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The '''2010 [[Franklin American Mortgage Company|Franklin American Mortgage]] [[Music City Bowl]]''' was the 13th edition of the [[college football]] [[bowl game]] and was played at [[LP Field]] in [[Nashville, Tennessee]]. The game was played on Thursday, December 30, [[2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season|2010]], at 5:30 p.m. CST and telecast on [[ESPN]].<ref>[http://www.musiccitybowl.com/newsroom/news.php?nID=201 Game Date Announced for Music City Bowl], Music City Bowl, April 9, 2010.</ref> The Tar Heels won 30-27 in two overtimes, but this game will be remembered for the frantic finish of the contest, and for causing a rule change for the next season.
The '''2010 [[Franklin American Mortgage Company|Franklin American Mortgage]] [[Music City Bowl]]''' was the 13th edition of the [[college football]] [[bowl game]] and was played at [[LP Field]] in [[Nashville, Tennessee]]. The game was played on Thursday, December 30, [[2010 NCAA Division I FBS football season|2010]], at 5:30 p.m. CST and telecast on [[ESPN]].<ref>[http://www.musiccitybowl.com/newsroom/news.php?nID=201 Game Date Announced for Music City Bowl], Music City Bowl, April 9, 2010.</ref> The Tar Heels won 30-27 in two overtimes, but this game will be remembered for the frantic finish of the contest, and for causing a rule change for the next season '''AND HOW TENNESSEE WAS SCREWED BY IDIOTIC REFS
'''

==Teams==
==Teams==
The [[2010 North Carolina Tar Heels football team|North Carolina Tar Heels]] represented the [[2010 Atlantic Coast Conference football season|Atlantic Coast Conference]], and the [[2010 Tennessee Volunteers football team|Tennessee Volunteers]] represented the [[2010 Southeastern Conference football season|Southeastern Conference]], the 32nd meeting between the two schools.
The [[2010 North Carolina Tar Heels football team|North Carolina Tar Heels]] represented the [[2010 Atlantic Coast Conference football season|Atlantic Coast Conference]], and the [[2010 Tennessee Volunteers football team|Tennessee Volunteers]] represented the [[2010 Southeastern Conference football season|Southeastern Conference]], the 32nd meeting between the two schools.

Revision as of 21:57, 12 September 2011

The 2010 Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl was the 13th edition of the college football bowl game and was played at LP Field in Nashville, Tennessee. The game was played on Thursday, December 30, 2010, at 5:30 p.m. CST and telecast on ESPN.[2] The Tar Heels won 30-27 in two overtimes, but this game will be remembered for the frantic finish of the contest, and for causing a rule change for the next season AND HOW TENNESSEE WAS SCREWED BY IDIOTIC REFS

Teams

The North Carolina Tar Heels represented the Atlantic Coast Conference, and the Tennessee Volunteers represented the Southeastern Conference, the 32nd meeting between the two schools.

Coming into the game, Tennessee held a 20-10-1 record in prior matchups with the last contest having taken place in 1961.[3] Tennessee and UNC were actually scheduled to play one another in 2011 and 2012; however, the series was canceled by Tennessee. The two programs had never before played each other in a bowl game.

North Carolina Tar Heels

The Tar Heels came into the 2010 season ranked No. 18 in the country in the pre-season AP poll. However, the season would be marked by numerous injuries and suspensions and UNC entered the game with a 7-5 record. North Carolina was making its third straight bowl appearance. Veteran quarterback T.J. Yates was one of the most improved players in the country during the 2010 regular season and was at the heart of the team’s success. He was No. 2 in the ACC in passing efficiency and No. 2 in passing average per game. The Tar Heels were making their first appearance in the Music City Bowl.

Tennessee Volunteers

Tennessee started the season at 2-6 and looked like it would not be appearing in a bowl game. However, the team rebounded nicely and won its last 4 straight to come into the game at 6-6. The Vols had one of the youngest teams in the country with 21 first-year players on the two-deep chart. Nonetheless, freshman quarterback Tyler Bray had thrown 12 TD passes in his last four starts to get the Vols bowl eligible. This was the first time that Tennessee played in the Music City Bowl.

