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Super Bowl: A tale of two catches


14084  d652ae5a0e504175b904e77e3814151d 300x223 Super Bowl: A tale of two catches

New England Patriots wide receiver Wes Welker drops a pass during the second half of the NFL Super Bowl XLVI football game against the New York Giants, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

Super Bowl 46 was a tale of two catches – one made, one dropped – that took place within the space of three plays. The catch he dropped will haunt New England Patriots flanker Wes Welker to the end of his days. The one that New York Giants’ wide receiver Mario Manningham caught led to the Giants’ fourth Vince Lombardi Trophy, and will be almost too painful for Patriots’ fans to ever watch. Four years after Giants’ receiver David Tyree’s legendary ball-on-helmet grab led to the Giants’ scintillating victory in Super Bowl 42, the Patriots just got fatally struck by Eli Manning lightning. Again.

It was a taut game, this 21-17 affair, airless and strange and beautiful to watch for purists, a game which lacked surface melodrama but in which the outcome hung on every snap. A baseball-type football game. A novelistic game, inexorable and fatalistic, the football equivalent of Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth, in which any change in the late narrative would have meant a different ending – Lily Bart not dying in despair, Tom Brady riding off into the sunset with four rings. But the fates – it felt like that, anyway, but it was just players making plays – decreed otherwise. Manningham’s gorgeous snag of Manning’s perfectly-thrown 38-yard pass on the left sideline, with only a nanosecond to get his feet down and secure possession of the ball as he was slammed out of bounds, will go down as one of the most memorable catches in Super Bowl history, up there with Steeler Lynn Swann’s balletic leap in 1979 and John Taylor’s winning grab in the 49ers’ last-second victory over the Bengals. For Giants’ fans, it will forever be Catch 2.

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Super Bowl: Giants win!


202aa  e1561bd1cb784676a7ecdd58da00faa8 300x147 Super Bowl: Giants win!

New England Patriots running back Danny Woodhead (39) scores a touchdown as New York Giants Kenny Phillips (21) and Michael Boley (59) defend during the first half of their NFL Super Bowl XLVI football game, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Elite and Eli. One and the same.

And now there are two Super Bowl championships and two MVPs to prove it.

Eli Manning is the big man in the NFL after one-upping Tom Brady and leading the New York Giants to a 21-17 victory over the New England Patriots in Sunday’s Super Bowl — in older brother Peyton’s house, at that.

“This isn’t about one person,” Manning insisted. “This is about a team coming together.”

A team led by a quarterback who months ago claimed — to snickers throughout the league — that he belonged in the same stratosphere as Brady, and then proved it.

Just as Manning did four years ago when the Giants ruined New England’s perfect season, he guided them 88 yards to the decisive touchdown, which the Patriots didn’t contest as Ahmad Bradshaw ran 6 yards with 57 seconds left.

“Certainly Eli has had a great season. He made some great throws in the fourth quarter, and they deserved to win,” Brady said.

They got some help from Patriots coach Bill Belichick, whose late-game risk didn’t turn out as he planned. Belichick reasoned the Giants would run the clock down and kick a short field goal, so he gambled by allowing the six points.

The ploy failed.

“Ball was inside the 10-yard line, a 90 percent field goal conversion,” he said. “Sure, could have done a better job in a lot of things.”

Manning did everything asked of him in the final minutes, a habit for the eight-year veteran. He’s beaten the Patriots in two thrilling Super Bowls. The Giants (13-7), who stood 7-7 in mid-December, now own the football world, and Manning owns two Super Bowl MVP awards, the same number as Brady.

It was a classic I-can-top-that showdown with the outcome in doubt until the last desperation pass fell to the turf as the last second ticked off the clock. Manning started the game with nine straight completions, a Super Bowl record; Brady hit 16 straight over the second and third quarters, breaking Joe Montana’s Super bowl record of 13.

Manning finished 30 for 40 for 296 yards and one touchdown, while Brady was 27 for 41 for 276 yards with two TDs and one interception.

“It’s been a wild game, a wild season,” Manning said.

Manning led six comeback victories during the season and set an NFL record with 15 fourth-quarter touchdown passes. He showed that brilliance in the clutch on the winning drive, completing five passes, starting with a sensational 38-yard sideline catch by Mario Manningham.

