1984 California Bowl

Summary

The 1984 California Bowl was an American college football bowl game played on December 15, 1984 at Bulldog Stadium in Fresno, California. The game pitted the UNLV Rebels and the Toledo Rockets.

1984 California Bowl
1234 Total
Toledo 3370 13
UNLV 76170 30
DateDecember 15, 1984
Season1984
StadiumBulldog Stadium
LocationFresno, California
RefereeJoe Thomas (SWC)
Attendance21,741
United States TV coverage
NetworkESPN
California Bowl
 < 1983  1985

Background edit

The Rebels rebounded from a 7–4 year in 1983 to win the Pacific Coast Athletic Association title with a perfect conference record, with their only losses being to Hawaii and SMU. This was UNLV's first ever bowl game appearance. The Rockets started the season 5–0–1, with victories over four conference opponents and a tie at Ohio. A loss to Kent State was their only conference loss, as they finished the season with three straight conference wins (and a loss against independent Temple) to win the Mid-American Conference for the second time in four seasons.

Game summary edit

  • UNLV — Gladney 19 yard touchdown pass from Randall Cunningham (Joey DiGiovanna kick), 11:29
  • Toledo — 22 yard field goal by Walker, 4:20
  • UNLV — Kirk Jones 7 yard touchdown pass from Cunningham (kick failed), 9:40
  • Toledo — 36 yard field goal by Walker, 0:03
  • UNLV — 44 yard field goal by Joey DiGiovanna, 8:55
  • Toledo — Bill Foure 38 yard touchdown pass from A. J. Sager (Walker kick), 5:29
  • UNLV — Ickey Woods 16 yard touchdown run (DiGiovanna kick), 4:14
  • UNLV — Randall Cunningham 10 yard touchdown run (DiGiovanna kick) 1:10

Randall Cunningham went 18-of-28 for two touchdowns, one interception and one touchdown run. UNLV had 127 rushing yards, 270 passing yards, and 77 return yards. Toledo had 203 rushing yards, 137 passing yards, and 96 return yards. UNLV turned it over three times, while Toledo turned it over once.[1]

Aftermath edit

After the game, it was found that UNLV had used ineligible players during the season. Despite the fact that they were not used in the bowl game, the school forfeited the win, though the NCAA does not recognize the forfeit. Because of this, both teams treat it as a victory in a technical sense. Toledo was given the trophy from the game, though when the two teams met years later, the trophy was evidently lost. Both teams underwent bowl droughts after this game, with the Rebels not going to a bowl game again until 1994 and the Rockets not going to a bowl game until 1995. Both teams won their games, which both took place in the Las Vegas Bowl, the successor to the California Bowl.

References edit

  1. ^ "UNLV Rebels Record Book" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 30, 2016.