1986 Gator Bowl

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DateDecember 27, 1986
Season1986
1986 Mazda Gator Bowl
1234 Total
Stanford 00714 21
Clemson 72000 27
DateDecember 27, 1986
Season1986
StadiumGator Bowl Stadium
LocationJacksonville, Florida
MVPRodney Williams (QB, Clemson)
Brad Muster (RB, Stanford)
RefereeRichard Burleson (SEC)
Attendance80,104
United States TV coverage
NetworkCBS
AnnouncersVerne Lundquist, Pat Haden, and John Dockery
Gator Bowl
 < 1985  1987 > 

The 1986 Gator Bowl (December) game was a post-season college football bowl game between the Stanford Cardinal and the Clemson Tigers, played on December 27, 1986, at Gator Bowl Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida. It was the 42nd edition of the bowl game. Through a sponsorship agreement announced in November, the bowl was officially known as the Mazda Gator Bowl.[1]

Stanford Cardinal

Under third-year head coach Jack Elway, Stanford was making its first bowl appearance since the 1978 Bluebonnet Bowl. The Cardinal was led by running back Brad Muster, who was only the second Cardinal back to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a season.[2] Stanford's starting quarterback, John Paye, was sidelined for the game due to a shoulder injury and backup Greg Ennis was named the starter.[2][3]

Clemson Tigers

The champions of the Atlantic Coast Conference, Clemson had recorded ties in its last two regular season games.[2] Under head coach Danny Ford, the Tigers were led by tailbacks Kenny Flowers and Terrence Flagler.[2]

Game summary

Clemson completely dominated the first half of the game, recording 291 yards of offense and 15 first downs, and scored touchdowns on runs from quarterback Rodney Williams and backs Chris Lancaster and Ray Williams.[3] David Treadwell added two field goals to put the Tigers up 27–0 at halftime.[3]

Stanford recovered in the second half, holding the Tigers scoreless while gradually bringing the score closer. Muster scored on a one-yard run in the third quarter, and then twice more on fourth quarter passes from Ennis.[3] The Cardinal had several chances to tie or win the game, but Ennis was intercepted inside the 10-yard line on one drive, and turned the ball over on downs with less than two minutes remaining.[3][4]

Scoring

Aftermath

References

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