- Final0BYU
TLSA24
2124
21 - Final1RUTG
ISU27
1327
13 - Final2MSST
WAKE23
1723
17 - Final3
14IOWA
OKLA14
3114
31 - Final4TEM
WYO37
1537
15 - Final5OHIO
USU24
2324
23 - Final6SDSU
ULL30
3230
32 - Final7FIU
MRSH10
2010
20 - Final818TCU
LT31
2431
24 - Final9
7ASU
BSU24
5624
56 - Final10
21NEV
USM17
2417
24 - Final11MIZZ
UNC41
2441
24 - Final12WMU
PUR32
3732
37 - Final13LOU
NCST24
3124
31 - Final14TOL
AFA42
4142
41 - Final15
24CAL
TEX10
2110
21 - Final16FSU
ND18
1418
14 - Final17
12WASH
BAY56
6756
67 - Final18TA&M
NW33
2233
22 - Final OTOT19GT
UTAH27
3027
30 - Final20ILL
UCLA20
1420
14 - Final21CIN
VAN31
2431
24 - Final22
25UVA
AUB24
4324
43 - Final2319
22HOU
PSU30
1430
14 - Final24OSU
FLA17
2417
24 - Final3OT3OT2517
16MSU
UGA33
3033
30 - Final2620
9NEB
SCAR13
3013
30 - Final2710
5WIS
ORE38
4538
45 - Final OTOT284
3STAN
OKST38
4138
41 - Final OTOT2913
11MICH
VT23
2023
20 - Final3023
15WVU
CLEM70
3370
33 - Final318
6KSU
ARK16
2916
29 - Final32SMU
PITT28
628
6 - Final33ARST
NIU20
3820
38 - Final342
1ALA
LSU21
021
0
Final
Coverage: ESPN
10:00 PM ET, December 30, 2011
Sun Devil Stadium, TEMPE, AZ
Top Performers
Passing: J. Vandenberg (IOWA) - 216 YDS, 2 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: B. Bell (OKLA) - 10 CAR, 51 YDS, 3 TD
Receiving: K. Davis (IOWA) - 5 REC, 76 YDS
TEMPE, Ariz. -- Oklahoma was gaining yards in bits instead of its usual chunks. Its defense was solid before giving up a pair of touchdowns in the fourth quarter to lose nearly all of a 21-point lead.
Then a camera fell from the sky.
It wasn't always pretty, but the Sooners grinded out a win, closing out a difficult year that included the death of a teammate and failed national title aspirations.
Blake Bell ran for his third touchdown in the closing seconds and Oklahoma (No. 14 BCS, No. 19 AP) survived a late rally, not to mention a crashing camera, to beat Iowa 31-14 in the Insight Bowl on Friday night.
"We did exactly what we wanted to: End this with a win," Oklahoma running back Brennan Clay said.
Big 12 blog
ESPN.com's David Ubben writes about all things involving the Big 12 in the conference blog.
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• Blog network: College Football Nation
Oklahoma (10-3) didn't get a particularly great game from quarterback Landry Jones and wasn't effective on the ground, either. Once considered national-title contenders, the Sooners held off the gritty Hawkeyes, capping a painful year that started with the death of linebacker Austin Box in the offseason.
Jones threw for 161 yards with a touchdown and an interception, and Bell put the game away with a 21-yard touchdown run with 45 seconds left.
"It means a lot; these guys persevered," Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops said. "(They) came out here tonight and played an excellent game."
Iowa (7-6) fell into a 21-0 hole before rallying behind two touchdown passes from James Vandenberg.
The Hawkeyes came up just short and dodged a potential disaster when an overhead camera crashed to the field next to receiver Marvin McNutt in the closing minutes. McNutt became tangled in the wire after the camera landed a few yards behind him, but wasn't hurt. The game was delayed five minutes while the camera was dragged off the field.
"First, I looked: What is it that fell from the sky?" McNutt said. "The next thing I know, the camera kind of scratched me a little bit. It was just pulling me and I knew I didn't want to keep going with it."
ESPN has consistently used the cameras for football coverage, making it a staple of "Monday Night Football." The cameras also have been used occasionally in the NBA, NHL, NASCAR, baseball, college basketball and at the island-green 17th hole at the TPC Sawgrass during The Players Championship.
The cameras, despite flying over the playing field, have rarely interfered with the action.
"We apologize for the accident. The independent company that operates SkyCam for us is in the midst of a thorough review to determine the cause of the problem," ESPN said in a statement Saturday morning. "We will work with them and bowl officials to determine our future course of action. As always our primary concern will be the safety of fans and those on the field."
McNutt didn't have the only near-miss.
Vandenberg overcame an early interception to throw for 216 yards, and hit C.J Fiedorowicz and Jordan Canzeri on touchdown passes in the fourth quarter. He also had two interceptions -- one early and one late -- and Iowa's short-handed running game managed just 76 yards on 37 carries.
"We did something things to hurt ourselves, but Oklahoma had a lot to do with that," Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said.
