1984 Cherry Bowl

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1984 Cherry Bowl
1234 Total
Army 0703 10
Michigan State 0006 6
DateDecember 22, 1984
Season
Referee
Don Baur (MAC)
Attendance70,332
Cherry Bowl
  1985

The 1984 Cherry Bowl was a post-season American

Silverdome in Pontiac, Michigan between the Army Cadets and the Michigan State Spartans on December 22, 1984. The game was the final contest of the 1984 NCAA Division I-A football season for both teams, and ended in a 10–6 victory for Army.[1]

Background

This was the first Cherry Bowl and first bowl game played in Michigan. This was Army's first ever bowl game and Michigan State's first bowl game since 1966.[citation needed]

Scoring summary

Ralf Mojsiejenko’s 52-yard field-goal attempt went wide left, costing Michigan State three points early. Another chance at the Army 5 for a touchdown led to an interception. A Spartan fumble led to an Army score. Clarence Jones scored the first Army points in a bowl game with a 4-yard touchdown run with 6:31 left in the first half to culminate an 8 play, 46 yard drive. This proved to be the halftime lead for the Cadets. In the fourth quarter, another Spartan fumble led to a score as Craig Stopa increased the lead to 10 with his 38-yard field goal with 8:40 left in the game. Bob Wasczenski caught a 36-yard touchdown pass to narrow the lead with 4:19 remaining. On their conversion attempt, the pass failed, leaving it at 10-6. From that point, Army and Michigan State played stalemate as Army won their first ever bowl game. The Cadets controlled the clock for 34:05. Nathan Sassaman rushed for 136 yards on 28 carries. Yarema was sacked three times and intercepted three times en route to an 11-of-25 155-yard performance.[2]

Statistics

Statistics Michigan State Army
First downs 13 15
Rushing yards 89 256
Passing yards 155 10
Total yards 244 266
Passes (Att-Comp-Int) 25–11–3 2–1–1
Punts–average 4–55.8 7–36.7
Fumbles–lost 3–2 2–1
Penalties–yards 4–26 1–7

References

  1. ^ Bolding, Mark. "The Cherry Bowl 1984". mmbolding.com. Archived from the original on August 28, 2008. Retrieved November 8, 2012.
  2. ^ "Bowl History" (PDF). 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016.