On second down at the Patriots 6 and with only one timeout remaining, Belichick had his defense stand up as Bradshaw took the handoff. Bradshaw thought about stopping short of the end zone, then tumbled in untouched.

“I was yelling to him, ‘Don’t score, don’t score,’” Manning said. “He tried to stop, but he fell into the end zone.”

Brady couldn’t answer in the final 57 seconds, although his heave into the end zone on the final play fell just beyond the grasp of lunging All-Pro tight end Rob Gronkowski. New England (15-4), winner of 10 straight since a loss to the Giants in November, was done.

Brady headed off with his head bowed, holding his helmet, still one short of the record four Super Bowl victories by Terry Bradshaw for the Pittsburgh Steelers and Montana for the San Francisco 49ers.

“Certainly it wasn’t one play that was the reason we lost,” Brady said. “Everybody feels they could do a little more. I’d rather come to this game and lose than not get here.”

All around him was the wild celebration by the Giants, NFL champions for the eighth — and perhaps most unlikely — time.

“Great toughness, great faith and great plays by a number of guys today,” Manning said, deflecting some of the attention. Still, he beat Brady. And he went one better than Peyton, the Indianapolis Colts quarterback who has one ring of his own but didn’t play this season as he recovered from neck surgery.

“It just feels good to win a Super Bowl. It doesn’t matter where you are,” Manning said.

It was the fifth trip to a Super Bowl for Brady and Belichick, tying the record. And it looked like a successful one when they stormed back from a 9-0 deficit and led 17-9 in the third quarter. But the Giants, who reached New England territory on every possession except a kneeldown at the end of the first half, got field goals of 38 and 33 yards from Tynes. And it looked like Tynes, who kicked them into the Super Bowl four years ago at Green Bay and again this year at San Francisco, both in overtime, would get called on again.

Then Belichick, known to try just about anything in a game, took a risk that didn’t pay off.

The Giants are the first Super Bowl winner that was outscored during the regular season. They were 6-2 after that 24-20 victory at New England, then lost four straight and five of six.

Coach Tom Coughlin insisted “the prize” was still within reach. Now the Giants are holding tight to that Vince Lombardi Trophy.

“What I was concerned with was these guys making their own history,” Coughlin said. “This is such a wonderful thing, these guys carving their own history.”

Coughlin got his own piece of the record book as the oldest coach, at 65, to win a Super Bowl.

It was the Giants’ fourth Super Bowl championship, more than any franchise except Pittsburgh with six and San Francisco and Dallas with five, and they became the first team to finish the regular season 9-7 and win the title.

New England had the ball for all of one play in the first 11 1-2 minutes, and that play was an utter failure, a rare poor decision by Brady. After Steve Weatherford’s punt was downed at the New England 6, Brady dropped to pass in the end zone and had time. With everyone covered and Giants defensive end Justin Tuck finally coming free to provide pressure, Brady heaved the ball downfield while still in the pocket.

Only problem: No Patriots receivers were anywhere near the pass. The Giants were awarded a safety for Brady’s grounding in the end zone.

Manning, meanwhile, couldn’t have been more on target early, hitting six receivers in the first period. He also was aided by Ahmad Bradshaw, who hardly looked like a running back with a bad foot. Bradshaw broke a 24-yard run, and New England made another critical mistake by having 12 men on the field on a third-and-3 on which the Giants fumbled.

Instead, New York got a first down at the 6, and two plays later Victor Cruz beat James Ihedigbo on a slant to make it 9-0, prompting Cruz to break into his signature salsa move.

Manning’s first incompletion didn’t come until 1:19 into the second quarter.

At that point, it was 9-3 after Stephen Gostkowski’s 29-yard field goal. The Patriots got to the Giants’ 11, but All-Pro DE Jason Pierre-Paul blocked a third-down pass.

Soon after, when the Patriots had a three-and-out and Pierre-Paul blocked another throw, Belichick and offensive coordinator Bill O’Brien had a quick discussion. Then O’Brien, soon to take over as Penn State coach, went over to the struggling Brady.

The talk must have helped. On the final series of the opening half, Brady was masterful. Starting at his 4, and ignoring the last time the Patriots began a series in the shadow of the end zone, he was vintage Brady.

