Oklahoma 14, LSU 21

1234T
OKLA (12-2)070714
LSU (13-1)777021

Final

8:00 PM ET, January 4, 2004
Superdome
NEW ORLEANS, LA

LSU stops OU offense in Sugar Bowl

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Team Stat Comparison
 
1st Downs1213
Total Yards154312
Passing102153
Rushing52159
Penalties11-708-65
3rd Down Conversions4-156-17
4th Down Conversions1-30-1
Turnovers23
Possession28:4131:19
Individual Leaders
Oklahoma Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
White13/3710202
LSU Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Mauck13/2212402
Bech1/12900
Oklahoma Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Jones205929
Clayton438015
Works1202
LSU Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Vincent16117164
Mauck1427011
Green322124
Oklahoma Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Clayton432019
Wilson331033
Runnels219013
Jones2606
LSU Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Clayton438018
Jones354029
Henderson224021
Green223023
Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTEROKLALSU
TD11:38SKYLER GREEN 24 YD RUN (RYAN GAUDET KICK)
Drive info: 3 plays, 32 yards.
07
SECOND QUARTEROKLALSU
TD7:31KEJUAN JONES 1 YD RUN (TREY DICARLO KICK)
Drive info: 3 plays, 2 yards.
77
TD4:21JUSTIN VINCENT 18 YD RUN (RYAN GAUDET KICK)
Drive info: 9 plays, 80 yards.
714
THIRD QUARTEROKLALSU
TD14:13MARCUS SPEARS 20 YD INTERCEPTION RETURN (RYAN GAUDET KICK)721
FOURTH QUARTEROKLALSU
TD11:01KEJUAN JONES 1 YD RUN (TREY DICARLO KICK)
Drive info: 9 plays, 31 yards.
1421

NEW ORLEANS -- LSU's defense wasn't too impressed with the highest-scoring team in the country.

The blitzes came from everywhere. Heisman Trophy winner Jason White took a brutal beating. And, when 297-pound defensive end Marcus Spears rumbled to the end zone with an interception, the purple-and-gold revelers got started on their first national title celebration in 45 years.

Make no mistake: defense wins championships. Just ask Oklahoma Sooners, which came up short 21-14 in a Sugar Bowl that settled half the argument about who's No. 1.

While Chad Lavalais was willing to share the national title with Southern Cal, he wasn't going to concede anything on defense.

Not to the Trojans. Not to anyone.

"There's no doubt in my mind we're the best defense in the country," said Lavalais, the prison guard-turned-star defensive tackle. "We made the plays when we needed to all year."

The Sooners, averaging 45.2 points, needed help from their special teams and defense just to score their two touchdowns. Without Brandon Shelby's blocked punt and Brodney Poole's interception, it wouldn't have been close.

LSU was not very impressed with Oklahoma's lofty numbers.

"We play in the (Southeastern Conference). We're used to playing smash-mouth football, real football," end Marquise Hill said. "They weren't just going to come in here and blow it out on us. If they thought that, they were sadly mistaken."

Oklahoma had a chance at the end when LSU's defense wilted just a bit. But the Tigers came through again, turning away the Sooners' chance at a tying touchdown with less than three minutes to go.

Oklahoma got the ball once more, but White threw three straight incompletions, then ended up on his back in his final play of the season. Lionel Turner blitzed up the middle and crushed the Sooners quarterback, who never had a chance to get rid of the ball.

White picked himself off the turf and trudged to the sideline, having completed just 13 of 37 for 102 yards and two interceptions -- by far his worst performance in a brilliant season.

"I said to him, 'Excuse me, Mr. Heisman. I'm going to be coming at you all night,"' Hill said. "I think our conference is the hardest and Jason White wasn't anything we hadn't seen before."

Overall, the Sooners managed just 154 yards on 70 plays from scrimmage -- 2.2 yards a try. Hardly to be expected from a team that had been piling up 461.4 yards per game, beating opponents with numbers that looked more like basketball than football.

Then again, LSU had been doing this all season. The Tigers were the stingiest defense in the country, allowing just over 10 points a game. Oklahoma barely made a dent in that average.

There were some hairy moments for LSU. Trailing by a touchdown, Oklahoma drove from its own 42 to the LSU 12 late in the game.

First down. A dozen yards from overtime. But LSU's defenders had come too far to let this one slip away.

White threw a couple of incompletions, his receivers too well covered. Then came the play that epitomized LSU's gambling style -- safety Jessie Daniels blitzed up the middle and Kejuan Jones was left running all alone toward the middle of the end zone.

But Daniels flattened White as he threw, the ball fluttering over Jones' outstretching, pleading hands. Oklahoma went for it on fourth down, White delivering another pass over the middle. The ball was deflected and Sooners receiver Mark Clayton nearly came up with it, only to have it scrape the turf with 2:46 remaining.

Incomplete.

Yes, this night belonged to the LSU defense.

"You've got to take chances every now and then," Hill said. "You can't play not to lose. You've got to play to win. We live and die by the blitz. We've been doing that all year. That's what got us 13 wins."

Spears provided the points that ultimately decided the game. On the first play of the second half, he sacked White. Then, he fooled the Oklahoma quarterback by dropping back in coverage on second down.

"That was just something that played into our hands," Spears said. "I was fortunate to be in the right place."

White threw the ball straight to Spears, who rumbled 20 yards for a touchdown that gave LSU a 21-7 lead. It was the seventh touchdown of the year for the Tigers' defense, a school record.

And now they have a national championship, too. Who cares that it will have to be shared with USC, No. 1 in The Associated Press media poll?

The LSU defense proved itself worthy of being No. 1.

College Football Scores

Other Scores:

Tuesday, December 16th
Memphis 27 Final
North Texas 17
Thursday, December 18th
Miami (OH) 49 Final
Louisville 28
Monday, December 22nd
North Carolina State 56 Final
Kansas 26
Tuesday, December 23rd
TCU 31 Final
Boise State 34
Wednesday, December 24th
Oregon State 55 Final
New Mexico 14
Thursday, December 25th
Houston 48 Final
Hawaii 54 3OT
Friday, December 26th
Northwestern 24 Final
Bowling Green 28
Virginia Tech 49 Final
California 52
Saturday, December 27th
Pittsburgh 16 Final
Virginia 23
Monday, December 29th
Michigan State 3 Final
Nebraska 17
Tuesday, December 30th
Navy 14 Final
Texas Tech 38
Texas 20 Final
Washington State 28
UCLA 9 Final
Fresno State 17
Wednesday, December 31st
Wisconsin 14 Final
Auburn 28
Oregon 30 Final
Minnesota 31
Utah 17 Final
Southern Miss 0
Missouri 14 Final
Arkansas 27
Boston College 35 Final
Colorado State 21
Thursday, January 1st
Iowa 37 Final
Florida 17
Maryland 41 Final
West Virginia 7
Georgia 34 Final
Purdue 27 OT
Michigan 14 Final
USC 28
Miami (FL) 16 Final
Florida State 14
Friday, January 2nd
Oklahoma State 28 Final
Mississippi 31
Tennessee 14 Final
Clemson 27
Kansas State 28 Final
Ohio State 35
Saturday, January 3rd
Georgia Tech 52 Final
Tulsa 10
Sunday, January 4th
Oklahoma 14 Final
LSU 21