December 2015 Birmingham Bowl: Difference between revisions

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:''This article is about the December 30, 2015 bowl game during the 2015-2016 college football season. For the January 3, 2015 bowl, see [[January 2015 Birmingham Bowl]].''
:''This article is about the December 30, 2015 bowl game during the 2015-2016 college football season. For the January 3, 2015 bowl, see [[January 2015 Birmingham Bowl]].''
[[File:December 2015 Birmingham Bowl logo.jpg|right|175px]]
[[File:Dec 2015 Birmingham Bowl logo.jpg|right|175px]]
The '''December 2015 Birmingham Bowl''' was the 10th contest in the annual postseason [[Birmingham Bowl]] series at [[Legion Field]] which began in [[2006]]. The game was played for the second year with no corporate title sponsor.
The '''December 2015 Birmingham Bowl''' was the 10th contest in the annual postseason [[Birmingham Bowl]] series at [[Legion Field]] which began in [[2006]]. The game was played for the second year with no corporate title sponsor.


The contest took place in a light rain on Wednesday, [[December 30]], [[2015]] with the [[Auburn Tigers football team|Auburn Tigers]] (6-6) of the [[Southeastern Conference]] meeting the 9-3 Memphis Tigers of the American Athletic Conference. The announced crowd was a record-high 59,430.
The contest took place in a light rain on Wednesday, [[December 30]], [[2015]] with the [[Auburn Tigers football team|Auburn Tigers]] (6-6) of the [[Southeastern Conference]] defeating the 9-3 Memphis Tigers of the American Athletic Conference 31-10. Assistant Darrell Dickey served as Memphis' interim head coach after Justin Fuente accepted the job at Virginia Tech. The announced crowd was a record-high 59,430.
 
==Game==
Auburn's first drive stalled with first and goal at the Memphis 3-yard line, and kicker [[Peyton Barber]] opened the scoring with a 20-yard field goal. Their second drive produced a touchdown when [[Kerryon Johnson]] crossed the goal line on an 8-yard run. Memphis followed an exchange of punts by turning the ball over on downs at midfield, but when receiver [[Jason Smith]] took the snap and threw a long pass on the 1st down, he was intercepted by linebacker Reggis Ball.
 
Memphis capitalized early in the second quarter with a field goal to close the gap to 10-3. Later Auburn's [[Blake Countess]] blocked Jake Elliott's 34-yard field goal attempt, but Reggis Ball snagged a second interception off of [[Sean White]]'s pass and returned it 53 yards for a touchdown, tying the game at 10. White threw another interception late in the quarter, but Memphis failed to score.
 
To start the second half Memphis marched the length of the field, but [[Tray Matthews]] intercepted Paxton Lynch's pass in the end zone to prevent a score. After another exchange of punts, relief quarterback [[Jeremy Johnson]] found Jason Smith in the end zone for an 11-yard touchdown. Johnson ran in another score from 1st and goal at the opening of the fourth quarter, giving Auburn a 24-10 lead.
 
[[Marcus Davis]] gave Auburn another chance with a 56-yard punt return and [[Jovon Robinson]] punched through in his second rush of the drive, closing the scoring at 31-10.


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==Other events==
==Other events==
A kickoff luncheon on [[September 25]], [[2014]] featured former [[Alabama Crimson Tide football|Alabama]] quarterback and [[SEC Network]] analyst [[Greg McElroy]]. Other speakers included Bowl director [[Mark Meadows]], Bright House executive [[Robert Smith]], and [[Birmingham-Southern College]] athletic director [[Joe Dean, Jr]].
A team luncheon on [[December 29]] featured Joe Theismann as keynote speaker, a question and answer session with coaches [[Gus Malzahn]] and Darrell Dickey, and the presentation of the [[Golden Flake Legend of Birmingham]] award to [[Major Ogilvie]].


The Fellowship of Christian Athletes Prayer Breakfast, with a keynote by former Florida quarterback and NFL coach [[Chan Gailey]] was held at the [[Sheraton Birmingham]]'s ballroom.
Both teams toured the [[Birmingham Civil Rights Institute]] and visited [[Children's Hospital]].


