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1979 Cotton Bowl Classic

The 1979 Cotton Bowl Classic was the 43rd edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas, on Monday, January 1. Part of the 1978–79 bowl game season, it matched the tenth-ranked Notre Dame Fighting Irish, an independent, and the #9 Houston Cougars of the Southwest Conference (SWC).

1979 Cotton Bowl Classic
43rd Cotton Bowl Classic
"The Chicken Soup Game"
1234 Total
Notre Dame 120023 35
Houston 713140 34
DateJanuary 1, 1979
Season1978
StadiumCotton Bowl
LocationDallas, Texas
MVPJoe Montana (Notre Dame QB)
David Hodge (Houston LB)
FavoriteNotre Dame by 3 points[1][2]
RefereePete Williams (SEC)
Attendance72,000 [3]
(32,500 est. actual)[4]
United States TV coverage
NetworkCBS
AnnouncersLindsey Nelson, Paul Hornung, and Frank Glieber

Popularly called the Chicken Soup Game,[5] it took place on an unusually cold day, the day after the worst ice storm in Dallas in thirty years.[6][7] Quarterback Joe Montana, who had the flu,[7] rallied Notre Dame to victory in the second half after eating a bowl of chicken soup. [8] The Irish outscored the Cougars 23–0 in the fourth quarter, scoring the game-tying touchdown and game-winning extra point with no time remaining.[9]

Teams edit

Notre Dame edit

Houston edit

Pre-game information edit

Televised by CBS, the game kicked off shortly after 1 p.m. CST, as did the Sugar Bowl on ABC.[10]

The seats at the Cotton Bowl were half empty despite the fact that the game was officially sold out. This was presumably caused by the "worst icestorm in 30 years," which had recently hit the Dallas area. "Some 50,000 homes were" allegedly "out of electricity the day before."[11]

The game-time temperature was 22 °F (–5 °C) and an 18-mph wind caused a chill factor of –6 °F (–21 °C). The weather was expected to have an impact on the field conditions, as the "old artificial turf field," which was scheduled to be torn up after the season, was "icy at spots."[11]

Game summary edit

After Notre Dame took a 12–0 lead on two touchdowns in the first quarter, Houston scored 34 unanswered points to go up 34–12, ten minutes into the second half. At that point, Joe Montana, who had sat out the beginning of the half because of hypothermia, returned to the game and eventually led Notre Dame to a 35–34 win on two late touchdown drives, with the game-winning score occurring as time had expired.

First half edit

All the scoring in the first half occurred off turnovers. Both teams scored two touchdowns, which gave Houston a 14–12 lead after a missed extra point and an unsuccessful two-point try by Notre Dame.

In the first quarter, Notre Dame scored the first twelve points of the game, with its first score coming on a rushing touchdown by Joe Montana. After recovering a muffed punt deep in Notre Dame territory, Houston scored a touchdown on a 3rd-and-13 completion by Danny Davis to Willis Adams.

The Cougars added another touchdown on a fourth-and-goal play after recovering another Notre Dame fumble deep in Irish territory. Late in the first half, two interceptions by Montana led to two field goals for Houston. Aided by the direction of the wind, Houston had thus gained the lead in the second quarter and led 20–12 at halftime.

Second half edit

When the teams returned to the field to start the second half, Notre Dame quarterback Joe Montana remained in the locker room.[5] During the game, Montana's body temperature had dipped to 96 °F (35.6 °C) and he had to fight off hypothermia. He was forced to retire to the locker room where the Notre Dame medical staff, led by orthopedic surgeon Les Bodner, warmed Montana by feeding him chicken bouillon soup, originally intended for offensive lineman Tim Foley, and covering him with warm blankets.[12]

In the third quarter, Houston built a 34–12 lead on two touchdowns coming on option running plays by quarterback Danny Davis. Montana returned to the field after missing just over ten minutes of game time and was cheered actively by the Notre Dame fans.[12] He led Notre Dame to its first first down of the second half, but threw interceptions on his first two drives of the half (for a total of four in the game).

Playing with the wind in the fourth quarter, however, Notre Dame cut the Houston lead to six points. Having blocked a Houston punt on the Cougars' previous drive, the Irish repeated that feat, with Steve Cichy running the ball in for a touchdown. On Notre Dame's next offensive possession, Montana threw a 30-yard completion to Jerome Heavens and scored a rushing touchdown. Having converted a two-point attempt after both of these touchdowns, Notre Dame had closed the gap to six points to make the score 34–28 Houston.

