NFC:3:30 PM (CT) | New Orleans at St. Louis/Seattle (NBC-TV) |
AFC:7:00 PM (CT) | New York Jets at Indianapolis (NBC-TV) |
AFC:NOON (CT) | Baltimore at Kansas City (CBS-TV) |
NFC:3:30 PM (CT) | Green Bay at Philadelphia (FOX-TV) |
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NFC:3:30 PM (CT) | New Orleans at St. Louis/Seattle (NBC-TV) |
AFC:7:00 PM (CT) | New York Jets at Indianapolis (NBC-TV) |
AFC:NOON (CT) | Baltimore at Kansas City (CBS-TV) |
NFC:3:30 PM (CT) | Green Bay at Philadelphia (FOX-TV) |
PASADENA—Andy Dalton threw a touchdown pass and ran for a score, linebacker Tank Carder swatted down a 2-point conversion pass attempt with 2 minutes to play, and No. 3 TCU completed a perfect season with its first Rose Bowl victory, 21-19 over fourth-ranked Wisconsin on Saturday. Bart Johnson caught an early TD pass and recovered a late onside kick for the Mountain West champion Horned Frogs (13-0), who followed up their second straight unbeaten regular season by busting the BCS in dramatic fashion.Dalton passed for 219 yards for TCU, which won’t win the national title — that will go to either Auburn or Oregon after they meet in the BCS championship game in nine days.These ferocious Frogs still proved they can play with anybody on college football’s biggest stages.Montee Ball rushed for 132 yards and a late score for the Big Ten co-champion Badgers (11-2), whose loss capped a nightmare New Year’s Day for their conference. The Big Ten went 0-5 in bowl games Saturday, and the Badgers fell just short of a late rally when Carder made a defensive play that will live forever in TCU lore.TCU lost last year’s Fiesta Bowl to Boise State, but that’s still the only loss of the past two seasons for TCU, the first school from a non-automatic qualifying conference to play in the Rose Bowl since the advent of the BCS, but the Frogs were right at home in Pasadena.Luke Shivers’ 1-yard TD run put TCU ahead 21-13 early in the third quarter, but neither team scored again until Wisconsin mounted a 77-drive in the waning minutes. Montee Ball rushed for a 4-yard score with 2 minutes to play, but Carder made a perfectly timed leap at the line to bat down Scott Tolzien’s throw to the end zone. The intended receiver was open in the end zone.Johnson easily grabbed Wisconsin’s onside kick, and TCU rushed for a final first down to kill the clock.When the final seconds ticked off, the Frogs ran about the field in a frenzy, eventually collecting near the TCU band and the quarter of the Rose Bowl stands filled with purple-clad fans.And eventually the Frogs doused their coach, too.
NOTES—Big Ten teams went 0-5 on New Years Day.
Derrick Rose had 28 points and 11 assists and the Bulls won for the 13th time in 15 games, beating the struggling, short-handed Cleveland Cavaliers 100-91 on Saturday night.Sluggish in a win over New Jersey the previous day, the Bulls trailed by 10 against a team that was missing three of its best players. But they outscored Cleveland 32-9 in the third quarter and hung on after nearly blowing a 15-point lead in the fourth, sending the Cavaliers to their 16th loss in 17 games.Luol Deng had 23 points, and Carlos Boozer added 20 points and 11 rebounds.The Cavaliers hung in even though center Anderson Varejao (broken cheekbone) and guards Mo Williams (left hip flexor strain) and Daniel Gibson (left thigh contusion) were sidelined. They cut it to 92-89 on Antawn Jamison’s two free throws with 2:48 remaining but wound up with their 14th straight road loss.Rose converted a layup, Boozer hit one of two free throws, Kurt Thomas stripped J.J. Hickson underneath, and the Bulls prevailed despite missing three free throws in the final 36 seconds. Hickson scored 21 points. Jamison added 19, but the Cavaliers were 3 of 21 from the field in the third quarter — turning a 61-53 halftime lead turned into an 85-70 deficit.Cleveland was up 63-53 early in the third when the Bulls went on an 18-2 run and took control.A dunk and finger roll by Deng and a layup by Boozer made it 66-65 Bulls. Rose nailed a 3 from the wing and Thomas hit a jumper to make 71-65, capping the run with 5:51 left in the quarter.If ever there was a game that seemed made for a blowout, this was one. Afterall, Williams missed his second game. Varejao and Gibson were out of the lineup after being injured in a loss to Charlotte on Wednesday.Instead, the Cavaliers hit 23 of 42 shots while building a 61-53 halftime lead behind Jamison (14 points) and Hickson (12 points).
NOTES—With Williams and Gibson out, Ramon Sessions started at point guard…..The Cavaliers have not won a road game since Nov. 9, when they beat New Jersey 93-91…..Thomas led the Bulls with 13 rebounds.