The [[Monday Morning Quarterback Club]] team luncheon on [[January 2]] featured [[Auburn Tigers football team|Auburn Tigers]] and NFL defensive back [[Mike Fuller]] and ESPN analyst Trevor Matich, along with both teams' head coaches and ESPN reporter Laura Rutledge.
That night's Street Fest and Pep Rally was held from 2:00 to 8:00 PM in the [[Uptown]] entertainment district. The event featured a [[Dreamland Bar-B-Q]] rib-eating contest, performances by both visiting marching bands, and concert headliners Dyan Scott and River Dan and His Band. Fireworks capped the event.


That night's Street Fest and Pep Rally was scheduled to be held in the [[Uptown]] entertainment district, but was moved indoors to the [[BJCC East Exhibition Hall]] due to rain. The event featured performances by both visiting marching bands.-->
An Outback Steakhouse "Fan Zone" outside Legion Field on the morning before the 11:00 AM kickoff featured music by Man's Best Friend.


{{Birmingham Bowl}}
{{Birmingham Bowl}}
==References==
==References==
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Latest revision as of 15:33, 7 January 2016

This article is about the December 30, 2015 bowl game during the 2015-2016 college football season. For the January 3, 2015 bowl, see January 2015 Birmingham Bowl.
Dec 2015 Birmingham Bowl logo.jpg

The December 2015 Birmingham Bowl was the 10th contest in the annual postseason Birmingham Bowl series at Legion Field which began in 2006. The game was played for the second year with no corporate title sponsor.

The contest took place in a light rain on Wednesday, December 30, 2015 with the Auburn Tigers (6-6) of the Southeastern Conference defeating the 9-3 Memphis Tigers of the American Athletic Conference 31-10. Assistant Darrell Dickey served as Memphis' interim head coach after Justin Fuente accepted the job at Virginia Tech. The announced crowd was a record-high 59,430.

Game

Auburn's first drive stalled with first and goal at the Memphis 3-yard line, and kicker Peyton Barber opened the scoring with a 20-yard field goal. Their second drive produced a touchdown when Kerryon Johnson crossed the goal line on an 8-yard run. Memphis followed an exchange of punts by turning the ball over on downs at midfield, but when receiver Jason Smith took the snap and threw a long pass on the 1st down, he was intercepted by linebacker Reggis Ball.

Memphis capitalized early in the second quarter with a field goal to close the gap to 10-3. Later Auburn's Blake Countess blocked Jake Elliott's 34-yard field goal attempt, but Reggis Ball snagged a second interception off of Sean White's pass and returned it 53 yards for a touchdown, tying the game at 10. White threw another interception late in the quarter, but Memphis failed to score.

To start the second half Memphis marched the length of the field, but Tray Matthews intercepted Paxton Lynch's pass in the end zone to prevent a score. After another exchange of punts, relief quarterback Jeremy Johnson found Jason Smith in the end zone for an 11-yard touchdown. Johnson ran in another score from 1st and goal at the opening of the fourth quarter, giving Auburn a 24-10 lead.

Marcus Davis gave Auburn another chance with a 56-yard punt return and Jovon Robinson punched through in his second rush of the drive, closing the scoring at 31-10.

Other events

A team luncheon on December 29 featured Joe Theismann as keynote speaker, a question and answer session with coaches Gus Malzahn and Darrell Dickey, and the presentation of the Golden Flake Legend of Birmingham award to Major Ogilvie.

Both teams toured the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute and visited Children's Hospital.

That night's Street Fest and Pep Rally was held from 2:00 to 8:00 PM in the Uptown entertainment district. The event featured a Dreamland Bar-B-Q rib-eating contest, performances by both visiting marching bands, and concert headliners Dyan Scott and River Dan and His Band. Fireworks capped the event.

An Outback Steakhouse "Fan Zone" outside Legion Field on the morning before the 11:00 AM kickoff featured music by Man's Best Friend.

Birmingham Bowl
Site:Legion Field (2006–2020), Protective Stadium (2021–)
Names: Papajohns.com Bowl (2006–2010), BBVA Compass Bowl (2011–2014), Birmingham Bowl (2015–2017), Jared Birmingham Bowl (2018), TicketSmarter Birmingham Bowl (2020–2022), 76® Birmingham Bowl (2023)
By year: 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, Jan. 2015, Dec. 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023

References

External links