With New York’s vaunted pass rush disappearing, Brady went 10-for-10 for 98 yards, capping the drive that included two Patriots penalties with Woodhead’s 4-yard TD reception with 8 seconds to go in the half. Hernandez and Woodhead each had four catches on the drive that, stunningly, put New England ahead despite being outplayed for so much of the first 30 minutes.

Brady kept firing — and hitting — in the third quarter, with five more completions. The Giants didn’t come within shouting distance of the record-setting quarterback. He capped a 79-yard drive to open the second half with a 12-yard TD to Hernandez, but then the game turned. Again.

Consecutive field goals by Lawrence Tynes of 38 and 33 yards brought New York within 17-15. Brady then threw deep for his tight end after weaving away from two pass rushers. His throw was short, and Chase Blackburn picked it off early in the fourth quarter.

Although the Giants moved into New England territory again, as they did on every drive to that point, they bogged down and punted.

In the end, though, New York made the critical plays, just as it did in 2008. With Manning in the lead.

“Two hundred and twenty-eight countries just saw Eli,” running back Brandon Jacobs said. “I don’t have to say anything.”

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So cold: Patriots release wide receiver on eve of Super Bowl


ead0b  d141f3819f60430aba1927905468d468 255x300 So cold: Patriots release wide receiver on eve of Super Bowl

New England Patriots wide receiver Tiquan Underwood shoots video in Lucas Oil Stadium on Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012, in Indianapolis. The Patriots visited with family and friends on the field the day before they are scheduled to face the New York Giants in NFL football Super Bowl XLVI on Feb. 5. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

In a supremely cold move, on the eve of the Super Bowl the New England Patriots released wide receiver Tiquan Underwood Saturday.

ESPN is reporting that Underwood was not cut due to disciplinary reasons.

His roster spot will be taken by defensive lineman Alex Silvestro who was promoted from the practice squad.

Underwood in recent days made news for cutting the Patriot’s logo into the back of his hi-top fade.

The — now — former Patriots wide receiver took to Twitter Saturday night but expressed no negative feelings toward the Patriots.

“This Is Nothing But MOTIVATION….” he tweeted, adding “I Been Thru A LOT…But There Are Ppl In This World w/ More Serious Problems So I Cant Hang The Head….Thank You Lord #Blessed,” he tweeted.

Underwood even wished the Patriots luck in Sunday’s big game.

“Good Luck To The New Enland Organization, The Coaches, & All My Teammates… #PatsNation,” he tweeted.

On Thursday Underwood told the Boston Herald that playing in the Super Bowl was like a dream come true.

“I watched a lot of Super Bowls growing up, dreamed about playing in the Super Bowl. For this to actually happen, it’s just a dream come true,” he said.

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Best Super Bowl ads [VIDEO]


The Super Bowl won’t air until Sunday, but advertisers have been rolling out their commercials in the weeks leading up to the big game.

Volkswagen AG stuck with the Star Wars theme it used last year, but this time they upped the cuteness factor by bringing in the dogs.

Whoever did the ad for Teleflora is a very smart person because it features Victoria’s Secret model Adriana Lima in lingerie.

Jerry Seinfeld brought back the “Soup Nazi,” while Matthew Broderick resurrected “Ferris Bueller”.

The Daily Caller picked the 10 best commercials you’ll see on Super Bowl Sunday:

WATCH:

10. Cars.com

f352a  0 Best Super Bowl ads [VIDEO]

9. Doritos

f352a  0 Best Super Bowl ads [VIDEO]

8.  Coca Cola

f352a  0 Best Super Bowl ads [VIDEO]

7. Chevrolet Sonic

f352a  0 Best Super Bowl ads [VIDEO]

6. E-Trade

331a1  0 Best Super Bowl ads [VIDEO]

The top 5 Super Bowl ads

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Cheer vs cheerleader-less Super Bowl


0d45b  628x471 300x199 Cheer vs cheerleader less Super Bowl

New England Patriots cheerleaders laugh as they experience a musical malfunction during their two minute warning performance in the fourth quarter of their NFL football game against the New England Patriots in Foxborough, Mass., Sunday afternoon, Oct. 9, 2011. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

From high school, college, to the pros, cheerleaders and football seem to go hand in hand.

Six teams in the National Football League, however, do not officially have cheerleaders.

In fact the upcoming Super Bowl will be a played between a team with cheerleaders (the New England Patriots) and a team without (the New York Giants).

