Motor City Bowl
December 26, 2005

Detroit, MI - It was the holiday season, and the Memphis Tiger football team gave its fans a Merry Christmas – even though it came a day later. Behind a DeAngelo Williams 238-yard rushing performance and three Stephen Gostkowski field goals, the Tigers posted their second postseason victory in three seasons with a 38-31 win over Akron in the 2005 Motor City Bowl. The game was played at Ford Field, the site of the NFL’s 2006 Super Bowl in early February.

LINESCORE
Memphis 0 13 7 18 38
Akron 3 0 7 21 31

Williams, who was named the Motor City Bowl MVP, compiled his bowl record-setting 238 yards on 31 carries and scored three touchdowns. Gostkowski hit field goals of 32, 25 and 50 yards, and the 50-yard effort set a Motor City Bowl mark.
The way the game started gave no indication it would end up being a 38-31 shootout. The Memphis offense sputtered at the start, and the Tigers relied on their defense and punter Michael Gibson’s foot. The Tiger defense allowed the Zips only three points, despite having two first-quarter drives deep in Memphis territory. Akron got the field goal on its second drive, but on the first trip across the 50 yard line, the Zips’ series was halted at the Memphis 25 when Tim Goodwell and Rod Smith stopped Brett Biggs on fourth-and-1. Gibson played just as important a role in the first quarter with two long punts – 51 and 49 yards – that pinned Akron inside its own 10 yard line both times.
After watching the defense keep the Tigers in the game in the first quarter, the Memphis offense got on track in the second frame. Williams, who gained only 19 yards in the first quarter, picked it up on the Tigers’ first scoring drive with 34 yards on the ground. Tiger quarterback Maurice Avery also found his groove in the second quarter, hitting Ernest Williams on a 42-yard strike to the Akron 23. Four plays later, Gostkowski connected on a 32-yard field goal to tie the contest at 3-all.
The Tigers kept it going. The defense held the Zips to three-and-out on their next series, and the Memphis offense continued to roll. On the first play of the ensuing drive, Avery found his target in Ryan Scott for a 50-yard gain to the Akron 2 yard line. Williams then pushed the ball across the goal line for the first Memphis lead of the game. After Gostkowski’s PAT, the Tigers led 10-3.
With just over four minutes left before halftime, Akron got the ball with an opportunity to cut into the Tiger lead, but it didn’t happen. The Tiger offense took over with 2:30 on the clock and took advantage of another scoring chance. After two rushes netted a minus-3 yards, Avery took back to the air and again hit Scott for a long gain – this time, 48 yards – to the Akron 27. From there, the Tigers moved the ball to the Zips 7, where Gostkowski hit his second field goal for a 13-3 Tiger halftime lead.
The early portion of the second half looked no different for the Akron offense. Stymied by the Tigers in the first half, the Zips were unable to get past their own 40 yard line on the first two possessions. Aided by two Akron defensive pass interference calls, the Tigers moved down to the Akron 2, where Williams scored his second touchdown for a 20-3 Memphis lead.
With only three minutes left in the third quarter and down 20-3, the Zips scored via the air on the ensuing drive. Zips quarterback Luke Getsy was 6-of-7 passing for 80 yards on the series that resulted in a 46-yard scoring strike to Jabari Arthur to cut the Tiger lead to 20-10.
The game moved into the fourth quarter, and the shootout began. Gostkowski got it started with a 50-yard field goal for a 23-10 Tiger lead. Akron responded with a quick three-play, 80-yard drive to cut the Memphis lead to 23-17. The big play was a Getsy-to-Biggs 72-yard scoring strike.
The Tigers then answered with their own big play in the form of Williams. With the Zips closing in and also gaining momentum, Memphis’ All-America running back took a handoff and raced 67 yards to the Akron 2. On the next play, Williams scored his third touchdown. Avery added the two-point conversion for a 31-17 Memphis advantage. The Tigers added another score on an Ernest Williams 5-yard run to increase the lead to 38-17 with only 6:38 left.
However, the Zips did not quit. Akron scored two touchdowns in under six minutes to pull to within seven at 38-31 with only 50 seconds left. The Zips’ first drive took nearly five minutes, and ended when Getsy hit Domenik Hixon from 14 yards out. The Akron special teams then executed a perfect on-side kick, and recovered the ball at midfield with 1:45 left. One minute later, Getsy connected with Arthur for a 19-yard touchdown pass to cut the Tiger lead to 38-31.
The Zips tried their magic one more time, but this time, the Tiger special teams recovered the on-side kick, and Memphis ran out the clock for the win.
Goodwell, who received the UAW Lineman Award, led the Tiger defense with 12 tackles, five TFLs and two sacks.

