1995 Orange Bowl

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DateJanuary 1, 1995
Season1994
1995 FedEx Orange Bowl
Bowl Coalition National Championship Game
61st Orange Bowl
The Miami Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida, hosted the Orange Bowl.
1234Total
Miami 1007017
Nebraska 0721524
DateJanuary 1, 1995
Season1994
StadiumMiami Orange Bowl
LocationMiami, Florida
MVPNebraska QB Tommie Frazier and Miami WR Chris T. Jones
FavoriteMiami by 1 (37)[1]
RefereeRon Winter (Big Ten)
Attendance81,753
United States TV coverage
NetworkNBC
AnnouncersTom Hammond (play-by-play)
Cris Collinsworth (analyst)
John Dockery (sideline)
Nielsen ratings18.9
Orange Bowl
  1994  1996 (Jan)  
College football championship game
  1994 1996 (Bowl Alliance)  

The 1995 Orange Bowl was a college football bowl game played on January 1, 1995, as the 61st edition of the Orange Bowl and the national championship game for the 1994 season. It featured the Nebraska Cornhuskers of the Big Eight and the Miami Hurricanes of the Big East. The game was a rematch of the historic 1984 Orange Bowl. As of 2020, the 1995 Orange Bowl holds the record for Orange Bowl attendance at 81,753.

Although this was the Bowl Coalition's National Championship Game, it was a match-up of the first and third-ranked teams in the country, as second-ranked Penn State was obligated to play in the 1995 Rose Bowl as the Big Ten champion.

This was the last national championship game to be played at one of the participating teams’ home stadiums until 2025, which also featured Miami playing for the title at their current home stadium, Hard Rock Stadium.

Miami

Big East champion Miami entered 10–1, ranked third in the AP and Coaches polls.

Nebraska

Big Eight champion Nebraska entered 12–0, ranked first in the AP and Coaches polls.

Game

Miami placekicker Dane Prewitt scored the first points of the game with a 44-yard field goal to open up a 3–0 Miami lead. Miami quarterback Frank Costa fired a 35-yard touchdown pass to Trent Jones for a 10–0 Miami lead. Nebraska quarterback Brook Berringer threw a 19-yard touchdown pass to tight end Mark Gilman before halftime, to close the deficit to 10–7. In the third quarter, Costa threw a 44-yard touchdown pass to Jonathan Harris, to open a 17–7 lead.

Nebraska outside linebacker Dwayne Harris sacked Costa in the end zone for a safety before the end of the third quarter, and Miami led 17–9. Fullback Cory Schlesinger scored on a 15-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter to trim the lead to 17–15. Tommie Frazier then found tight end Eric Alford in the back of the end zone to tie the game, 17–17. A 14-yard touchdown run by Schlesinger gave Nebraska a 24–17 lead, and the defense held on to win the national championship.

Scoring summary

QtrTimeTeamDetail[2]MIANU
17:54MIADane Prewitt 44-yd field goal30
0:04MIATrent Jones 35-yd pass from Frank Costa (Prewitt kick)100
27:54NUMark Gilman 19-yd pass from Brook Berringer (Tom Sieler kick)107
313:19MIAJonathan Harris 44-yd pass from Costa (Prewitt kick)177
11:35NUCosta sacked in end zone by Dwayne Harris179
47:38NUCory Schlesinger 15-yd rush (Eric Alford pass from Tommie Frazier)1717
2:46NUSchlesinger 14-yd rush (Sieler kick)1724

Team statistics

Aftermath

References

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