Last Super Bowl neither the Green Bay Packers nor the Pittsburgh Steelers had an official cheerleader squad.

The Chicago Bears, Detroit Lions and Cleveland Browns are also cheerleader-less.

So what do these six teams have against pom poms, gyrating and general peppiness?

As most will quickly note, the cheerleader-less teams are all located in colder climates, but the teams The Daily Caller was able to contact explained their lack of cheerleaders with a variety of reasons.

“It was a team decision not to have cheerleaders,” Bears spokesman Jim Christman told The Daily Caller.

Pat Hanlon, spokesman for the Super Bowl-bound Giants, said that New York franchise is focused on football, not cheerleaders.

“Every team has its own philosophy regarding game presentation,” Hanlon told TheDC. “Ours has never included cheerleaders or a dance team. We have always felt the focus should be on the game, on the field.”

Neal Gulkis of the Cleveland Browns directed TheDC to a 2010 Cleveland.com article recalling the last year, 1971, the Browns had cheerleaders.

“The cheerleaders were gone after 1971. Some actually quit before the season ended because it was so cold,” the article explained, pointing out that the cold weather uniforms in 1971 looked a bit goofy.

“We had them one year. They looked crazy. It was ridiculous,” said Pat Modell, wife of former Browns owner Art Modell. “It was so cold in Cleveland that it almost looked like they were wearing woolly pajamas.”

Green Bay Packers spokesman Aaron Popkey told TheDC that the team has not had cheerleaders since 1988. According to the Packers’ media kit, the decision to discontinue the cheer program was due in large part to a television news poll which revealed that there was not an overwhelming amount of support in favor of official cheerleaders.

“In general terms, the poll disclosed there were as many fans who expressed opposition to the return of the cheerleaders as there were those in favor of restoring them,” said Packers executive vice president of administration Bob Harlan. “On that basis, we felt the appropriate decision at this time would be to continue without them.”

Since the early ‘90s, Popkey explained, cheer squads from St. Norbert College and the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay have been a “complementary component” to the Lambeau Field experience.

The Lions have not had a cheer team since 1934, according to YahooSports. In 2010 a very unofficial Lions cheer squad, the Detroit Pride, made its debut — but with stringent rules.

“They are not allowed to perform organized cheers. They cannot obstruct the view of fans. They are not allowed to take group photos with fans,” Pride of Detroit, a Lions Blog, reported. “Only two girls may appear in photos, so they plan to walk through Ford Field in rows of two. They cannot wear Lions logos or team colors. Although there is blue in their uniforms, it will not be ‘Honolulu blue.’”

The Steelers ended their cheer program, the Steelerettes, in 1970, according to USA Today. The owning Rooney family broke up the squad after 10 years, feeling that it did not add enough to the game experience, according to WTAE Pittsburgh.

One way or another Sunday will be a battle of the cheer versus cheerleader-less teams. Last year, when neither team had cheerleaders, NFL spokesman Greg Aiello explained the NFL’s policy.

“It’s a team issue,” Aiello said. “If the team has cheerleaders, they are part of the Super Bowl.”

The Patriots did not respond to a request for comment.

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Bankrolling a Super Bowl trip


d8f39  4dea12f58ef14585a17ea7dc81ae5e68 211x300 Bankrolling a Super Bowl trip

ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND EDITIONS, JAN. 28-29 -FILE – In this Jan. 22, 2012, file photo, New England Patriot Tom Brady (12) throws a pass during the AFC Championship NFL football game against the Baltimore Ravens in Foxborough, Mass. The Patriots face the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLVI on Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012, in Indianapolis.(AP Photo/Matt Slocum, File)

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Attending Super Bowl XLVI in Indianapolis is an expensive proposition.

Getting there alone will set you back $ 1,500 or more, whether you are flying from Boston or New York, according to travel site Orbitz.

Those arriving by private jet — expect delays.

At Super Bowel XLV in Texas last year, Dallas-area airports received roughly 700 private aircraft for the big game. Indianapolis expects a similarly-sized flotilla of corporate craft to touch down ahead of Super Bowl Sunday.

Lodging will also be expensive, even for modest accommodations.

A room at the Best Inn will run you $ 900 per night, according to website Travelocity. That’s an eight hundred and forty five dollar premium over the hotel’s typical rate.

Part of the reason for the tremendous mark-up for lodging is that Indianapolis has less than half the number of hotel rooms as Dallas.

