tennesseeduke
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2012
- Messages
- 8,787
- Likes
- 9,526
I have great memories of that Sugar Bowl and the entire season. Only game I missed was at Florida.
Met Bobby Scott at Pat O'Brien's and he bought me a hurricane. Super nice guy as were his wife and friends.
To this day, I consider the ’86 Sugar Bowl to be the most complete and inspired 60-minute performance by a Tennessee football team that I have witnessed in 52 years of following Big Orange pigskinery.
This webpage will give you a really good overview (1971 Game Recap - Official Site of the Allstate Sugar Bowl) of the 1971 Sugar Bowl. The first twelve minutes of that game were, with the possible exception of the third quarter of the 1990 Florida game, the most perfect performance that I can recall from a Tennessee football team. We jumped on Air Force 24-0 straight out of the gate. As the page cited above states, “In four possessions, Tennessee scored four times and led 24-0 with 3:12 to go in the first quarter.”
Then a dog ran onto the field and it took “more than ten minutes” before it could be trapped and cleared from the field. The proverbial magic, from a Tennessee perspective, had escaped into thin air, and the game became fairly pedestrian and very sloppy from that point on, particularly from a turnover standpoint. We coughed the ball up five times, but Air Force fumbled seven times, losing four, and threw four interceptions.
As the stat sheet indicates, Bobby Majors had a 57-yard punt return for a touchdown, and one of Air Force’s two touchdowns occurred as a result of recovering a Tennessee fumble in our end zone. Air Force had a prolific passing attack that year, but we held them to -12 yards rushing.
To this day, I consider the ’86 Sugar Bowl to be the most complete and inspired 60-minute performance by a Tennessee football team that I have witnessed in 52 years of following Big Orange pigskinery.
This webpage will give you a really good overview (1971 Game Recap - Official Site of the Allstate Sugar Bowl) of the 1971 Sugar Bowl. The first twelve minutes of that game were, with the possible exception of the third quarter of the 1990 Florida game, the most perfect performance that I can recall from a Tennessee football team. We jumped on Air Force 24-0 straight out of the gate. As the page cited above states, “In four possessions, Tennessee scored four times and led 24-0 with 3:12 to go in the first quarter.”
Then a dog ran onto the field and it took “more than ten minutes” before it could be trapped and cleared from the field. The proverbial magic, from a Tennessee perspective, had escaped into thin air, and the game became fairly pedestrian and very sloppy from that point on, particularly from a turnover standpoint. We coughed the ball up five times, but Air Force fumbled seven times, losing four, and threw four interceptions.
As the stat sheet indicates, Bobby Majors had a 57-yard punt return for a touchdown, and one of Air Force’s two touchdowns occurred as a result of recovering a Tennessee fumble in our end zone. Air Force had a prolific passing attack that year, but we held them to -12 yards rushing.
Great game for sure. The most perfect quarter recently would have to be the 2000 Arkansas game. UT was up 35-0 with like 5 min left in the 1st quarter. We could’ve scored 100 if we had wanted too lolTo this day, I consider the ’86 Sugar Bowl to be the most complete and inspired 60-minute performance by a Tennessee football team that I have witnessed in 52 years of following Big Orange pigskinery.
This webpage will give you a really good overview (1971 Game Recap - Official Site of the Allstate Sugar Bowl) of the 1971 Sugar Bowl. The first twelve minutes of that game were, with the possible exception of the third quarter of the 1990 Florida game, the most perfect performance that I can recall from a Tennessee football team. We jumped on Air Force 24-0 straight out of the gate. As the page cited above states, “In four possessions, Tennessee scored four times and led 24-0 with 3:12 to go in the first quarter.”
Then a dog ran onto the field and it took “more than ten minutes” before it could be trapped and cleared from the field. The proverbial magic, from a Tennessee perspective, had escaped into thin air, and the game became fairly pedestrian and very sloppy from that point on, particularly from a turnover standpoint. We coughed the ball up five times, but Air Force fumbled seven times, losing four, and threw four interceptions.
As the stat sheet indicates, Bobby Majors had a 57-yard punt return for a touchdown, and one of Air Force’s two touchdowns occurred as a result of recovering a Tennessee fumble in our end zone. Air Force had a prolific passing attack that year, but we held them to -12 yards rushing.
I didn't read all the replies, so my apologies if mine is a repeat. You can buy the DVD online too. I seen it for sale from a few sites when I was looking up gifts for my dad.Hello, I hope everyone had a great Christmas/Hanukkah. I was wondering if anyone has any video and or memories of the 1971 and 1986 Sugar Bowls. I can only find a couple of really short clips of the 1986 game.