1989 Independence Bowl

{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}

{{Infobox NCAA football yearly game

|game_name=Independence Bowl

|subheader =

|title_sponsor=

|date_game_played=December 16

|year_game_played=1989

|football_season=1989

|home_name_short=Tulsa

|home_nickname=Golden Hurricane

|home_record=6–5

|home_conference=Independent

|home_coach=David Rader

|home_1q =7

|home_2q =10

|home_3q =7

|home_4q =0

|MVP= QB Bill Musgrave (Oregon)
DB Chris Oldham (Oregon)

|visitor_name_short=Oregon

|visitor_nickname=Ducks

|visitor_record=7–4

|visitor_conference=Pac-10

|visitor_coach=Rich Brooks

|visitor_1q =3

|visitor_2q =7

|visitor_3q =7

|visitor_4q =10

|us_network=Mizlou

|us_announcers=

|odds=Oregon by 16

|first_game_ever_played=

|type=bg

|stadium=Independence Stadium

|city=Shreveport, Louisiana

|referee= Al Ford (SEC)

|attendance=44,621

}}

The 1989 Independence Bowl was the final Independence Bowl without sponsorship. It featured the Oregon Ducks and the Tulsa Golden Hurricane.

Background

This was Tulsa's first bowl appearance since 1976, also in the Independence Bowl. This was Oregon's first bowl game since 1963. Oregon finished tied for second in the Pacific-10 Conference with Washington (who went to the Freedom Bowl) and Arizona (who went to the Copper Bowl). This was their highest finish in the conference since 1970.

Game summary

Brett Adams gave Tulsa the lead with a touchdown run early in the game, but Oregon responded with two long drives that culminated with a Musgrave touchdown pass and a field goal to take a 10–7 lead. Tulsa tied the game with two minutes remaining in the second quarter to make it 10–10. But as Oregon went to punt late in the first half, Herbert Harvey blocked the punt and Derrick Williams recovered it and ran 21 yards for a touchdown that gave Tulsa a 17-10 lead heading into halftime. Adams added his second touchdown run in the third quarter to make it 24–10 Tulsa. But Oregon would score twice in six minutes on Musgrave passing and rushing touchdowns to tie the game at 24 early in the fourth quarter. With just over three minutes to play, a Tulsa fumble recovery was overturned by the officials, which kept Oregon's drive alive. That drive culminated in a field goal to give the Ducks a 27-24 lead. That field goal would prove to be the game-winner, giving Oregon their first bowl win since 1963.{{cite web

|url=http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/tuls/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/2012-13/misc_non_event/TulsaFootballHistory.pdf

|title=1989 Independence Bowl

|page=104

|work=Tulsa Golden Hurricane Football Media Guide

|publisher=Tulsa Golden Hurricane Athletics

|accessdate=January 17, 2015

|archive-date=March 4, 2016

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304085825/http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/tuls/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/2012-13/misc_non_event/TulsaFootballHistory.pdf

|url-status=dead

}}

Aftermath

Oregon has returned to the Independence Bowl just once since this game, in 1992. Tulsa would make its next appearance in the Independence Bowl in 2015.

Statistics

class="wikitable"

! Statistics !! Oregon !! Tulsa

First Downs1614
Yards Rushing14070
Yards Passing320183
Total Yards460253
Punts-Average3-23.55-34.8
Fumbles-Lost2-13-1
Interceptions22
Penalties-Yards5-491-1

References

{{Reflist}}

{{1989 bowl game navbox}}

{{Independence Bowl navbox}}

{{Oregon Ducks bowl game navbox}}

{{Tulsa Golden Hurricane bowl game navbox}}

Independence Bowl

Category:Independence Bowl

Category:Oregon Ducks football bowl games

Category:Tulsa Golden Hurricane football bowl games

Independence

Category:December 1989 sports events in the United States

{{Collegefootball-bowl-stub}}