Notre Dame Almanac: Happy Anniversary Music City Bowl

LSU quarterback Anthony Jennings completed a then game-record 75 yard touchdown pass to wide receiver John Diarse.  Jennings other 13 pass attempts on the afternoon totaled just 76 more yards.  Joe Burrow was still a senior at Athens High School on this day.

I woke up this morning and began flipping channels only to come to ESPN-U.  I thought I was still in a haze when it said the 2014 Music City Bowl between Notre Dame and LSU was being shown.

If you’re a Notre Dame fan you remember the Irish pulling off the win to finish a 2014 season that began with so much positivity until one bad call in Tallahassee sent things spiraling out of control the second half of the season.

It did end on a high note however as the Irish earned their first win over an SEC team since beating Tennessee in 2005.

Do you remember how ridiculous that game was, though?

A young man named Leonard Fournette announcing his arrival by returning a kickoff 100 yards for a socre and setting the record for longest run in Music City Bowl history, an 89 yard touchdown run.  He’d finish with 264 total yards.

Notre Dame went back and forth between Everett Golson and Malik Zaire at quarterback as the two combined to throw for 186 yards and a touchdown while Zaire also helped play the ball-possession game in carrying 22 times for 96 yards.

Notre Dame ran the ball 51 times on the day, an almost exact 2:1 ratio as they attempted 26 passes.

CJ Prosise began his transformation to running back that afternoon as he had three carries (also had three carries all year coming in) for 75 yards, including a 50 yard scoring run.  A pretty nice first step for what wound up being a special 2015 for him.

LSU quarterback Anthony Jennings completed a then game-record 75 yard touchdown pass to wide receiver John Diarse.  Jennings other 13 pass attempts on the afternoon totaled just 76 more yards.  Joe Burrow was still a senior at Athens High School on this day.

And most importantly it all ended with Kyle Brindza hitting a 32 yard field goal as time expired to give Notre Dame (+8.5) the upset victory.

That was five years ago today, relive some of those fun memories by watching the highlights below:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qp7jkgtWNVc&w=560&h=315]

 

 

Music City Bowl: Louisville vs. Mississippi State odds, picks and best bets

Previewing the Music City Bowl between Louisville and Mississippi State with NCAA football betting odds, picks and best bets

The Louisville Cardinals (7-5) and Mississippi State Bulldogs (6-6) will square off in the Music City Bowl at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, Tenn., on Dec. 30 at 4 p.m. ET.

We analyze the Louisville-Mississippi State odds and betting lines, while providing college football betting tips and advice on this matchup.

Louisville at Mississippi State: Three things you need to know

1. Mississippi State ranks 18th in the nation in rushing this season, averaging 227 yards per game. That doesn’t bode well for Louisville, which allowed 517 rushing yards to Kentucky in its most recent game. The Cardinals’ rush defense is 115th in the country (210.8).

2. Louisville’s five losses are all by at least 11 points with an average margin of defeat of 24.2 points. Five of the Bulldogs’ six losses came by at least 10 points, including four by at least 19.

3. Louisville’s first-year head coach Scott Satterfield is 3-0 in his career in bowl games, previously coaching Appalachian State. Mississippi State coach Joe Moorhead lost in his bowl debut as head coach last season, 27-22 to Iowa in the Outback Bowl.


Get some action on this game or others by placing a bet at BetMGM!


Louisville at Mississippi State: Odds, betting lines and picks

Odds via BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Friday at 3 p.m. ET.

Prediction

Mississippi State 31, Louisville 21

Moneyline (ML)

The Bulldogs won each of their last two games to close out the regular season after losing 38-7 to Alabama. They are 6-1 in their last seven December games, proving to be a tough out late in the year.

Bet the MISSISSIPPI STATE (-167) moneyline, which is a good number to get in at.

New to sports betting? A $10 wager on Mississippi State returns a profit of $5.99.

Against the Spread (ATS)

Mississippi State is 10-4 ATS in its last 14 nonconference games. Louisville, on the other hand, is only 1-6 ATS in its last seven games against the SEC.

Bet MISSISSIPPI STATE (-110) to cover the 3.5-point spread in this one.

