2022 Las Vegas Bowl

The 2022 Las Vegas Bowl was a college football bowl game played on December 17, 2022, at Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada. The 30th annual Las Vegas Bowl, the game featured Oregon State from the Pac-12 Conference and Florida from the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The game began at 11:35 a.m. PST[5] and aired on ESPN.[6] It was one of the 2022–23 bowl games concluding the 2022 FBS football season. Sponsored by roofing distribution company SRS Distribution, the game was officially known as the SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl.

2022 SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl
30th Las Vegas Bowl
Allegiant Stadium and the teams at scrimmage during the second quarter
1234Total
Florida00033
Oregon State7313730
DateDecember 17, 2022
Season2022
StadiumAllegiant Stadium
LocationParadise, Nevada
MVPBen Gulbranson (QB, Oregon State)[1]
FavoriteOregon State by 8.5[2]
RefereeRiley Johnson (ACC)[3]
Attendance29,750
PayoutUS$2,900,000[4]
United States TV coverage
NetworkESPN
AnnouncersDave Pasch (play-by-play), Kirk Herbstreit and Pat McAfee (analysts), and Laura Rutledge (sideline)
Las Vegas Bowl
 < 2021  2023

Teams

The Las Vegas Bowl featured the Florida Gators from the Southeastern Conference and the Oregon State Beavers from the Pac-12 Conference. This was the first meeting between the teams.[7]

This was the 19th bowl game appearance for Oregon State, and they entered with a bowl record of 11–7.[7] The Beavers had appeared in the Las Vegas Bowl twice before: they defeated New Mexico in the 2003 game and lost to BYU in the 2009 game.[7] The game was Florida's 48th bowl game appearance, and they entered with a record of 24–23 across all prior appearances.[8] This was the first appearance in the Las Vegas Bowl — and in a bowl game in the state of Nevada — for the Gators.[8]

Florida

In Billy Napier's debut season with the program, the Gators kicked off their campaign with an upset victory over No. 7 Utah,[9] vaulting them into the AP Poll at No. 12.[10] They suffered a setback in their conference opener the next week as they lost by ten to No. 20 Kentucky,[11] but rebounded with a narrow win over South Florida closed out their three-game home stretch to begin the year.[12] They fell out of the rankings following a five-point defeat at No. 11 Tennessee the next week in a game that was visited by College GameDay.[13] After delaying their fifth game by a day due to Hurricane Ian,[14] the Gators hosted Eastern Washington and won,[15] and they played Missouri the next Saturday for homecoming in a game that they also won.[16] They were unable to keep up their good form, as the Gators fell to LSU by ten points at home before heading into a bye week.[17] They fell back to .500 with a rivalry loss against No. 1 Georgia in Jacksonville to conclude the month of October.[18] Florida responded with a pair of conference wins, the second of which earned them bowl eligibility: first on the road against Texas A&M[19] and second at home against South Carolina.[20] The Gators' final SEC game resulted in an upset loss to Vanderbilt by seven points,[21] and Florida's regular season concluded with a rivalry loss to Florida State, also by seven.[22] The Gators accepted their bid to the Las Vegas Bowl on December 4, and entered with a 6–6 overall record and a 3–5 record in SEC play.[23]

On December 5, Florida quarterback Anthony Richardson announced that he would forgo playing in the bowl game and instead declare for the NFL draft.[24] As a result, Napier announced on December 8 that redshirt freshman Jack Miller III would start at quarterback for the Gators in Richardson's place.[25]