Game Statistics
Team Quarter Play
AKR 1 (0:40)   Jason Swiger 43 field goal
MEM 2 (7:02)   Stephen Gostkowski 32 field goal
MEM 2 (4:08)   DeAngelo Williams 1 run (Gostkowski kick)
MEM 2 (0:18)   Stephen Gostkowski 25 field goal
MEM 3 (3:02)   DeAngelo Williams 2 run (Gostkowski kick)
AKR 3 (0:46)   Jabari Arthur 46 pass from Luke Getsy (Swiger kick)
MEM 4 (12:04)   Stephen Gostkowski 50 field goal
AKR 4 (11:03)   Brett Biggs 72 pass from Getsy (Swiger kick)
MEM 4 (10:41)   DeAngelo Williams 2 run (Maurice Avery 2-pt. rush)
MEM 4 (3:09)   Earnest Williams 5 run (Gostkowski kick)
AKR 4 (1:46)   Domenik Hixon 14 pass from Getsy (Swiger kick)
AKR 4 (0:55)   Jabari Arthur 19 pass from Getsy (Swiger kick)

Team Statistics
  MEM AKR
  First Downs 21 24
  Rushes-Yards 58-346 23-47
  Passing Yards 170 455
  Passes Att-Comp-Int 7-14-0 34-59-0
  Total Offense Plays-Yards 72-516 82-502
  Punt Returns-Yards 5-39 0-0
  Kickoff Returns-Yards 3-97 2-39
  Interception Returns-Yards 0-0 0-0
  Punts (Number-Average) 5-45.6 8-40.5
  Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0
  Penalties-Yards 7-62 10-61
  Time of Possession 29:48 30:12
  Third Down Conversions 6-14 8-18
  Fourth Down Conversions 0-0 0-1
  Red-Zone Scores-Chances 6-6 2-2
  Sacks By: Number-Yards 3-22 0-0

Indvidual Statistics
Rushing: MEM - DeAngelo Williams 31-238-3, Joseph Doss 9-56-0, Maurice Avery 13-38-0, Earnest Williams 3-18-1, Team 2-(-4)-0; AKR - Brett Biggs 14-46-0, Dennis Kennedy 3-13-0, Joe McDaniel 1-5-0, Luke Getsy 5-(-17)-0.
Passing: MEM - Maurice Avery 7-13-170-0-0, Ryan Scott 0-1-0-0-0; AKR - Luke Getsy 34-59-455-4-0.
Receiving: MEM - Ryan Scott 3-103-0, Earnest Williams 1-42-0, John Doucette 1-28-0, Antonio McCoy 1-(-1)-0, DeAngelo Williams 1-(-2)-0; AKR - Jabari Arthur 8-180-2, Brett Biggs 4-79-1, Kris Kasparek 6-70-0, Domenik Hixon 7-63-1, Jason Montgomery 6-55-0, Dennis Kennedy 2-6-0, Joe Mcdaniel 1-2-0.
Interceptions: MEM - none; AKR - none.
Fumbles: MEM - Maurice Avery 1-1; AKR - none.
Officials: Referee: Jack Folliard; Umpire: Dennis Angel; Linesman: James Rinne; Line Judge: Blake Lozo; Back Judge: Mike Aaronian; Field Judge: Mike Mothershed; Side Judge: Bernard Samuels.
Attendance: 50,616 (weather-temp 72 degrees indoor, wind-none).


Information About The Motor City Bowl
  Bowl Notes (including bowl records broken or tied by Memphis/Akron)
  Game Statistics (game, team, and individual stats)
  Play Breakdown Summary (number of runs & passes, and when)
  Play-By-Play (every play of the entire game -- pretty cool)


News Articles
  Happy Motoring -- MVP Williams rumbles to 238 yards as Tigers beat back
  feisty Zips
  (Commercial Appeal)
  Calkins: One last time DeAngelo gives his gift to U of M  (Commercial
  Appeal)
  Avery-Scott a Potent Tandem -- Passes Help Open Offense in Tigers'
  Win
  (Commercial Appeal)
  Motor City Bowl Postgame  (Commercial Appeal)
  MOTOR CITY BOWL: Tigers zip past Akron  (Detroit Free Press)
  Avery's arm clears room for Williams  (Detroit Free Press)
  Memphis runs from Akron -- Star back gets 233 yards, just enough to
  beat Zips

  (The Detroit News)
  Williams bids farewell -- Memphis tailback lets his emotions -- and the
  tears -- flow as stellar college career ends

  (The Detroit News)

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