With a half minute left and fourth down and one on their own 29, Houston went for the first down and was stopped.[13] With six seconds left on the eight-yard-line, Montana threw the ball out of bounds and only two seconds remained.[12]

The final play was a touchdown pass to receiver Kris Haines as time expired. Placekicker Joe Unis was forced to kick the extra point twice after a Notre Dame penalty, but was successful both times, and Notre Dame won by a point, 35–34.[9][14][3]

With a high temperature of 24 °F (−4 °C), a strong 30 mph (50 km/h) north wind impacted both the subzero wind chill and the outcome of the game;[13] all but seven of the game's 69 combined points were scored by the team defending the north end zone.[15] Because of the weather, the stadium was less than half full in the first half and as few as 7,000 remained at game's end.[4]

Scoring edit

First quarter

  • Notre Dame – Joe Montana 3-yard run (kick failed)
  • Notre Dame – Pete Buchanan 1-yard run (pass failed)
  • Houston – Willis Adams 15-yard pass from Danny Davis (Kenny Hatfield kick)

Second quarter

  • Houston – Randy Love 1-yard run (Hatfield kick)
  • Houston – Hatfield 21-yard field goal
  • Houston – Hatfield 24-yard field goal

Third quarter

  • Houston – Davis 2-yard run (Hatfield kick)
  • Houston – Davis 5-yard run (Hatfield kick)

Fourth quarter

  • Notre Dame – Steve Cichy 33-yard blocked punt return (Vagas Ferguson pass from Montana)
  • Notre Dame – Montana 2-yard run (Kris Haines pass from Montana)
  • Notre Dame – Haines 8-yard pass from Montana (Joe Unis kick)

Statistics edit

Statistics Notre Dame    Houston   
First downs 13 16
Rushing yards 40–131 63–229
Passing yards 163 60
Passing 13–37–4 4–13–0
Total offense 77–294 73–289
Fumbles–lost 3–3 6–3
Turnovers 7 3
Punts–average 7–26 10–25
Penalties–yards 8–74 6–39
Source:[9][13]

Aftermath edit

The game is one of the most notable games in Montana's entire football career.[12] It was his final game for Notre Dame and helped to reinforce his image with football fans as "The Comeback Kid." Six months after the game, Notre Dame put out a promotional film called Seven and a Half Minutes to Destiny. Notre Dame head coach Dan Devine called the movie a "Joe Montana film."[12]

The Cougars returned the following year and staged a dramatic win of their own, defeating Nebraska 17–14 in the final seconds.

Montana went on to a hall of fame career in the National Football League (NFL), winning four Super Bowls with the San Francisco 49ers.

References edit

  1. ^ "Houston, Irish want to have fun". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Associated Press. January 1, 1979. p. 32.
  2. ^ "Irish are 'serious' for Cougs". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. January 1, 1979. p. 21.
  3. ^ a b "1979 Classic Recap" (PDF). cottonbowl.com. January 1, 1979.
  4. ^ a b "Montana, Haines team up final time for Notre Dame". Pittsburgh Press. January 2, 1979. p. B4.
  5. ^ a b "The List: Greatest Bowl Games". ESPN. from the original on December 19, 2008. Retrieved January 7, 2009.
  6. ^ "Notre Dame hot on Dallas ice". Reading Eagle. (Pennsylvania). Associated Press. January 2, 1979. p. 25.
  7. ^ a b Looney, Douglas S. (January 8, 1979). "Cotton Bowl". Sports Illustrated. p. 14.
  8. ^ Anderson, Dave (January 18, 1994). "Joe Cool has coped with cold". New York Times. p. B13.
  9. ^ a b c "Long-practiced pass gives Irish victory over Houston, weather". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). UPI. January 2, 1979. p. 2D.
  10. ^ "Sports menu: television". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). January 1, 1979. p. 20.
  11. ^ a b Reports given during game broadcast
  12. ^ a b c d e "Born to be a quarterback". cnnsi.com. August 13, 1999. from the original on August 9, 2007. Retrieved July 22, 2007.
  13. ^ a b c "Houston's big gamble backfired". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Associated Press. January 2, 1979. p. 17.
  14. ^ Mike Jones, "Irish windfall thaws UH lead, 35–34," Dallas Morning News, January 2, 1979, http://www.whas11.com/sharedcontent/dws/spt/colleges/cottonbowl/history/1979.html[permanent dead link] (accessed November 26, 2007).
  15. ^ (PDF). p. 120. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 6, 2018.

