2016 Las Vegas Bowl

The 2016 Las Vegas Bowl was a college football bowl game that was played on December 17, 2016, at Sam Boyd Stadium in Whitney, Nevada. The 25th annual Las Vegas Bowl was one of the 2016–17 bowl games concluding the 2016 FBS football season. The game aired on ABC. Through sponsorship from GEICO, the game was officially known as the Las Vegas Bowl presented by GEICO.[5]

2016 Las Vegas Bowl presented by GEICO
25th Las Vegas Bowl
1234Total
Houston1000010
San Diego State06141434
DateDecember 17, 2016
Season2016
StadiumSam Boyd Stadium
LocationWhitney, Nevada
MVPSan Diego State RB Donnel Pumphrey[1]
FavoriteHouston by 3.5[2]
RefereeDaniel Gautreaux (C-USA)[3]
Attendance29,286[3]
PayoutUS$1,350,000[4]
United States TV coverage
NetworkABC
Sports USA
AnnouncersBrent Musburger, Jesse Palmer, Kaylee Hartung (ABC)
Eli Gold, Gary Barnett (Sports USA)
Las Vegas Bowl
 < 2015  2017

Team selection

The game would have featured teams from the Mountain West Conference and Pac-12 Conference. However, since the Pac-12 had only six bowl-eligible teams, and two of them qualified for New Years Six bowls, the sixth-place Pac-12 team was unavailable. Instead, the bowl elected to invite the Houston Cougars of the American Athletic Conference. This was the first time an AAC team played in the Las Vegas Bowl. The representative from the Mountain West was San Diego State, which qualified for the bowl by winning the 2016 Mountain West Conference Football Championship Game. Houston played in its first-ever Las Vegas Bowl, while San Diego State appeared for a second time, the first being a 1998 loss to North Carolina.

This was the third meeting between the schools, with Houston having won both previous ones. The most recent prior meeting was on October 6, 1973, when the Cougars defeated the Aztecs by a score of 14–9.[6]

Houston

San Diego State

Game summary

On the fourth drive of the game, Houston capped a 10-play, 24-yard drive with a 31-yard field goal by Ty Cummings. After a three-and-out by San Diego State, Houston went on a 10-play, 74-yard touchdown drive. Greg Ward, Jr.'s 2-yard run put the Cougars up 10–0 to finish the 1st quarter. San Diego State responded with 34 unanswered points, leading to a 34–10 win by the Aztecs.

On the first play of the Aztecs' first drive in the 4th quarter, Donnel Pumphrey broke the all-time FBS career record for rushing yardage.

Scoring summary

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPUHSDSU
16:3810243:31UH31-yard field goal by Ty Cummings30
11:2210743:50UHGreg Ward Jr. 2-yard touchdown run, Ty Cummings kick good100
26:288554:26SDSU23-yard field goal by John Baron103
21:297262:52SDSU28-yard field goal by John Baron106
33:144681:54SDSUDonnel Pumphrey 32-yard touchdown run, John Baron kick good1013
30:56SDSUInterception returned 54 yards for touchdown by Ron Smith, John Baron kick good1020
48:581280:25SDSUCurtis Anderson 28-yard touchdown reception from Christian Chapman, John Baron kick good1027
41:114211:46SDSUJuw Washington 7-yard touchdown run, John Baron kick good1034
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football.1034

Source: [3]

Statistics

Statistics[3]HOUSDSU
First downs1613
Plays–yards75–25451–255
Rushes–yards41–25 (0.6)37–127 (3.4)
Passing yards229128
Passing: Comp–Att–Int25–34–410–14–0
Time of possession32:1227:48
CategoryTeamPlayerStatistics
PassingHOUGreg Ward, Jr.25/34, 229 yds, 4 INT
SDSUChristian Chapman10/14, 128 yds, 1 TD
RushingHOUDuke Catalon14 car, 18 yds
SDSUDonnel Pumphrey19 car, 115 yds, 1 TD
ReceivingHOUBrandon Wilson5 rec, 52 yds
SDSUDavid Wells4 rec, 33 yds

References