Alabama–Penn State football rivalry

American college football rivalry From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alabama–Penn State football rivalry

The Alabama–Penn State football rivalry is an American college football rivalry between the Alabama Crimson Tide football team of the University of Alabama and Penn State Nittany Lions football team of Pennsylvania State University.[2][3][4] Following their three Bowl games in 1959, 1975 and 1979, the teams met for 10 straight years in what was ofted described as one of the nation's top intersectional rivalries.[5][6][7][8]

Quick Facts First meeting, Latest meeting ...
Alabama–Penn State football rivalry
First meetingDecember 19, 1959
Penn State, 7–0
Latest meetingSeptember 10, 2011
Alabama, 27–11
Next meetingTBD
Statistics
Meetings total15
All-time seriesAlabama leads, 10–5[1]
Largest victoryAlabama, 42–21 (1982)
Penn State, 23–3 (1986)
Longest win streakAlabama, 4 (1975–1982)
Current win streakAlabama, 2 (2010–present)
Close
Thumb
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
460km
286miles
Penn State
Alabama
Locations of Alabama and Penn State

After their 1990 game, the series became dormant with Penn State's move to the Big Ten Conference[9][10] but was renewed in 2010 in Tuscaloosa[11][12] and 2011 in State College.[13][14][15]

Bowl games

Summarize
Perspective

1959 Liberty Bowl

In a defensive struggle, the only scoring of the game came at the close of the second quarter, as Penn State threw for a touchdown on a fake field goal, leading to a 7–0 win for the Nittany Lions.[16]

1975 Sugar Bowl

With each team successfully kicking two field goals, the winning margin was a third-quarter touchdown by the Crimson Tide, as Alabama won, 13–6.[17]

1979 Sugar Bowl

Alabama scored in the second quarter, then Penn State answered in the third, then Alabama took a 14–7 lead on a touchdown set up by a 62-yard punt return.[18] Penn State had a chance to tie in the fourth, but Chuck Fusina threw an interception into the Alabama end zone. Then the Crimson Tide had a chance to put the game away, but fumbled the football back to Penn State at the Nittany Lion 19-yard-line with four minutes to go. Penn State drove to a first and goal at the Alabama eight. On third and goal from the one, Fusina asked Bama linebacker Marty Lyons "What do you think we should do?", and Lyons answered "You'd better pass." On third down, Penn State was stopped inches short of the goal line.[18] On fourth down, Penn State was stopped again, Barry Krauss meeting Mike Guman and throwing him back for no gain.[18] Alabama held on for a 14–7 victory.[19][18]

Game results

Alabama victoriesPenn State victories
More information No., Date ...
No.DateLocationWinning teamLosing team
1 December 19, 1959 Philadelphia, PA #12 Penn State 7 #10 Alabama 0
2 December 31, 1975 New Orleans, LA #3 Alabama 13 #7 Penn State 6
3 January 1, 1979 New Orleans, LA #2 Alabama 14 #1 Penn State 7
4 November 14, 1981 State College, PA #6 Alabama 31 #5 Penn State 16
5 October 9, 1982 Birmingham, AL #4 Alabama 42 #3 Penn State 21
6 October 8, 1983 State College, PA Penn State 34 #3 Alabama 28
7 October 13, 1984 Tuscaloosa, AL Alabama 6 #11 Penn State 0
8 October 12, 1985 State College, PA #8 Penn State 19 #10 Alabama 17
9 October 25, 1986 Tuscaloosa, AL #5 Penn State 23 #2 Alabama 3
10 September 12, 1987 State College, PA #19 Alabama 24 #11 Penn State 13
11 October 22, 1988 Birmingham, AL Alabama 8 Penn State 3
12 October 28, 1989 State College, PA #6 Alabama 17 #14 Penn State 16
13 October 27, 1990 Tuscaloosa, AL Penn State 9 Alabama 0
14 September 11, 2010 Tuscaloosa, AL #1 Alabama 24 #18 Penn State 3
15 September 10, 2011 State College, PA #3 Alabama 27 #23 Penn State 11
Series: Alabama leads 10–5[1]
Close

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.