External links edit

  • Irishlegends.com – Review of the game

1979, cotton, bowl, classic, 43rd, edition, college, football, bowl, game, played, cotton, bowl, dallas, texas, monday, january, part, 1978, bowl, game, season, matched, tenth, ranked, notre, dame, fighting, irish, independent, houston, cougars, southwest, con. The 1979 Cotton Bowl Classic was the 43rd edition of the college football bowl game played at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas Texas on Monday January 1 Part of the 1978 79 bowl game season it matched the tenth ranked Notre Dame Fighting Irish an independent and the 9 Houston Cougars of the Southwest Conference SWC 1979 Cotton Bowl Classic43rd Cotton Bowl Classic The Chicken Soup Game Notre Dame Fighting Irish Houston Cougars 8 3 9 2 Independent SWC35 34Head coach Dan Devine Head coach Bill YeomanAPCoaches109 APCoaches9111234 TotalNotre Dame 120023 35Houston 713140 34DateJanuary 1 1979Season1978StadiumCotton BowlLocationDallas TexasMVPJoe Montana Notre Dame QB David Hodge Houston LB FavoriteNotre Dame by 3 points 1 2 RefereePete Williams SEC Attendance72 000 3 32 500 est actual 4 United States TV coverageNetworkCBSAnnouncersLindsey Nelson Paul Hornung and Frank GlieberCotton Bowl Classic lt 1978 1980 gt Popularly called the Chicken Soup Game 5 it took place on an unusually cold day the day after the worst ice storm in Dallas in thirty years 6 7 Quarterback Joe Montana who had the flu 7 rallied Notre Dame to victory in the second half after eating a bowl of chicken soup 8 The Irish outscored the Cougars 23 0 in the fourth quarter scoring the game tying touchdown and game winning extra point with no time remaining 9 Contents 1 Teams 1 1 Notre Dame 1 2 Houston 2 Pre game information 3 Game summary 3 1 First half 3 2 Second half 3 3 Scoring 4 Statistics 5 Aftermath 6 References 7 External linksTeams editMain article 1978 NCAA Division I A football season Notre Dame edit Main article 1978 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team Houston edit Main article 1978 Houston Cougars football teamPre game information editTelevised by CBS the game kicked off shortly after 1 p m CST as did the Sugar Bowl on ABC 10 The seats at the Cotton Bowl were half empty despite the fact that the game was officially sold out This was presumably caused by the worst icestorm in 30 years which had recently hit the Dallas area Some 50 000 homes were allegedly out of electricity the day before 11 The game time temperature was 22 F 5 C and an 18 mph wind caused a chill factor of 6 F 21 C The weather was expected to have an impact on the field conditions as the old artificial turf field which was scheduled to be torn up after the season was icy at spots 11 Game summary editAfter Notre Dame took a 12 0 lead on two touchdowns in the first quarter Houston scored 34 unanswered points to go up 34 12 ten minutes into the second half At that point Joe Montana who had sat out the beginning of the half because of hypothermia returned to the game and eventually led Notre Dame to a 35 34 win on two late touchdown drives with the game winning score occurring as time had expired First half edit All the scoring in the first half occurred off turnovers Both teams scored two touchdowns which gave Houston a 14 12 lead after a missed extra point and an unsuccessful two point try by Notre Dame In the first quarter Notre Dame scored the first twelve points of the game with its first score coming on a rushing touchdown by Joe Montana After recovering a muffed punt deep in Notre Dame territory Houston scored a touchdown on a 3rd and 13 completion by Danny Davis to Willis Adams The Cougars added another touchdown on a fourth and goal play after recovering another Notre Dame fumble deep in Irish territory Late in the first half two interceptions by Montana led to two field goals for Houston Aided by the direction of the wind Houston had thus gained the lead in the second quarter and led 20 12 at halftime Second half edit When the teams returned to the field to start the second half Notre Dame quarterback Joe Montana remained in the locker room 5 During the game Montana s body temperature had dipped to 96 F 35 6 C and he had to fight off hypothermia He was forced to retire to the locker room where the Notre Dame medical staff led by orthopedic surgeon Les Bodner warmed Montana by feeding him chicken bouillon soup originally intended for offensive lineman Tim Foley and covering him with warm blankets 12 In the third quarter Houston built a 34 12 lead on two touchdowns coming on option running plays by quarterback Danny Davis Montana returned to the field after missing just over ten minutes of game time and was cheered actively by the Notre Dame fans 12 He led Notre Dame to