And what about the game day tickets?  How much for them?

Well, according to ticket reseller website Stubhub, tickets to this year’s Super Bowl are available right now for $ 2,100, but that won’t get you a very good seat.  For the best seat in the house — a VIP luxury suite — plan on shelling out $ 516,484.

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Williams, 49ers fumble away chance at Super Bowl


dc242  70001984a04b45ef890989b1a9f7b4ca 300x241 Williams, 49ers fumble away chance at Super Bowl

San Francisco 49ers’ Kyle Williams (10) fumbles a punt as New York Giants’ Devin Thomas (15) recovers during overtime of the NFC Championship NFL football game Sunday, Jan. 22, 2012, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Kyle Williams fumbled the punt that ultimately ended the San Francisco 49ers’ quest for a Super Bowl berth.

Plenty of his teammates were ready to share the blame.

Williams’ second fumbled punt of the game set up Lawrence Tynes’ 31-yard field goal in overtime, and the 49ers lost the NFC championship game to the New York Giants 20-17 Sunday.

“You hate to be the last guy that had the ball, to give it away in that fashion and to lose a game of this magnitude,” Williams said. “It is what it is. We’re going to move forward as a team. Everyone has come to pat me on the back and the shoulder to say it’s not me.”

Williams, returning kicks in place of the injured Ted Ginn Jr., muffed one punt early in the fourth quarter to set up a go-ahead touchdown for New York, then was stripped by Jacquian Williams in overtime to give the Giants the ball at the 24.

After three runs and a kneeldown, Tynes kicked the game-winner, and Williams slowly made a dejected walk back to the locker room as the 49ers missed out on a prime chance to go to the Super Bowl.

“He is going to need his teammates to stick with him and be with him,” nose tackle Ricky Jean Francois said. “I understand a lot of people are going to put the blame on him. Like I told him, `The blame is not on you.’ There were multiple times we could have ended this game. I don’t blame him at all. … I just don’t want him to beat himself up for it.”

The fact that turnovers did in San Francisco was truly surprising. The 49ers tied an NFL record with just 10 giveaways all season—including none on special teams—and had a plus-28 turnover margin in the regular season. They took advantage of five New Orleans turnovers to win 36-32 last week but were on the wrong end in this game because of Williams.

Williams, the son of Chicago White Sox general manager Ken Williams, did not look smooth fielding punts after doing it just twice in the regular season.

He made a dangerous, sliding catch on one return and called a fair catch on another with room to run. He then made his first big miscue after San Francisco forced a punt early in the fourth quarter while protecting a 14-10 lead.

Steve Weatherford hit a short, bouncing punt that Williams came up to try to field. He backed away at the last minute, but the ball glanced off his right knee and was recovered by Devin Thomas at the San Francisco 29. The play was originally not ruled a fumble but was overturned by on review.

“I told him we’re all in this together,” San Francisco All Pro linebackerPatrick Willis said. “I believe in him. If I had a do-over, he’d still be my guy back there. He’s a tremendous athlete. Unfortunately some bad plays happened to him.”

Six plays later, Eli Manning threw a 17-yard touchdown pass to Mario Manningham, who beat backup cornerback Tramaine Brock on third-and-15. Brock was playing in place of starter Tarell Brown, who left late in the third quarter after a violent collision with teammate Dashon Goldson.

Williams helped atone for his first miscue when he returned the ensuing kickoff 40 yards to help set upDavid Akers’ tying field goal late in regulation.

But on his second return in overtime, Williams gave the ball away again. He fielded the punt at the 19 and was stripped by Jacquian Williams. Thomas once again pounced on the ball at the 24, setting up the Giants’ winning kick and ending San Francisco’s most successful season in years.

“It was one of those situations where I caught the ball, tried to head upfield, tried to make a play and it ended up for the worse,” Williams said.

Coach Jim Harbaugh got the Niners to the brink of the Super Bowl in his first season, taking over a 6-10 team and going 13-3 to win the NFC West. The ability to protect the ball and cause turnovers was the biggest reason for the turnaround.

But the Niners forced no

turnovers against the Giants and were ultimately done in by Williams’ costly giveaways.

“There were a lot of ways in which we played well enough to win,” Harbaugh said. “We just didn’t come away with it. It will be a while before we get over it but we will get over it. Our team is not defeated by any means.”

