1963 Cotton Bowl Classic

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DateJanuary 1, 1963
Season1962
LocationDallas, Texas
1963 Cotton Bowl Classic
27th Cotton Bowl Classic
1234Total
LSU 037313
Texas 00000
DateJanuary 1, 1963
Season1962
StadiumCotton Bowl
LocationDallas, Texas
MVPLynn Amedee (LSU QB, PK)
Johnny Treadwell (Texas G)
FavoriteLSU (slight)[1][2]
RefereeBurns McKinney (SWC;
split crew: SWC, SEC)
Attendance75,504
PayoutUS$175,000 per team[3]
United States TV coverage
NetworkCBS
AnnouncersLindsey Nelson, Terry Brennan
Cotton Bowl Classic
  1962  1964  
The Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas, hosted the Cotton Bowl Classic.

The 1963 Cotton Bowl Classic was the 27th edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas, on Tuesday, January 1. Part of the 1962–63 bowl game season, the game featured the fourth-ranked Texas Longhorns of the Southwest Conference (SWC) and the #7 LSU Tigers of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).[1] LSU shut out the Longhorns, 13–0.[4][5][6]

Texas

The Longhorns were making their second of three consecutive Cotton Bowl appearances after winning the Southwest Conference again. They were unbeaten, with a tie at Rice.

LSU

The Tigers, who finished third in the Southeastern Conference, lost to Ole Miss and also tied Rice. LSU had won the Orange Bowl the previous season. They were making their first Cotton Bowl appearance since 1947, a scoreless tie (against Arkansas). This was head coach Charlie McClendon's first year at LSU, where he stayed through 1979.

Game summary

LSU quarterback Lynn Amedee's 23-yard field goal gave the Tigers a 3–0 halftime lead. Earlier, Texas' shoeless Tony Crosby had missed from 42 yards, which led to the scoring drive. This was the first field goal in the Cotton Bowl in 21 years.

Amedee recovered a Longhorn fumble at the 37 early in the third quarter and reserve quarterback Jimmy Field scored five plays later on a 22-yard touchdown run. Buddy Hamic recovered a Texas fumble to set up another Amedee field goal thirteen plays later, and the Tigers kept the Longhorns off the scoreboard.[4][5][7]

Scoring

First quarter

No scoring

Second quarter

Third quarter

  • LSU – Jimmy Field 22-yard touchdown run (Amedee kick)

Fourth quarter

  • LSU – Amedee 37-yard field goal
Source:[4][5]

Statistics

Aftermath

References

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