1949 Sun Bowl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

DateJanuary 1, 1949
Season1948
StadiumKidd Field
1949 Sun Bowl
15th Sun Bowl
1234Total
West Virginia 0714021
Texas Mines 060612
DateJanuary 1, 1949
Season1948
StadiumKidd Field
LocationEl Paso, Texas
RefereeHarry Phillips
Attendance13,000
Sun Bowl
  1948  1950  

The 1949 Sun Bowl was a college football postseason bowl game between the Texas Mines Miners and the West Virginia Mountaineers.

Controversy surrounded this game before it was played. In late November, the independent Lafayette Leopards of Easton, Pennsylvania, were invited to play in the Sun Bowl against Texas Mines, the second-place team in the Border Conference, under the condition that their star halfback, David Showell, an African-American, did not play. Four days later, Lafayette rejected the bid. West Virginia was selected to play against the Miners. The Lafayette–Texas Mines contest that was not held is referred to as "The Greatest Game They Never Played", which was turned into a song.[1]

This was the second bowl appearance for Texas Mines, and first since 1937, which was also in the Sun Bowl. This was West Virginia's first bowl game since 1938.

Game summary

After a scoreless first quarter, the Miners struck first quickly on a Harvey Gabrel touchdown dive. The extra point was not converted, leaving it at 6–0. The Mountaineers soon responded when James Walthall threw a 25-yard pass to Clarence Cox, who ran into the end zone to give West Virginia a 7–6 lead at halftime. They struck back in the second half with two James Devonshire touchdown runs before the third quarter ended to make the lead 21–6. Texas Mines closed the score to 21–12 on a Fred Wendt 60-yard kickoff return, but did not score again as West Virginia won.[2]

Statistics

Aftermath

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI