1948 Cotton Bowl Classic
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| 1948 Cotton Bowl Classic | |||||||||||||||||||
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| 12th Cotton Bowl Classic | |||||||||||||||||||
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| Date | January 1, 1948 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Season | 1947 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Stadium | Cotton Bowl | ||||||||||||||||||
| Location | Dallas, Texas | ||||||||||||||||||
| MVP | G Steve Suhey (Penn State) RB Doak Walker (SMU) | ||||||||||||||||||
| Referee | Abb Curtis (SWC; split crew: SWC, EAIFO) | ||||||||||||||||||
| Attendance | 43,000 | ||||||||||||||||||

The 1948 Cotton Bowl Classic was a post-season game between the SMU Mustangs and the Penn State Nittany Lions. It was the first interracial bowl game in the southern United States.[1] The game was a struggle of yardage with the final score being decided on a missed extra point.
SMU was coached by Matty Bell and led by Doak Walker, who was named All-American. SMU went unbeaten and had won the Southwest Conference championship.
Penn State was coached by Bob Higgins, who would retire after next season. They also went unbeaten as an Independent. Coincidentally, Higgins was the coach who had handed SMU their first bowl loss back in 1925.
First interracial bowl game

This was the first bowl game to feature African American players. Wallace Triplett and Dennis Hoggard played for Penn State after team captain Steve Suhey denied a request for the team to vote on whether to allow Triplett and Hoggard to play, saying the whole team would play or they would not attend at all.[2] The team stayed at the Dallas Air Naval Training base due to Triplett and Hoggard not being allowed in the cities' hotels. Triplett said that the crowd was not pleased with this being an interracial game, jeering and yelling profanity during the game.[3]