1958 Orange Bowl

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DateJanuary 1, 1958
Season1957
1958 Orange Bowl
24th Orange Bowl
Burdine Stadium in Miami, Florida, hosted the Orange Bowl.
1234Total
Duke 077721
Oklahoma 7772748
DateJanuary 1, 1958
Season1957
StadiumBurdine Stadium
LocationMiami, Florida
FavoriteOklahoma by 10 points[1]
RefereeJohn Donohue (ACC;
split crew: ACC, Big Seven)
Attendance76,318
United States TV coverage
NetworkCBS
AnnouncersChris Schenkel & Johnny Lujack
Orange Bowl
  1957  1959  

The 1958 Orange Bowl matched the Duke Blue Devils and the Oklahoma Sooners, played in Miami, on New Year's Day.[2]

This was Duke's second Orange Bowl appearance in four seasons, having last appeared in January 1955. They finished second in the Atlantic Coast Conference to North Carolina State, though Duke was invited due to the Wolfpack being on probation. Oklahoma was champion of the Big Seven Conference for the twelfth straight year and were in the Orange Bowl for the fourth time in six seasons (the two absences were due to the conference's rescinded no-repeat rule).

Game summary

Despite being outgained in yards and having more penalties, Oklahoma converted six Duke mistakes (2 fumbles, 2 interceptions, a blocked punt and a wild snap) into touchdowns. Dave Baker returned an interception 94 yards to give the Sooners an early 7–0 lead. Clendon Thomas scored on a touchdown run after a bad punt formation on Duke. Hal McElhaney narrowed the lead on his own touchdown run to make it 14-7 at halftime.

Carl Dodd increased Oklahoma's lead to 21–7, but George Dutrow ran in for a touchdown to make it 21–14 at the end of three quarters. Sandefer and Baker both scored in the fourth quarter and Hobby caught a pass from Baker as Oklahoma scored three times in three minutes on three more Duke turnovers to make it 41–14. McElhaney narrowed the lead on his second touchdown of the game. Duke was given another chance to narrow it again, but the Sooners intercepted George Harris' pass for the second time as Dick Carpenter returned it for a touchdown and sealed the game for Oklahoma, who won their third Orange Bowl in five seasons.[3][4]

Aftermath

Statistics

References

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