The Niners really did miss Ginn, who injured his right knee in last week’s thrilling win over New Orleans. San Francisco was already thin at receiver after releasing Braylon Edwards late in the regular season and was unable to get anything out of its wideouts this game.

San Francisco’s wide receivers had just one catch all game—a 3-yarder by Michael Crabtree on a third-and-5 play before Akers’ tying field goal with 5:39 left in regulation.

The bulk of San Francisco’s offense came on two big passes from Alex Smith to Vernon Davis. They connected on a 73-yarder to open the scoring in the first quarter and a 28-yarder to take a 14-10 lead in the third.

The 49ers converted just one of 13 third downs all game, with the only conversion coming on the final play of regulation, leaving plenty of blame to go to players besides Williams.

“We all know him,” Smith said. “We know how committed he is to winning. It’s not on him. I look at the 1-for-13 on third downs. I know he’s going to feel bad, but he’s still part of our team. We didn’t lose the game there. We lost it across the board offensively. We just couldn’t get it done.”

So now instead of the 49ers’ coach taking on his brother, John, in the “Superbaugh” in Indianapolis in two weeks, the Harbaughs will be watching the big game in part because of special teams.

John’s Ravens fell earlier in the day to New England 23-20 when Billy Cundiff pushed a 32-yard field goal attempt wide left in the closing seconds of the AFC title game.

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West Virginia drubs Clemson 70-33 in Orange Bowl


9a88d  57cf80d466c143068cc5c37f1e2deab9 300x197 West Virginia drubs Clemson 70 33 in Orange Bowl

West Virginia’s wide receiver Tavon Austin celebrates after West Virginia won the Orange Bowl NCAA college football game, Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2012, in Miami. West Virginia defeated Clemson 70-33. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

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MIAMI (AP) — As the West Virginia Mountaineers celebrated their first Orange Bowl victory, safety Darwin Cook shared a hug with the game’s mascot, Obie.

They had run into each other earlier in the end zone when Cook scored the night’s pivotal touchdown, then leaped on the smiling orange. Only after the game did he learn a woman was wearing the Obie outfit.

“I didn’t know you were a girl,” he told her. “I apologize.”

The Mountaineers ran over everything in their path Wednesday night, including the Clemson Tigers. Geno Smith tied the record for any bowl game with six touchdown passes, and the No. 23-ranked Mountaineers set a bowl scoring record with their high-powered offense by routing No. 14 Clemson 70-33.

But it was a defensive player — Cook — who made the most memorable play by returning a fumble 99 yards for a touchdown to break the game open.

Standing in the sideline, Smith watched a video replay of Cook’s touchdown in disbelief.

“Crazy, man,” Smith said. “When I saw that, I knew things were breaking our way.”

Cook collided comically with mascot Obie after scoring one of the Mountaineers’ five TDs in the second quarter, including three in the final 2:29 for a 49-20 lead. It was the highest-scoring half by a team in a bowl game.

“I always envisioned making great plays,” Cook said. “If you think it will happen, it will happen.”

Tavon Austin tied a record for any bowl game with four touchdown catches. Smith went 31 for 42 and had 401 yards passing to break Tom Brady’s Orange Bowl record. Smith also ran for a score, helping West Virginia break the bowl record for points established six nights earlier when Baylor beat Washington 67-56 in the Alamo Bowl.

“Never could we imagine we’d put up 70 points,” Smith said.

“It was like a virus,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said.

The Mountaineers (10-3) won in their first Orange Bowl appearance and improved to 3-0 in Bowl Championship Series games.

“Our guys felt like they weren’t getting too much credit,” West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen said. “And they wanted to make a statement in this game.”

Clemson (10-4) lost playing in its first major bowl in 30 years. Despite the drubbing, Swinney said, the wait for a return trip won’t be so long.

“It won’t be 30 years,” Swinney said. “We’ll be back.”

The offensive showcase was the latest in a succession this bowl season, and perhaps the last. Defense is expected to dominate in the final BCS game Monday night, when Louisiana State faces Alabama for the national title.

West Virginia totaled 589 yards and 31 first downs. Smith was chosen the game’s outstanding player but gave Austin an assist.

“He won me an MVP,” Smith said. “He’s one of the quickest guys I’ve ever seen, and it’s just a blessing to have a guy like him on my team.”

