213:0510675:14ARMYDarnell Woolfolk 1-yard touchdown run, 2-point run failed (Ahmad Bradshaw run)187
26:379934:10ARMYAndy Davidson 6-yard touchdown run, 2-point pass incomplete (Samuel Johnson pass)247
22:269834:02NTJeffery Wilson 22-yard touchdown reception from Alec Morris, Trevor Moore kick good2414
20:106681:40NTRico Bussey 27-yard touchdown reception from Alec Morris, Trevor Moore kick good2421
37:416843:05ARMYAhmad Bradshaw 65-yard touchdown run, Blake Wilson kick good3121
30:451180:05NTTyler Wilson 18-yard touchdown reception from Alec Morris, Trevor Moore kick good3128
40:2811501:50NT37-yard field goal by Trevor Moore3131
OT725ARMYJordan Asberry 3-yard touchdown run, Blake Wilson kick good3831
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football.3831

Statistics

StatisticsARMYNT
First Downs2219
Third down efficiency11–175–12
Plays-yards78–53367–410
Rushes-yards74–48027–96
Passing yards53314
Passing, Comp-Att-Int2–4–027–40–2
Time of Possession36:1823:42
TeamCategoryPlayerStatistics
ArmyPassing Ahmad Bradshaw 2/3, 53 yards
RushingAhmad Bradshaw18 carries, 129 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingTyler Campbell1 reception, 38 yards
North TexasPassingAlec Morris26/38, 304 yards, 3 TD, 1 INT
RushingJeffery Wilson20 carries, 81 yards, 1 TD
ReceivingTurner Smiley8 receptions, 79 yards

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