2013 Alamo Bowl

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2013 Valero Alamo Bowl
1 2 3 4 Total
Oregon 10 10 3 7 30
Texas 7 0 0 0 7
Date December 30, 2013
Season 2013
Stadium Alamodome
Location San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
MVP Offense: Marcus Mariota (QB)
Defense: Avery Patterson (SS)
Favorite Oregon by 13[1]
National anthem Oregon Marching Band & The University of Texas Longhorn Band
Referee Dennis Hennigan (ACC)
Halftime show World Strides Heritage Performance Program
Attendance 65,918
Payout US$3 million per team
United States TV coverage
Network ESPN
Announcers Brad Nessler, Todd Blackledge & Holly Rowe
Nielsen ratings 4.6 (6.757 million viewers)[2]
Alamo Bowl
 < 2012  2015

The 2013 Alamo Bowl was an American college football bowl game that was played on December 30, 2013, at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas. The 21st edition of the Alamo Bowl, it featured the Texas Longhorns from the Big 12 Conference and the Oregon Ducks from the Pac-12 Conference. It was telecast at 5:45 p.m. CST on ESPN. It was one of the 2013–14 bowl games that concluded the 2013 FBS football season. The game was sponsored by the Valero Energy Corporation and was officially known as the Valero Alamo Bowl. Oregon defeated Texas by a score of 30–7.

Texas finished the regular season with a record of 8–4 (7–2 Big 12), tied for second place in the Big 12. Oregon, ranked #10 in the BCS, finished the regular season with a record of 10–2 (7–2 Pac-12), co-champions of the Pac-12 North Division.

Teams

Texas

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Texas was selected to represent the Big 12 after an 8–4 season, finishing third overall in the conference. Starting the season ranked 15th in both major polls, Texas would start the season disappointingly by going 1–2 against non-conference opponents with a win over New Mexico State and losses to BYU and Ole Miss. They would eventually contend for the Big-12 Championship by starting their conference schedule at 6–0 with wins over Kansas State, Iowa State, Oklahoma, TCU, Kansas and West Virginia. They would finish their remaining conference slate with a home loss to Oklahoma State, rebound to beat Texas Tech after a bye week and finish the season with a road loss to Baylor, finishing the season unranked in the polls.

Oregon

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Oregon was selected to represent the Pac-12 after a 10–2 regular season, finishing second overall in the conference. Their first season with new Head Coach Mark Helfrich after Chip Kelly's departure to the NFL, they would start the season ranked third in both major polls, and win their first eight games over Nicholls State, Virginia, Tennessee, California, Colorado, Washington, Washington State and UCLA. Going into November sitting at 8–0 and contending for the a slot in the BCS National Championship Game they would finish the season 2–2 with road loses to Stanford and Arizona and home wins against Utah and arch-rival Oregon State finishing the season ranked tenth in the AP and BCS polls.

Game summary

Scoring summary

2013 Valero Alamo Bowl – Game summary
1 2 3 4 Total
#10 Oregon 10 10 3 7 30
Texas 7 0 0 0 7

at AlamodomeSan Antonio, TX

Game information
First Quarter
  • ORE – Avery Patterson 37-yard interception return (Matt Wogan kick)
  • ORE – Wogan 25-yard field goal
  • TEX – Case McCoy 1-yard run (Anthony Fera kick)
Second Quarter
  • ORE – Wogan 32-yard field goal
  • ORE – Josh Huff 16 yard-pass from Marcus Mariota (Wogan kick)
Third Quarter
  • ORE – Wogan 39-yard field goal
Fourth Quarter
  • ORE – Derrick Malone 38-yard interception return (Wogan kick)
  • Texas leads the series with Oregon 4–1 (.800). The series began in 1941 at Texas, Texas 71, Oregon 7. The last meeting was the 2000 Holiday Bowl, Oregon 35, Texas 30.[3]
Top Passers
  • ORE – Marcus Mariota, 18–26, 253 yards, 1 TD
  • TEX – Case McCoy, 8–17, 48 yards, 2 INT
Top Rushers
  • ORE – Marcus Mariota, 15 attempts, 134 yards
  • TEX – Malcolm Brown, 26 attempts, 130 yards
Top Receiving
  • ORE – Josh Huff, 5 receptions, 104 yards, 1 TD
  • TEX – Joe Bergeron, 2 receptions, 16 yards
Top Tackler
  • ORE –
  • TEX –

Statistics

Teams Texas Oregon
1st downs 13 24
Total yards 236 470
Passing yards 56 253
Rushing yards 180 217
Penalties–Yards 4–35 11–87
3rd down conversions 6 of 19 4 of 12
4th down conversions 2 of 3 0 of 0
Turnovers 2 0
Time of Possession 31:45 28:15

[4]

Notes

  • This was the second year in a row that Texas has played in the Alamo Bowl having beaten Oregon State in the 2012 Alamo Bowl 31–27.[5]
  • This was the second time that Oregon and Texas have faced off in the post-season, the only other time being the 2000 Holiday Bowl, where Oregon beat Texas 35–30, Oregon's only win in the series.[6]
  • While all bowl games are technically considered neutral site games, the Longhorns are based less than 100 miles away from San Antonio, in Austin whereas the Ducks and their accompanying fans will have to travel either over 1,600 miles by air or drive over 2,000 miles from Eugene, Oregon.
  • December 10, 2013 – Oregon starting tight end Pharaoh Brown was suspended for the Alamo Bowl due to his role in a campus snowball fight on December 6 that got out of hand.[7]
  • December 13, 2013 – Oregon defensive back Troy Hill was suspended from all football-related activities after being arrested for fourth-degree assault, menacing and strangulation.[8]
  • December 14, 2013 – Texas head coach Mack Brown announced that his resignation following the Alamo Bowl after 16 years as head coach of Longhorns, having led them to six Big 12 South Division Championships, two Big 12 Conference Championships, and the 2005 BCS National Championship with an overall record of 158–47 (.771).[9]
  • December 16, 2013 – Troy Hill was arraigned on lesser charges of menacing and criminal mischief, and entered a plea of not guilty.[10]
  • December 22, 2013 – Texas wide receiver Daje Johnson (So.), offensive tackle Kennedy Estelle (So.) and runningback Jalen Overstreet (Fr.) were declared academically ineligible to participate in the 2013 Alamo Bowl. Johnson had 757 all-purpose yards on the year, Estelle had started 8 games at right tackle and Overstreet has 102 rushing yards with two touchdowns.[11]
  • December 27, 2013 – Oregon Defensive Coordinator Nick Aliotti announced his retirement following the Alamo Bowl. Aliotti has coached at Oregon for a total of 26 years, as a graduate assistant from 1978 to 1979, as the outside linebackers coach from 1988 to 1992 and then as the defensive coordinator from 1993 to 1994. He would then follow former Oregon head coach Rich Brooks to the NFL in 1995 and returned to Oregon after coaching at UCLA for one season, in 1999, where he has coached ever since.[12]

References