Over/Under (O/U)

The over/under is 62.5, which is pretty a high number for these teams. The under has hit in five of the Bulldogs’ last seven games and in each of the last three, though the over is 4-1 in Louisville’s last five.

Still, you should bet the UNDER (-110), given how bad both passing attacks are.

Get some action on this game or others, place a bet with BetMGM today. And for more sports betting picks and tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @camdasilva and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

[lawrence-newsletter]

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1623]

Music City Bowl’s Scott Ramsey discusses Vols’ chances of playing in Nashville

2019 Tennessee football.

[jwplayer OSBA6oIu-er0jUifI]

NASHVILLE — Tennessee (7-5, 5-3 SEC) finished the 2019 regular season with five consecutive wins.

The five-game win-streak has provided momentum heading into the offseason under Jeremy Pruitt as he continues to rebuild the Vols’ program back to a championship contender.

Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl President and CEO Scott Ramsey discussed how Tennessee playing in Nashville for the postseason is a good fit.

“Obviously we would be very excited to have them,” Ramsey told Vols Wire of Tennessee. “I think it would be a good fit.”

Ramsey mentioned that each year is different and having the Vols play at Nissan Stadium is a better fit this bowl season with Tennessee carrying momentum into 2020.

“I think every year is different,” Ramsey said. “In talking to the Tennessee folks and Phillip (Fulmer), sometimes when you are really close you want to make it the right year when you are there.

“I know some of our counterparts have similar situations, sometimes it seems like it’s the right year and sometimes it works best if you go in a different direction, but this one certainly feels that if we have the opportunity then it will be really successful. Tennessee specifically, they did not play at Vanderbilt this year and no bowl game last year, so we feel like with a Monday afternoon game and a chance to really reach out and maximize the opportunity to the fans to participate in the program and the players to play in front of a full stadium, we think we have the right opportunity.”

Ramsey said that he and counterparts representing other bowl games have to wait and see how championship games play out before Sunday’s final College Football Rankings.

“I say that with a little bit of a pumping the brakes because we have to see how the system plays out and some things we can’t control and how many teams the SEC ultimately gets in the New Year’s Six — which could dictate the available teams in our pool and shuffle all of the cards,” Ramsey said of Tennessee playing in the Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl. “We have been fortunate in Nashville, given the geographical proximity to most of the schools within at least a half-day drive, our flexibility with some teams are really good and we have seen some really great response.

“Our city is an exciting place for the players and fans. If we are fortunate enough to have Tennessee it will be a great, successful fit this year.”

Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl selection process

  • Agreement with the SEC to take on either the ACC or Big Ten (through a unique partnership with the TaxSlayer Bowl) each year.
  • Equally positioned with five other Bowl games (Outback, TaxSlayer, Advocare Texas, Belk, and Autozone Liberty) immediately following the College Football Playoff and Capital One Bowl.
  • The SEC office controls selection of SEC schools with input from both the Bowls and Universities within the above-mentioned six Bowl group.
  • Over the course of six years, the SEC will play an ACC team three times and a Big Ten team three times.
  • The Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl and TaxSlayer Bowl will jointly determine which Conference (ACC or Big 10) will play in each Bowl on “Selection Sunday.” The rotation is not pre-determined giving the Bowls maximum flexibility in creating the best match-ups for their respective SEC opponent.

Ramsey discussed which conference could matchup against an SEC team this season in the Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl.

“We probably will go ACC this year,” he said. “Louisville, most logically, would be one of our options, Virginia Tech could fit in there as well. We will see how things play out and leads into Sunday.”

If Tennessee is not the team representing the SEC in Nashville, Ramsey views Mississippi State or Kentucky as “successful” options, as well.

As championship games unfold leading up to the final College Football Playoff rankings, Ramsey detailed what he will be watching for.

“What we are really watching are how many (SEC teams) are in the New Year’s Six,” Ramsey said. “It’s a dominio effect. We are all trying to make matchups work.

“We work more through the conferences for a better sense of all the matchups and not just two. So it might be a three or four bowl trickle like Tampa, Charlotte, Houston. Who you have on the other side of the game factors. We all do talk and we all share preferences, and ultimately now it centers with the conferences.”

Franklin American Mortgage Music City Bowl — December 30, 2019 — 3:00 p.m. CT