1968 Sugar Bowl

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DateJanuary 1, 1968
Season1967
1968 Sugar Bowl
34th Sugar Bowl
Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana, hosted the Sugar Bowl.
1234Total
Wyoming 0130013
LSU 0071320
DateJanuary 1, 1968
Season1967
StadiumTulane Stadium
LocationNew Orleans, Louisiana
MVPGlenn Smith (LSU RB)
FavoriteLSU by 7 [1]
RefereeJames M. Artley (SEC);
split crew: SEC, WAC)
Attendance78,963
United States TV coverage
NetworkNBC
AnnouncersCharlie Jones
Elmer Angsman
Sugar Bowl
  1967  1969  

The 1968 Sugar Bowl was the 34th edition of the college football bowl game, played at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Monday, January 1. The unranked LSU Tigers of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) rallied to top the undefeated and sixth-ranked Wyoming Cowboys of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC), 20–13.[2][3][4]

Entering the bowl season, Wyoming was the only undefeated team in the nation among major schools,[5] but LSU was favored by a touchdown, largely because it had faced a tougher schedule than the Cowboys and virtual home field advantage, as the Tigers were playing just eighty miles (130 km) from their campus.[1]

Wyoming

LSU

Game summary

The first game of a major bowl tripleheader (Rose, Orange) on NBC, it kicked off at 1 pm CST. Following morning rains, the game was played on soggy natural turf in clammy 45 °F (7 °C) temperatures.

After a scoreless first quarter, Wyoming drove eighty yards and scored on a one-yard sweep run from halfback Jim Kiick; Jerry DePoyster added field goals of 24 and 49 yards and the Cowboys led 13–0 at halftime.

In the third quarter, LSU running back Glenn Smith came off of the bench and scored on a one-yard touchdown run, making the score 13–7. In the fourth quarter, Tiger quarterback Nelson Stokley completed touchdown passes of eight and fourteen yards to end Tommy Morel as LSU rallied for a 20–13 win.[3][6] The last score occurred with more than four minutes remaining; quarterback Paul Toscano advanced the Cowboys deep into LSU territory, but Wyoming flanker Gene Huey was tackled in-bounds on the five-yard line and time ran out.[6]

Smith, a third-string sophomore from New Orleans' Holy Cross High School, entered the game late in the third quarter and was named the game's most valuable player.[4]

Scoring

First quarter

No scoring

Second quarter

Third quarter

  • LSU – Glenn Smith 1 run (Roy Hurd kick), 2:10

Fourth quarter

  • LSU – Tommy Morel 8 pass from Nelson Stokley (Hurd kick), 11:39
  • LSU – Morel 14 pass from Stokley (Hurd kick), 4:22
Source:[3][6][4]

Statistics

Aftermath

References

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