DALLAS—Taylor Potts threw four touchdown passes and scored another on a trick play, and Eric Stephens ran 86 yards for a TD to carry Texas Tech to a 45-38 victory over Northwestern in the inaugural TicketCity Bowl.The Red Raiders (8-5) led by 22 points early in the second half, then had to sweat it out.The Wildcats (7-6) got within a touchdown twice in the fourth quarter, with freshmen quarterbacks Evan Watkins and Kain Colter combining to lead three straight touchdown drives and Jordan Maybin returning an interception 39 yards for a score with 5:37 left.The game wasn’t decided until the final play, a heave by Watkins that was intercepted.NU remains winless in a bowl since 1949. The Wildcats have lost eight in a row, including three straight close ones.The game was played at the Cotton Bowl, site of more bowl games than any stadium but the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. The building was empty last bowl season because the namesake game moved to Cowboys Stadium. Attendance was announced as 40,121, well under half of capacity; the actual crowd was several thousand less. Not even a game sponsored by a ticket-seller could lure folks other than fans of both schools to an 11 a.m. kickoff on a windy New Year’s morning with temperatures in the 30s.It turned out to be quite a contest — 927 yards of total offense and an inspired comeback by the Wildcats.There were all sorts of oddities and game-changing plays, from a flubbed hold on an extra-point kick to Tech coach Tommy Tuberville trying an onside kick while leading 38-17 late in the third quarter. Soon, Northwestern was within 38-31.Potts held them off, though, going 43 of 56 for 369 yards. He ran twice for 19 yards, 13 coming when he threw the ball to Austin Zouzalik on the right side of the field and Zouzalik threw it back to him. Potts scored easily behind a convoy of blockers. The throwback was ruled a lateral, so it went down as a rushing play. Stephens became Tech’s main running back because of an injury to Baron Batch. He ran 14 times for 128 yards.His big play was the second-longest in a bowl game at this stadium, topped only by the 95-yarder in the 1954 Cotton Bowl that was awarded when Alabama’s Tommy Lewis came off the bench to tackle Rice’s Dickie Maegle.Stephens also contributed to the dramatic finish by failing to gain enough first downs to let Tech run out the clock.Lyle Leong caught 10 passes for 118 yards and two touchdowns.Watkins, a redshirt freshman who took over when Dan Persa tore an Achilles’ tendon in mid-November, was 10 of 21 for 76 yards and a touchdown. He also ran for a 13 yards and a touchdown.Colter, his smaller, speedy substitute, ran 18 times for 105 yards and two touchdowns. He also threw for 36 yards.Midway through the fourth quarter, Northwestern safety Hunter Bates — son of former Dallas Cowboys standout Bill Bates — broke a leg and had to be carted off the field.NU scored its most points of the season against a Tech defense run by line coach Sam McElroy. He took over following the departure of coordinator James Willis earlier this week. His unit was solid in the first half, then gave up scores on the first four drives it faced in the second half.
Northwestern’s Jordan Mabin intercepts a pass intended for Texas Tech’s Detron Lewis. (AP) |
EL PASO—Freshman Tommy Rees passed for 201 yards and two touchdowns to Michael Floyd as Notre Dame beat the Hurricanes 33-17 in the Sun Bowl on Friday, making Brian Kelly the first Fighting Irish coach to win a bowl game in his first season.After a 20-year break, it was all Irish in the latest installment of a storied rivalry that became known during the 1980s as Catholics versus Convicts.Notre Dame (8-5) reached the end zone on three of its first four possessions. Rees tossed TD passes of 3 and 34 yards to Floyd and Cierre Wood broke free on a 34-yard scoring run before David Ruffer added field goals from 40, 50 and 19 yards.The Irish closed with four victories to cap an up-and-down season under Kelly. After a 1-3 start, they endured the death of the team’s student videographer and the loss of quarterback Dayne Crist to a season-ending injury during a stunning 28-27 loss to Tulsa in South Bend.The Irish recovered to beat Utah, Army and USC down the stretch, then handled Miami (7-6) easily for Notre Dame’s second straight postseason victory.The Hurricanes trailed 30-3 going into the fourth quarter, completing a season in which their coach was fired with an ugly loss.Notre Dame’s 30th bowl appearance was a New Year’s Eve fiesta in El Paso, a predominantly Roman Catholic city on the Mexican border that embraced the Irish with huge cheers from the first glimpse of a golden helmet coming from the locker rooms.Rees hardly looked like a freshman, completing 15 of 29 attempts without an interception. His performance marked the first time a first-year starting quarterback at Notre Dame won a bowl game.Floyd had a big day, too, with six catches for 109 yards receiving, and his numbers would have been even better if he’d brought in what would have been two more TD catches.The game sold out in 21 hours, the fastest in the Sun Bowl’s 77-year history, and the crowd of 54,021 set a bowl attendance record. Many fans wore Notre Dame jackets to ward off the 34-degree weather as a round of overnight snow dusted the Franklin Mountains.The warm-weather Hurricanes — many wearing head covers under their helmets — struggled much of the afternoon to get anything going.Miami scored twice in the fourth quarter when Stephen Morris threw a 6-yard TD pass to Leonard Hankerson and a 42-yard scoring play to Tommy Streeter, but it was too late by then.The Canes trailed 27-0 late in the first half and the player with the most catches from a Hurricanes quarterback was Irish safety Harrison Smith, who intercepted three passes. Robert Blanton also had an interception during Miami’s turnover binge.Not everything went perfectly for Notre Dame. Ruffer was wide right a 36-yard try late in the third quarter, his first miss on 24 career attempts.Still, it was a rough finish to a tough season for the Hurricanes, who saw coach Randy Shannon fired in November. With interim coach Jeff Stoutland working the game for Miami from the sideline, newly hired coach Al Golden watched from a Sun Bowl suite.Jacory Harris started at quarterback for the Canes after Morris sprained an ankle in practice this week. Harris couldn’t get anything going, completing just 4 of 7 with three interceptions. Morris took over the second quarter and finished.