1999 Independence Bowl

College football game
1999 Sanford Independence Bowl
Oklahoma Sooners Ole Miss Rebels
(7–4) (7–4)
Big 12 SEC
25 27
Head coach: 
Bob Stoops
Head coach: 
David Cutcliffe
1234 Total
Oklahoma 30157 25
Ole Miss 71406 27
DateDecember 31, 1999
Season1999
StadiumIndependence Stadium
LocationShreveport, Louisiana
MVPCB Tim Strickland, Ole Miss
QB Josh Heupel, Oklahoma
RefereeJim Maconaghy (Big East) [1]
Attendance49,873
United States TV coverage
NetworkESPN
AnnouncersRich Waltz (Play by Play)
Gino Toretta (Analyst)
Don McPherson (Sideline)
Independence Bowl
 < 1998  2000 > 

The 1999 Independence Bowl was a college football postseason bowl game between the Ole Miss Rebels and the Oklahoma Sooners. It was the last football game of the 20th century

Background

Ole Miss finished tied for 3rd in the SEC West while the Sooners finished tied for second in the Big 12 South under Bob Stoops in his first year with the program. This was Ole Miss' second straight Independence Bowl and Oklahoma's first bowl game since 1994.

Game summary

Ole Miss took a 21–3 halftime lead on two touchdown passes from Romaro Miller (who went 12-of-17 for 158 yards in the first half, a contrast to his 6-of-11 in the second half) and a Deuce McAllister touchdown run of 80 yards. Oklahoma cut the lead in the third quarter on two touchdown passes from Josh Heupel to make it 21–18 going into the final quarter. Binkley made it 24–18 on a field goal with 11 minutes remaining. Oklahoma however scored on a Heupel touchdown pass to Quenton Griffin to make it 25–24 with 2:17 remaining. But the Rebels had one last drive in them, and Les Binkley's 39-yard field goal won the game for the Rebels as the clock expired, giving Ole Miss their fourth straight bowl win. Oklahoma set the record for most passing yards in an Independence Bowl with 390 yards, as Heupel was named co-MVP, along with Tim Strickland, who had an interception for Ole Miss. McAllister went for 121 yards on 17 carries and 55 yards on 3 catches. In losing efforts, Quenton Griffin rushed for 86 yards on 12 carries and had 8 catches for 65 yards while Brandon Daniels caught six passes for 109 yards.[2][3]

Aftermath

While the Sooners have not returned to the Independence Bowl since this game, they have played in a bowl game at the end of each season since 1999, including four national championship games. The Rebels have returned to the Independence Bowl just once, in 2002 where they defeated Nebraska behind the arm of Eli Manning 27-23.

Statistics

Statistics Ole Miss Oklahoma
First Downs 19 27
Rushing Yards 159 91
Passing 202 390
Interceptions 2 1
Punts-Average 5-39 1-10
Fumbles-Lost 1-0 3-3
Penalties-Yards 3-13 4-35

References

  1. ^ "Maconaghy Announces Retirement as CAA Football Coordinator of Officiating". caasports.com. December 5, 2018. Retrieved March 6, 2019.
  2. ^ "USA TODAY Latest news".
  3. ^ "Independence Bowl Postgame Notes - OLEMISSSPORTS.COM - OLE MISS Official Athletic Site". Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  • v
  • t
  • e
1999–2000 NCAA football bowl game season
  • All-Star Games: East–West Shrine Game (Jan. 15)
  • Senior Bowl (Jan. 22)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Ole Miss Rebels bowl games
  • v
  • t
  • e
Oklahoma Sooners bowl games

# denotes national championship game; † denotes College Football Playoff semifinal game


Stub icon

This college football bowl article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e