1991 Freedom Bowl

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

{{Infobox NCAA football yearly game

|game_name=Freedom Bowl

|subheader = Freedom Bowl VIII

|title_sponsor=

|date_game_played=December 30

|year_game_played=1991

|football_season=1991

|home_name_short=San Diego State

|home_nickname=Aztecs

|home_record=8–3–1

|home_coach=Al Luginbill

|home_1q =7

|home_2q =7

|home_3q =0

|home_4q =3

|visitor_name_short=Tulsa

|visitor_nickname=Golden Hurricane

|visitor_record=9–2

|visitor_coach=David Rader

|visitor_rank_AP=22

|visitor_rank_coaches=25

|visitor_1q =7

|visitor_2q =7

|visitor_3q =7

|visitor_4q =7

|us_network=Raycom

|us_announcers=Phil Stone and Dave Rowe

|MVP=RB Ron Jackson (Tulsa)

|odds=

|first_game_ever_played=

|type=bg

|stadium=Anaheim Stadium

|city=Anaheim, California

|attendance=34,217

}}

The Freedom Bowl featured the San Diego State Aztecs and the Tulsa Golden Hurricane as their postseason bowl game to end the 1991 NCAA Division I-A football season for both teams.{{cite web | url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-12-31-sp-1283-story.html | title=Tulsa Runs San Diego State Aground | access-date=3 March 2016}}

Background

While the Aztecs finished second in the Western Athletic Conference, they were invited to their first bowl game since the 1986 Holiday Bowl. They were led by Marshall Faulk, who in his freshman year ran for 1,429 yards rushing and scored 23 total touchdowns. Meanwhile, this was Tulsa's 2nd bowl appearance in three seasons.

Game summary

Ron Jackson scored all of Tulsa's touchdowns four in total with three of them giving Tulsa the lead and the final being the exclamation point. He rushed for 211 yards on 46 carries. Faulk gave the Aztecs the lead with a touchdown run, though Tulsa responded with by scoring two straight touchdown runs by Jackson. Lowery made the game tied at halftime with a touchdown run. But the Aztecs were stuffed in the second half, being held to a field goal with 83 total yards as Tulsa scored twice more and never looked back. A key moment in the game happened when quarterback/punter Gus Frerotte punted the ball to T. C. Wright with Tulsa leading 21–17. Wright was at his own eight when he fumbled the ball, and Billy Cole recovered for Tulsa. Two plays later, the Hurricane scored on Jackson's final touchdown to give Tulsa their first bowl win since 1964.{{cite web

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

|title=1991 Freedom 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

The Hurricane went into a slump from that point on, going 26–57–1 under Rader in the eight years after the game before being fired, in contrast to his 26–26 record before this game. The Freedom Bowl would play three more games before disbanding after 1994.

Statistics

class="wikitable"

! Statistics !! Tulsa !! SDSU

First Downs2321
Yards Rushing256189
Yards Passing122164
Total Yards378353
Punts-Average5-34.45-35.2
Fumbles-Lost4-13-2
Interceptions00
Penalties-Yards2-206-38

References

{{Reflist}}

{{1991 bowl game navbox}}

{{Freedom Bowl navbox}}

{{San Diego State Aztecs bowl game navbox}}

{{Tulsa Golden Hurricane bowl game navbox}}

Freedom Bowl

Category:Freedom Bowl

Category:1990s in Anaheim, California

Category:San Diego State Aztecs football bowl games

Category:Tulsa Golden Hurricane football bowl games

Freedom Bowl

Freedom Bowl

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