Oregon State

Jonathan Smith's fifth year at the helm of the Oregon State program began with a trio of non-conference games: one home, one away, and one played at a neutral site. The Beavers' opener saw them defeat Boise State[26] and their first road contest of the season resulted in a three-point win over Fresno State after a game-winning touchdown on the game's last play.[27] They improved to 3–0 with a 40-point win over Montana State in Portland.[28] Two ranked opponents waited for Oregon State as the Beavers entered Pac-12 play with a loss to No. 7 USC, by three points,[29] followed by a loss to No. 12 Utah, by 26 points.[30] The Beavers rebounded with a one-point win over Stanford[31] before returning home to face Washington State, whom they defeated by 14 points.[32] OSU earned bowl eligibility the following week by defeating Colorado at home, 42–9.[33] After entering the rankings for the first time this season at No. 23, the Beavers fell to Washington in a Friday night road game,[34] but regained their place in the top 25 with a victory the next week against California.[35] In their final road game, Oregon State traveled to Tempe and beat Arizona State by 24 points,[36] putting them at No. 21 in the College Football Playoff rankings entering their rivalry game with No. 9 Oregon.[37] The Beavers rallied from a 21-point third quarter deficit to beat the Ducks by 4, marking the end of their best regular season under Jonathan Smith.[38]

The Beavers accepted their bowl bid on December 4; they entered with a 9–3 record and a 6–3 mark in conference play.[23]

Game summary

The game was originally scheduled for 4:30 p.m. PST on ABC, but was moved up after the NFL flexed the New England PatriotsLas Vegas Raiders game out of NBC Sunday Night Football in order to allow the Raiders, who play their home games at Allegiant Stadium, more time to prepare the venue.[39] The game's original time and network was moved to be the new time and network for the New Mexico Bowl as a result.[40]

The officiating crew for the game, representing the Atlantic Coast Conference, was led by referee Riley Johnson and umpire Mark Wilson.[3]

Due in part to many players sitting out the bowl game in order to avoid an injury, the Gators offense struggled mightily in the game. Florida scored a field goal with just 37 seconds left in the game to barely avoid its first shutout since October 29, 1988 and extend its all time NCAA record of avoiding a shutout to 436 games.[41][42][43]

2022 SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl
Period1234Total
Florida00033
No. 14 Oregon State7313730

at Allegiant StadiumParadise, Nevada

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPFloridaOregon State
12:108653:39Oregon StateTyjon Lindsey 8-yard touchdown run, Everett Hayes kick good07
24:329595:20Oregon State27-yard field goal by Everett Hayes010
310:2010644:33Oregon StateSilas Bolden 15-yard touchdown reception from Ben Gulbranson, Everett Hayes kick good017
38:44370:25Oregon StateBen Gulbranson 7-yard touchdown run, Atticus Sappington kick good023
413:0213986:33Oregon StateJam Griffin 2-yard touchdown run, Atticus Sappington kick good030
40:3712645:14Florida40-yard field goal by Adam Mihalek330
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football.030

Statistics

Florida statistics[5]
Gators passing
C–AYdsTD–INT
Jack Miller III13–221800–0
Gators rushing
CarYdsTD
Montrell Johnson Jr.11140
Trevor Etienne8140
Jack Miller III13130
Ricky Pearsall1−20
Gators receiving
RecYdsTD
Ricky Pearsall4650
Thai Chiaokhiao-Bowman2530
Caleb Douglas2250
Jonathan Odom2240
Ja'Quavion Fraziars1100
Trevor Etienne190
Montrell Johnson Jr.1−60
Oregon State statistics[5]
Beavers passing
C–AYdsTD–INT
Ben Gulbranson12–191651–0
Tristan Gebbia5–6240–0
Tyjon Lindsey0–100–0
Beavers rushing
CarYdsTD
Deshaun Fenwick201070
Jack Colletto2170
Ben Gulbranson5151
Jesiah Irish2150
Damien Martinez3120
Tyjon Lindsey181
Jam Griffin221
Kanoa Shannon120
TEAM1−20
Tristan Gebbia1−120
Beavers receiving
RecYdsTD
Silas Bolden6991
John Dunmore5420
Jack Velling2210
Isaiah Newell1110
Jesiah Irish190
Tyjon Lindsey270

References