1995 Rose Bowl

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1995 Rose Bowl
81st Rose Bowl Game
1 2 3 4 Total
Penn State 7 7 14 10 38
Oregon 7 0 7 6 20
Date January 2, 1995
Season 1994
Stadium Rose Bowl
Location Pasadena, California
MVP Ki-Jana Carter (Penn State RB)
Danny O'Neil (Oregon QB)
National anthem Penn State Blue Band
Halftime show Penn State Blue Band, Oregon Marching Band
Attendance 102,247
United States TV coverage
Network ABC
Announcers: Keith Jackson, Bob Griese
Rose Bowl
 < 1994  1996 > 

The 1995 Rose Bowl was a college football bowl game played on Monday January 2, 1995 because New Year's Day was on a Sunday. It was the 81st Rose Bowl Game. The Penn State Nittany Lions defeated the Oregon Ducks 3820. Ki-Jana Carter of Penn State and Danny O'Neil of Oregon both were named the Rose Bowl Players of the Game.[1] Many observers point to this game as the one that made Ki-Jana Carter a number one selection in the 1995 NFL Draft.

Teams

Both teams were appearing in the Rose Bowl after being away for many years. The Oregon Ducks last appeared in the 1958 Rose Bowl, 37 years prior. The Penn State Nittany Lions appeared only one other time, the 1923 Rose Bowl, when the Rose Bowl stadium was used for the game for the first time.

Penn State Nittany Lions

Penn State was playing their second season as the 11th member in the Big Ten Conference. They went undefeated through the Big Ten season and were ranked #2 going in to the contest.

Oregon Ducks

Oregon opened with a win over Portland State, but then lost to non-conference opponents Utah and Hawaii. However, on October 1, 1994, the Ducks pulled off a surprise trouncing of #19 USC, a team that the Ducks had defeated only one other time since 1972. The Ducks followed this victory with a loss to Washington State. They would go on to win the rest of their conference games, including a 10-9 victory over Arizona. The season ended with a 17-13 win over Oregon State with the Rose Bowl on the line. Oregon finished in sole possession of first place, with Arizona and USC tied for second.

Game summary

Penn State running back Ki-Jana Carter provided the highlight of the game when he scored an 83-yard touchdown on Penn State's first offensive play, prompting announcer Keith Jackson to utter the quote "They had him, they thought and then he was gone." After Carter's touchdown, Oregon came right back to tie the game. Penn State scored again and led 14-7 at halftime. But Oregon rode the short passing game of QB Danny O'Neil and kept the ball away from the Penn State potent offense. Oregon tied the game midway through the 3rd quarter. Penn State scored to take a 21-14 and got the ball back. Then came the key play of the game. Penn State S Chuck Penzenik intercepted O'Neil with just over 11 minutes left in the 3rd quarter, returning the ball to the Oregon 13-yard line. Carter then scored his third touchdown, a short 3-yard run that put the Nittany Lions ahead 28-14. Penn State would go on to win in comfortable fashion, 38-20.

Scoring

First quarter

  • Penn State — Ki-Jana Carter 83 run (Brett Conway kick), 10:50
  • Oregon — Josh Wilcox 1 pass from Danny O’Neil (Matt Belden kick), 10:05

Second quarter

  • Penn State — Brian Milne 1 run (Conway kick), 1:26

Third quarter

  • Oregon — Cristin McLemore 17 pass from O’Neil (Belden kick), 4:54
  • Penn State — Carter 17 run (Conway kick), 3:53
  • Penn State — Carter 3 run (Conway kick), 2:01

Fourth quarter

  • Penn State — Conway 43 FG, 5:43
  • Penn State — Jon Witman 9 run (Michael Barninger kick), 4:24
  • Oregon — Ricky Whittle 3 run (pass failed), 2:44

Game records

Team Performance vs. Opponent Year
Passing yards 456, Oregon vs. Penn State 1995

Aftermath

Danny O'Neil contributed to 13 Rose Bowl records including individual records for passes attempted, passes completed, and passing yardage. As of 2008, his records still stood for most offensive plays (74), most passes attempted (61), most passes completed (41) and most yards passing (456).[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Bonk, Thomas (January 3, 1995). "Rose Bowl: Penn State 38, Oregon 20". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 9, 2010. 

Bibliography

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