Austin had 11 receptions, scoring on passes of 8, 27, 3 and 37 yards.

“I do know who the fastest kid on the field was,” Holgorsen said. “We made a conscious effort to get him the ball a bunch, and whenever we got him the ball, he made things happen.”

Clemson couldn’t keep up with the Big East Conference co-champions, although Andre Ellington did score the game’s first points on a 68-yard run. First-team All-Americans Sammy Watkins and Dwayne Allen combined for only seven catches for 87 yards.

“We didn’t play too good,” Watkins said. “We’ve got the whole next year to get right.”

Amid the flurry of points, defensive back Cook came up with second-longest play in Orange Bowl history.

Clemson was on the verge of taking the lead in the second quarter when Ellington ran up the middle and disappeared into a heap at the 1. A teammate signaled touchdown, but the ball came loose and Cook grabbed it, then took off with nothing but the end zone in front of him.

“Cook was the only one in the stadium who knew the ball was out,” teammate Bruce Irvin said. “That was a heads-up play.”

The potential 14-point swing seemed to deflate the Tigers, who had moved the ball almost at will to that point.

“They hadn’t really stopped us,” Swinney said. “That was huge. Then it snowballed quickly.”

The Tigers were doomed when quarterback Tajh Boyd committed turnovers on consecutive Clemson plays.

After Smith ran 7 yards on a keeper for a 35-20 lead, Pat Miller intercepted Boyd’s pass. Smith flipped a 1-yard touchdown pass to Austin and, on the next play a call was overturned, with the replay official determining Boyd had lost a fumble.

Alston then ran for a 1-yard touchdown with 4 seconds left in the half.

“Momentum swung not in our favor, and it was hard to recapture,” Boyd said. “West Virginia is a great offense. You can’t really get behind them. We couldn’t stop them. Guys were gassed. Their legs were going. It was a tough loss — pretty embarrassing.”

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Rose Bowl: Oregon edges Wisconsin in record-setting shootout


39fd7  816d1f78f8f04714a9e555a1146671cc 300x227 Rose Bowl: Oregon edges Wisconsin in record setting shootout

Wisconsin’s Nick Toon, left, scores a touchdown as Oregon’s Ifo Ekpre-Olomu defends during the second half of the Rose Bowl NCAA college football game, Monday, Jan. 2, 2012, in Pasadena, Calif. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)

No one expected Monday’s Rose Bowl matchup between Oregon and Wisconsin to be a defensive struggle. Not with the Ducks coming in averaging 46 points per game and the Badgers not far behind at 44.6.

Fans of big plays and offensive fireworks (not to mention flashy — literally — uniforms) got their New Year’s wish as the “grandaddy of them all” turned into an offensive display for the ages. The two teams combined for 1,129 total yards and countless highlights in a wild back-and-forth shootout. In the end, Oregon emerged with a 45-38 victory — its first in 95 years.

But it wasn’t the Ducks’ defense that sealed the win by stopping Wisconsin on its final drive in the waning seconds — it was the clock.

Full Story: Rose Bowl: Oregon edges Wisconsin in record-setting shootout

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Griffin, Baylor win record-breaking Alamo Bowl


176ac  44b510b8d6214740af7b6432ac9c075d 294x300 Griffin, Baylor win record breaking Alamo Bowl

Washington’s Devin Aguilar, left, makes a touchdown reception ahead of Baylor’s K.J. Morton during the second half of the Alamo Bowl college football game, Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011, at the Alamodome in San Antonio. Baylor pulled out a thrilling Alamo Bowl victory in the highest-scoring bowl game in history, beating Washington 67-56 in a record-smashing shootout Thursday night. (AP Photo/Darren Abate)

a473e  pic arrow next Griffin, Baylor win record breaking Alamo Bowl

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — If that really was Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III’s final college game, what an incredible way to go out.

Just ask him.

“We went out in style!” Griffin shouted to his teammates.

It was amazing the Baylor quarterback had any breath left at all. Not after a record-shattering Alamo Bowl that might not only be remembered as the highest-scoring regulation bowl game in history, but also possibly as Griffin’s last addition to his legacy in Waco.

The AP Player of the Year wasn’t dazzling Thursday night, but he didn’t need to be as No. 15 Baylor still pulled out an incredible 67-56 victory over Washington.

