2010 Champs Sports Bowl

2010 Champs Sports Bowl
1234 Total
West Virginia 0700 7
NC State 7367 23
Date December 28, 2010
Season 2010
Stadium Citrus Bowl
Location Orlando, Florida
MVP QB Russell Wilson, NC State
Favorite W. Virginia by 3[1]
Referee John O'Neill (Big Ten)
Attendance 48,962
Payout US$2.125 million per team
United States TV coverage
Network ESPN
Announcers Joe Tessitore, Rod Gilmore and Rob Stone
Nielsen ratings TBD

The 2010 Champs Sports Bowl was a college football bowl game that was played on December 28, 2010. The game matched up the NC State Wolfpack from the Atlantic Coast Conference versus the West Virginia Mountaineers from the Big East Conference. The game was scheduled for a 6:30 p.m. ET kickoff at Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium, Orlando, Fla.

Teams

West Virginia

West Virginia enters the game with a 9-3 record and are Co-Champions of the Big East Conference. The Mountaineers were hurt in their quest for the Big East's BCS bid with October losses to UConn and Syracuse. WVU's strength lies in their defense, which ranks 2nd nationally in points allowed and 3rd in yards allowed. The Mountaineers have appeared in eight straight bowl games and were defeated in last year's Gator Bowl by Florida State 33-21. West Virginia has played in the bowl on two previous occasions, in 1995 and 1997, when it was known as the Carquest Bowl and was played in Miami.

NC State

NC State enters the bowl with an overall record of 8-4. The Wolfpack will attempt to win a bowl game for the first time in coach Tom O’Brien’s four seasons in Raleigh. NC State played in the Papajohns.com Bowl in his second season but lost to Rutgers, 29-23. The strength of the Wolfpack is in their passing game, which is ranked number 19 in the country. NC State has appeared in the bowl three previous times, first in 1998 when the game was known as the MicornPC Bowl and was played in Miami, Florida, and then in 2001 and 2003 when it was played in Orlando but was called the Tangerine Bowl.

Game Summary

Scoring

Scoring Play Score
1st Quarter
NCSU – Russell Wilson 16-yard pass to Mustafa Greene (Josh Czajkowski kick), 1:37 NCSU 7–0
2nd Quarter
WVU – Geno Smith 32-yard pass to Stedman Bailey (Tyler Bitancurt kick), 2:10 TIE 7–7
NCSU – Josh Czajkowski 45 yard kick, 0:26 NCSU 10–7
3rd Quarter
NCSU – Josh Czajkowski 38 yard kick, 6:05 NCSU 13–7
NCSU – Josh Czajkowski 40 yard kick, 1:50 NCSU 16–7
4th Quarter
NCSU – Russell Wilson 7-yard pass to Jarvis Williams (Josh Czajkowski kick), 3:55 NCSU 23–7

Statistics

Statistics West Virginia NC State
First Downs 18 21
Total offense, plays-yards 64-324 81-377
Rushes-yards (net) 25-128 36-101
Passes, Comp-Att-Yds 22-39-196 28-45-276
Fumbles-Interceptions4-1 0-0
Time of Possession 23:14 36:46

Game Notes

The two schools have played each other nine times previously, with WVU holding a 5-4 advantage. They have not played since 1979. This will be the third time that they have played in a bowl game, having played in the 1972 and 1975 Peach Bowls. The bowl series between NC State and West Virginia is split, 1-1: the Wolfpack won the 1972 contest 49-13, and the Mountaineers 13-10 victors in 1975.

References

  1. The Tuscaloosa News, December 28, 2010
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