Game Summary

The 2010 Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl ended in unusual fashion. Trailing Tennessee 17-20 with only 31 seconds left, no time-outs and the ball on their own twenty yard line, the Tar Heels were able to move all the way to the Tennessee 25 yard line with 16 seconds remaining. North Carolina's Shaun Draughn ran the ball for a seven-yard gain but did not get out of bounds to stop the clock. Chaos ensued as North Carolina tried to rush in the field-goal unit to tie the game. North Carolina had seventeen players on the field as quarterback T.J. Yates tried to stop the clock by spiking the ball at 0:01. Penalty flags flew as the clock on the scoreboard ran out. Volunteers fans and players streamed onto the field in celebration while UNC coaches and players were in disbelief. The head referee announced to the crowd over the loudspeaker, "The game is over," and the head coaches for both schools shook hands at mid-field. The replay official then called for a review since there had been one second left on the clock when the ball was spiked. The officials reversed the decision on the field, ruling that the ball had in fact been snapped and spiked with one second remaining on the clock. The Tar Heels were assessed the five-yard penalty for too many men on the field and the clock was reset to 0:01. UNC kicker Casey Barth then kicked a 39-yard field goal to tie the score at 20-20 and send the game into overtime. Both teams scored touchdowns in the first overtime period to tie the score at 27-27. In the second overtime period, North Carolina linebacker Quan Sturdivant intercepted a pass from Tennessee quarterback Tyler Bray on the Volunteers' possession and North Carolina kicker Barth kicked a 23-yard field goal to win the game for North Carolina 30-27.[4]

Scoring

Scoring Play Score
1st Quarter
UNC - Shaun Draughn 58 yard run (Casey Barth kick), 10:58 UNC 7-0
TENN - Tyler Bray 29 yard pass to Gerald Jones (Daniel Lincoln kick), 2:10 TIE 7-7
2nd Quarter
UNC - Casey Barth 28 yard kick, 10:24 UNC 10-7
TENN - Tyler Bray 45 yard pass to Da'Rick Rogers (Daniel Lincoln kick), 1:30 TENN 14-10
UNC - T.J. Yates 39 yard pass to Erik Highsmith (Casey Barth kick), 0:27 UNC 17-14
3rd Quarter
No scoring UNC 17-14
4th Quarter
TENN - Tyler Bray 8 yard pass to Justin Hunter (Daniel Lincoln kick missed), 5:16 TENN 20-17
UNC - Casey Barth 40 yard kick, 0:00 TIE 20-20
Overtime
UNC - T.J. Yates 1 yard run (Casey Barth kick) UNC 27-20
TENN - Tyler Bray 20 yard pass to Luke Stocker (Daniel Lincoln kick) TIE 27-27
2nd Overtime
UNC - Casey Barth 23 yard kick UNC 30-27

Statistics

Statistics N. Carolina Tennessee
First Downs 21 20
Total offense, plays-yards 385 339
Rushes-yards (net) 29-157 29-27
Passes, Comp-Att-Yds 23-40-234 27-45-312
Fumbles-Interceptions 1-1 0-3
Time of Possession 28:11 31:49
Penalties-Yards 12-80 8-75

[5]

Aftermath

Because of the 4th quarter situation in which North Carolina's penalty stopped the clock, a rule change was made effective beginning with the 2011 season. If a team commits a penalty that directly causes a clock stoppage in the final minute of a half, the opposing team is allowed to have 10 seconds run off the clock in addition to the yardage penalty.[6]

References

  1. ^ The Tuscaloosa News, December 18, 2010
  2. ^ Game Date Announced for Music City Bowl, Music City Bowl, April 9, 2010.
  3. ^ Although the states of North Carolina and Tennessee share a common border, the Tar Heels are in the Atlantic Coast Conference while the Volunteers belong to the Southeastern Conference.
  4. ^ Travis, Clay (2010-12-31). "Music City Miracle Part Two Crushes Tennessee as North Carolina Triumphs". http://ncaafootball.fanhouse.com. Retrieved 2011-01-01. {{cite news}}: External link in |newspaper= (help)
  5. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/boxscore?gameId=303642633
  6. ^ Associated Press (April 15, 2011). "Series of rules changes approved". ESPN.com. Retrieved April 15, 2011.