If it was RG3′s final showcase before jumping to the NFL, it was a gripping goodbye to watch. One of the nation’s most electrifying players was upstaged by an even more exciting nail-biter that shattered the previous record for points in regulation set in the 2001 GMAC Bowl.

Fans showered Griffin with chants of “One more year! One more year!” as he paraded the Alamo Bowl trophy around the field. He stopped at the front-row stands and showed off his prize to his mother, who has already been looking at her son’s NFL draft prospects.

Griffin said he’ll start looking, too, soon enough.

For now, there was still the craziness of this game to sort through.

“I want Baylor nation to enjoy this,” Griffin said. “It’s not about me. I’ve got about two weeks. I’ll enjoy this the next day, and then the next day, and then I’ll make it.”

The previous bowl record for a regulation game was 102 points in the 2001 GMAC Bowl between Marshall and East Carolina. That game went to double overtime and ended with a combined 125 points, which still stands as the overall bowl record.

Baylor, which a bowl game for the first time since 1992, and Washington (7-6) also set a bowl record for total offense with 1,397 yards.

“We just knew we needed to score,” Washington quarterback Keith Price said. “We needed to score fast, just to give our defense a boost.”

Griffin had an unremarkable night, throwing just one touchdown pass and running for another score. But Terrance Ganaway starred ably in his place, rushing for 200 yards and five touchdowns. His last was a 43-yard run with 2:28 left to seal Baylor’s first 10-win season since 1980.

Price outplayed his Heisman counterpart, going 23 for 27 with 438 yards and four touchdowns. He also ran for another three scores.

“I think we’ll have a hard time this bowl season to see a quarterback play as well as he did,” Washington coach Steve Sarkisian.

Griffin was 24 of 33 for 295 yards — and his only touchdown throw came on the game’s opening drive.

Blown out in four other games against ranked opponents this season, the Huskies finally made one interesting. Not that it started that way after Baylor ran up 245 yards of offense alone in the first quarter — awful even by the standards of Washington’s defense, which is among the nation’s worst.

Price, a sophomore who threw a school-record 29 touchdown passes in his first year as the starter, began cutting into a 21-7 deficit with a 12-yard scoring strike to James Johnson. Seven minutes later, Washington tied it when Devin Aguilar somersaulted over the goal line after catching a 1-yard lob.

The overwhelming crowd of Baylor fans — decked in green-and-gold Heisman shirts and armed with signs such as “Superman wears RG3 socks” — stood in stunned silenced. That gave way to disbelieving gasps on the next series, when the typically sure-handed Griffin fumbled after getting popped by Andrew Hudson.

After that, it was practically a free-for-all of big plays.

A 56-yard touchdown dash by Chris Polk. An 80-yard touchdown catch by Washington’s Jermaine Kearse two plays into the second half. An 89-yard scoring rumble Ganaway. Kearse again, catching and darting for 60 yards before getting dragged down, setting up Price’s fourth touchdown toss the next play.

Back and forth, back and forth. One after another. In all, five plays covered 50 or more yards, three of them for scores.

“That was crazy,” Baylor coach Art Briles said.

For an Alamo Bowl short on drama and light on matchups in recent years, it was a thrilling scoring spree that overshadowed the mere novelty of featuring the Heisman winner. And that in itself was a rarity for a bowl of this stature. Not since Ty Detmer took BYU to the Holiday Bowl in 1990, had a Heisman winner played in a bowl before New Year’s Day.

Plenty came to see this one.

Anticipating a surge of Heisman gawkers, Alamo Bowl officials added 800 temporary seats and opened up others with obstructed views that required ticket-buyers to sign a form acknowledging the poor sightlines. Those seats sold, anyway, and the announced attendance of 65,256 was the fifth-largest in the bowl’s history.

Others had better seats.

That includes Miami Dolphins general manager Jeff Ireland, who kicked for Baylor in the late 1980s but was here on business scouting Griffin in case the fourth-year junior enters the draft. Griffin’s parents, two sisters and fiancee watched from front-row seats.

Griffin acknowledged this week his parents are looking at his draft prospects but denies having any substantial talks with them.

Win or lose, it was an impressive finale for Washington after stumbling into the postseason losing four of its last six. Particularly against a ranked team after then-Top 25 opponents Nebraska, Stanford, Oregon and USC all crushed the Huskies by an average of 24 points.

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