1995 Liberty Bowl

1995 Liberty Bowl
1234 Total
Stanford 0760 13
East Carolina 7903 19
Date December 30, 1995
Season 1995
Stadium Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium
Location Memphis, Tennessee
MVP Kwame Ellis (CB), Stanford
Attendance 47,398
United States TV coverage
Network ABC

The 1995 Liberty Bowl game was a college football bowl game between the Stanford Cardinal and the East Carolina Pirates played on December 30, 1995 at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium in Memphis, Tennessee. It was the tenth edition of the bowl game.

Although East Carolina did not reach the end zone on offense—they scored on four Chad Holcomb field goals and a Daren Hart interception return—that effort, combined with strong defense, was enough to defeat Stanford 19–13. The Cardinal scored the game's only offensive touchdown, and Kwame Ellis's return of a blocked punt for a second score contributed to his being named the game's MVP in a losing effort.

Teams

Stanford Cardinal

Led by first-year coach Tyrone Willingham who replaced Bill Walsh, the Cardinal had been expected to finish last in the Pac-10; instead, the team finished with a 7–3–1 record, good enough for fourth in the conference.[1] Stanford was led offensively by quarterback Mark Butterfield, who had thrown for over 2,500 yards and 19 touchdowns during the season and running back Anthony Bookman, who had run for 900 yards.[1][2]

East Carolina Pirates

East Carolina was led by fourth-year head coach Steve Logan. The Pirates were returning to the Liberty Bowl for the second-straight year after having been blown out 30–0 in the 1994 Liberty Bowl. East Carolina was led by quarterback Marcus Crandell, who had thrown for over 2,700 yards and 18 touchdowns and as a junior, was already East Carolina's all-time passing and offensive yardage leader.[2][3]

Game summary

Despite the offensive credentials of both teams, the game turned out to showcase the defenses of both teams. Stanford took the opening kickoff into East Carolina territory before the drive failed. On its next possession, Stanford appeared to be driving again, but Butterfield's pass was intercepted by Daren Hart, who raced 39 yards for a touchdown. Early in the second quarter, Pirate kicker Chad Holcomb kicked a 46-yard field goal. Stanford finally scored on an Adam Salina one-yard plunge to cut the lead to 10–7, but two Holcomb field goals in the last 2:01 of the half made the halftime score 16–7.[4]

Early in the second half, Stanford cornerback Kwame Ellis blocked a punt and returned it for a touchdown to make the score 16–13 after the missed PAT, but could get no closer as the Pirate defense kept Stanford off-balance all day, holding Butterfield to just 139 passing yards and Bookman to only 46 rushing yards.[4] A fourth Holcomb field goal sealed the victory for East Carolina.[3][4]

Ellis, who had blocked the punt and contributed to a defensive effort that did not allow any East Carolina offensive touchdowns, was named the game's MVP in a losing effort.[4]

Scoring

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

Aftermath

Willingham would remain at Stanford for seven seasons, eventually winning the conference championship and taking the team to the 2000 Rose Bowl, the team's first Rose Bowl since 1972. He left to become coach of Notre Dame in 2002.

East Carolina would move into the top 25 after this game, which ended Logan's most successful season at East Carolina where he coached until 2002. Quarterback Crandall had a successful career in the Canadian Football League, winning the Grey Cup Most Valuable Player in 2001 as quarterback of the Calgary Stampeders.

References

  1. 1 2 Friedlander, Brett (December 29, 1995). "Willingham's wish comes true". Fayetteville Observer. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  2. 1 2 "Stanford wants to make statement". Lodi News-Sentinel. December 28, 1995. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  3. 1 2 "Liberty Bowl: East Carolina Beats Stanford With Defense". Los Angeles Times. December 31, 1995. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "1995 Liberty Bowl" (PDF). Stanford Football Media Guide. Stanford Athletics. p. 163. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
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