its first first down of the second half but threw interceptions on his first two drives of the half for a total of four in the game Playing with the wind in the fourth quarter however Notre Dame cut the Houston lead to six points Having blocked a Houston punt on the Cougars previous drive the Irish repeated that feat with Steve Cichy running the ball in for a touchdown On Notre Dame s next offensive possession Montana threw a 30 yard completion to Jerome Heavens and scored a rushing touchdown Having converted a two point attempt after both of these touchdowns Notre Dame had closed the gap to six points to make the score 34 28 Houston With a half minute left and fourth down and one on their own 29 Houston went for the first down and was stopped 13 With six seconds left on the eight yard line Montana threw the ball out of bounds and only two seconds remained 12 The final play was a touchdown pass to receiver Kris Haines as time expired Placekicker Joe Unis was forced to kick the extra point twice after a Notre Dame penalty but was successful both times and Notre Dame won by a point 35 34 9 14 3 With a high temperature of 24 F 4 C a strong 30 mph 50 km h north wind impacted both the subzero wind chill and the outcome of the game 13 all but seven of the game s 69 combined points were scored by the team defending the north end zone 15 Because of the weather the stadium was less than half full in the first half and as few as 7 000 remained at game s end 4 Scoring edit First quarter Notre Dame Joe Montana 3 yard run kick failed Notre Dame Pete Buchanan 1 yard run pass failed Houston Willis Adams 15 yard pass from Danny Davis Kenny Hatfield kick Second quarter Houston Randy Love 1 yard run Hatfield kick Houston Hatfield 21 yard field goal Houston Hatfield 24 yard field goalThird quarter Houston Davis 2 yard run Hatfield kick Houston Davis 5 yard run Hatfield kick Fourth quarter Notre Dame Steve Cichy 33 yard blocked punt return Vagas Ferguson pass from Montana Notre Dame Montana 2 yard run Kris Haines pass from Montana Notre Dame Haines 8 yard pass from Montana Joe Unis kick Statistics editStatistics Notre Dame Houston First downs 13 16Rushing yards 40 131 63 229Passing yards 163 60Passing 13 37 4 4 13 0Total offense 77 294 73 289Fumbles lost 3 3 6 3Turnovers 7 3Punts average 7 26 10 25Penalties yards 8 74 6 39Source 9 13 Aftermath editThe game is one of the most notable games in Montana s entire football career 12 It was his final game for Notre Dame and helped to reinforce his image with football fans as The Comeback Kid Six months after the game Notre Dame put out a promotional film called Seven and a Half Minutes to Destiny Notre Dame head coach Dan Devine called the movie a Joe Montana film 12 The Cougars returned the following year and staged a dramatic win of their own defeating Nebraska 17 14 in the final seconds Montana went on to a hall of fame career in the National Football League NFL winning four Super Bowls with the San Francisco 49ers References edit Houston Irish want to have fun Pittsburgh Post Gazette Associated Press January 1 1979 p 32 Irish are serious for Cougs Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Associated Press January 1 1979 p 21 a b 1979 Classic Recap PDF cottonbowl com January 1 1979 a b Montana Haines team up final time for Notre Dame Pittsburgh Press January 2 1979 p B4 a b The List Greatest Bowl Games ESPN Archived from the original on December 19 2008 Retrieved January 7 2009 Notre Dame hot on Dallas ice Reading Eagle Pennsylvania Associated Press January 2 1979 p 25 a b Looney Douglas S January 8 1979 Cotton Bowl Sports Illustrated p 14 Anderson Dave January 18 1994 Joe Cool has coped with cold New York Times p B13 a b c Long practiced pass gives Irish victory over Houston weather Eugene Register Guard Oregon UPI January 2 1979 p 2D Sports menu television Spokesman Review Spokane Washington January 1 1979 p 20 a b Reports given during game broadcast a b c d e Born to be a quarterback cnnsi com August 13 1999 Archived from the original on August 9 2007 Retrieved July 22 2007 a b c Houston s big gamble backfired Pittsburgh Post Gazette Associated Press January 2 1979 p 17 Mike Jones Irish windfall thaws UH lead 35 34 Dallas Morning News January 2 1979 http www whas11 com sharedcontent dws spt colleges cottonbowl history 1979 html permanent dead link accessed November 26 2007 Notre Dame Football Supplement Bowl Game Recaps PDF p 120 Archived from the original PDF on July 6 2018 External links editIrishlegends com Review of the game Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1979 Cotton Bowl Classic amp oldid 1169037344, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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