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11/29/01
Longhorns
Rewind: The 1996 Big 12 Championship
Scoring summary
Team statistics
Individual statistics
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quarterback James Brown completed 19-of-28 passes for a career-high
353 yards in the 1996 Big 12 Championship game, including this fourth-and-one
pass to Derek Lewis with 2:40 remaining in the contest. Lewis hauled
in the fourth-down pass and raced 61 yards to set up Texas' game-clinching
touchdown. |
ST.
LOUIS -- In one of the biggest upsets of the 1996 college football
season and one of the biggest wins in recent Texas football history,
the Longhorns knocked off No. 3 Nebraska 37-27 to claim the first-ever
Big 12 Conference crown. A career-best 353 yards on 19 of 28 passing
by QB James Brown and 120 yards rushing and three touchdowns by fifth-year
senior RB Priest Holmes helped lead Texas to the stirring win over the
two-defending national champion Huskers in St. Louis.
Brown caught Nebraska's high-powered defense off guard from the start,
completing all four of his passes on the opening drive to help lead
the Longhorns 80 yards to the score. Holmes capped the drive with a
five-yard touchdown and Texas led 7-0 early. DeAngelo Evans scored his
first of three TD runs for the Huskers to tie the score 7-7 as the first
quarter came to an end, but Texas jumped back in front with a 49-yard
field goal by Phil Dawson. Kris Brown answered with a career-long 55-yard
field goal and again the teams were tied.
Holmes then shocked the Trans World Dome crowd midway through quarter
two with a career-high 61-yard run through the Nebraska line for a touchdown
to give the Longhorns a 17-10 advantage. Nebraska responded with a 23-yard
run for a touchdown by Evans, but a 30-yard field goal by Dawson helped
the Steers secure a 20-17 hafltime lead.
Dawson helped extend that cushion with a 47-yard field goal to open
the second half scoring, matching his career-high with three FGs in
one game. Nebraska's steady offense responded by continuing to churn
downfield. The Huskers finally captured their first lead of the game
on another Evans TD, this time an option on the right side for a six-yard
gain.
A James Brown interception on the ensuing drive was followed by another
Kris Brown field goal and the Huskers appeared to be gaining momentum
with a 27-23 lead. But the Longhorns staged a stunning turnaround. Just
four plays later James Brown lofted a pass into Wane McGarity's hand
on the right sideline that the receiver turned into a brilliant 66-yard
TD. The shell-shocked Huskers suddenly trailed 30-27, and there was
life on the Texas sideline.
That set the stage for what is sure to be one of the most talked about
plays in Longhorns history, a gutsy fourth-and-one conversion on Texas'
own 28-yard line. The Horns had possession and a three point lead but
elected to go for the first down with the pigskin resting just inches
from the first down marker. With 2:40 left on the Trans World Dome clock,
James Brown stepped up to center and received the ball immediately.
Then the junior QB stunned the Husker defense by rolling out of the
pocket to his left side and throwing downfield to reserve tight end
Derek Lewis for what turned into a 61-yard completion. Lewis, making
just his eighth catch of the season, took that pass down to the Nebraska
11 and set up Holmes for his third touchdown and a 37-27 back-breaking
score.
"We probably had more big plays against us today than we've had
all season long," said Nebraska defensive coordinator Charlie McBride.
"I can't remember a game since I've been at Nebraska (20 years)
when we had that many big plays against us."
Nebraska's attempt to stage a miracle comeback was quickly halted when
Dwight Kirkpatrick sacked Scott Frost and forced the quarterback into
fumbling the ball back into Texas' hands to run down the clock.
Texas had peppered Nebraska's top five-ranked defense for 503 yards
of total offense by the end of the contest. The loss was Nebraska's
first in conference in 31 games.
Scoring Summary
Nebraska 7 10 7 .3
27
Texas ...7 13 3 14 37
First Quarter
11:25 UT - Priest Holmes 5-yd run (Phil Dawson kick)
Drive: 11 plays, 80 yards, 3:35
0:14 NU - DeAngelo Evans 2-yd run (Kris Brown kick)
Drive: 12 plays, 80 yards, 5:45
Second Quarter
11:50 UT - Dawson 49-yd FG
Drive: 4 plays, 5 yards, 0:49
8:39 NU - Brown 51-yd FG
Drive: 7 plays, 31 yards, 3:11
7:24 UT - Priest Holmes 61-yd run (Dawson kick)
Drive: 3 plays, 87 yards, 1:15
2:23 NU - DeAngelo Evans 23-yd run (Brown kick)
Drive: 11 plays, 80 yards, 5:01
1:00 UT - Dawson 30-yd FG
Drive: 9 plays, 63 yards, 1:23
Third Quarter
8:30 UT - Dawson 47-yd FG
Drive: 6 plays, 52 yards, 2:29
2:11 NU - DeAngelo Evans 6-yd run (Brown kick)
Drive: 15 plays, 72 yards, 6:19
Fourth Quarter
10:11 NU - Kris Brown 24-yd FG
Drive: 13 plays, 46 yards, 5:22
8:53 UT - Wane McGarity 66-yd pass from James Brown (Dawson kick)
Drive: 3 plays, 80 yards, 1:18
1:53 UT - Priest Holmes 11-yd run (Dawson kick)
Drive: 7 plays, 93 yards, 2:13
Team Statistics
Nebraska Texas
First Downs 26 22
Carries/Net Yards Rushing 63-243 28-150
Pass Comp./Att./Int. 15-24-0 19-29-2
Net Yards Passing 155 353
Total Plays/Yards 87-398 57-503
Fumbles/Lost 3-2 0-0
Punts/Avg. 3-39.0 1-43.0
Penalties/Yards 5-35 4-24
Sacks by/Loss 0-0 1-5
Time of Possession 39:35 20:25
Individual Statistics
Texas
Rushing (Att./Yds./TD): Priest Holmes (9-120-3).
Passing (Comp./Att./Int./Yds./TD): James Brown (19-28-2-353-1).
Receiving (No./Yds./TD): Mike Adams (6-92); Wane McGarity (3-96-1).
Tackles (Ast./Unast./Total): Dusty Renfro (9-11-20); Aaron Humphrey
(3-9-12).
Punting (No./Yds./Avg.): Mark Schultis (1-43-43.0).
Nebraska
Rushing (Att./Yds./TD): DeAngelo Evans (32-130-3).
Passing (Comp./Att./Int./Yds./TD): Scott Frost (15-24-0-155-0).
Receiving (No./Yds./TD): DeAngelo Evans (6-42); Brendan Holbein (3-43).
Tackles (Ast./Unast./Total): Eric Stokes (1-7-8).
Punting (No./Yds./Avg.): Jesse Kosch (3-117-39.0).
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