Oklahoma's return trip to the desert wasn't expected, at least not this early in the bowl season.
Big Ten Blog
ESPN.com's Adam Rittenberg and Brian Bennett write about all things Big Ten in the conference blog.
• Blog network: College Football Nation
Coming off a rout of Connecticut in last year's Fiesta Bowl, the Sooners were ranked No. 1 in the preseason, with hopes of a second national title under Stoops.
Those aspirations were gone after a string of injuries -- All-America receiver Ryan Broyles' torn ACL was the big one -- and two losses in the final three games, including a 44-10 rout by Bedlam rival Oklahoma State in the Big 12 championship game.
The frustrating run knocked Oklahoma out of not only the national championship chase, but out of a BCS bowl and into the Insight Bowl.
Instead of making a statement in the desert, the Sooners seemed to stand still in the first half. Oklahoma had just 89 yards on 27 plays in the half, but led 14-0 thanks a pair of 4-yard runs by Bell -- one set up by an interception and another on the Sooners' only sustained drive.
The Sooners finally started to click, a least for a little while, in the second half.
Oklahoma drove inside Iowa's 10 on its opening drive, though that ended with an acrobatic tip-and-catch interception by Iowa defensive lineman Broderick Binns.
The Sooners didn't slow down, marching on their next drive for a 3-yard, play-action touchdown pass from Jones to Trent Ratterree -- breaking a streak of eight straight TDs by Bell -- to go up 21-0.
The Hawkeyes finally fought back.
Iowa overcame the suspension of its top running back and a favored opponent to win last year's Insight Bowl, beating Missouri 27-24. The Hawkeyes did it behind Marcus Coker, who ran for 219 yards and two touchdowns after replacing suspended starter Adam Robinson.
This time it was Coker who had to watch. The sophomore, who ran for 1,384 yards and 15 touchdowns during the regular season, was suspended for violating the university's student-athlete code of conduct.
Without Coker, Iowa would have to rely on a group of unproven running backs -- none had more than 18 carries -- and lean even more on Vandenberg.
No one was particularly effective in the first half.
Vanderberg was off-target early and had a pass intercepted by Jamell Fleming at Iowa's 31-yard line in the first quarter, then exacerbated the miscue by being called for a late-hit penalty. Bell scored his first touchdown two plays later.
Iowa had just one sustained drive in the first half, but that petered out; the Hawkeyes lost 3 yards on fourth-and-1 from the Oklahoma 6.
Their running game ineffective, the Hawkeyes bumbled around most of the next two quarters before finally moving the ball again late in the third quarter. Vandenberg completed seven of his eight passes on a 75-yard drive, the final an across-his-body throw for a 5-yard touchdown pass to Fiedorowicz that cut Oklahoma's lead to 21-7.
Vandenberg then got the Hawkeyes within seven with 7 minutes left, hitting Keenan Davis to convert on a fourth-and-10 to set up a 9-yard touchdown pass to Canzeri on a screen.
That was it, though.
Oklahoma's Mike Hunnicutt followed a 35-yard field goal with just over 4 minutes left and Bell added his final scoring run after the falling camera nearly took out McNutt, ending Iowa's school-record bowl winning streak at three.
"We had a couple of hiccups out there," Iowa defensive tackle Mike Daniels said. "The results show when you have hiccups against a team like that."
Thankfully for the Hawkeyes and McNutt, the falling camera wasn't more than a hiccup.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
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Bowl Overview
It was over when... Oklahoma responded to Iowa's second-half comeback with a couple of late scores.
Gameball goes to... Jamell Fleming, who picked off a pass early to set the Sooners' defensive tone.
Stat of the game... 0. That's how many first downs Oklahoma had in the first quarter with a 7-0 lead.
Team Stat Comparison
| IOWA | OKLA | |
|---|---|---|
| 1st Downs | 21 | 16 |
| Total Yards | 292 | 275 |
| Passing | 216 | 161 |
| Rushing | 76 | 114 |
| Penalties | 6-36 | 6-45 |
| 3rd Down Conversions | 6-17 | 4-12 |
| 4th Down Conversions | 2-4 | 1-1 |
| Turnovers | 2 | 1 |
| Possession | 33:14 | 26:46 |
Passing Leaders
| Iowa | C/ATT | YDS | AVG | TD | INT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vandenberg | 23/44 | 216 | 4.9 | 2 | 1 |
Scoring Summary
| FIRST QUARTER | IOWA | OKLA | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | TD | 10:19 | Blake Bell 4 Yd Run (Michael Hunnicutt Kick) | 0 | 7 |
| SECOND QUARTER | IOWA | OKLA | |||
![]() | TD | 06:56 | Blake Bell 4 Yd Run (Michael Hunnicutt Kick) | 0 | 14 |
| THIRD QUARTER | IOWA | OKLA | |||
![]() | TD | 07:42 | Trent Ratterree 3 Yd Pass From Landry Jones (Michael Hunnicutt Kick) | 0 | 21 |
| FOURTH QUARTER | IOWA | OKLA | |||
![]() | TD | 14:46 | C.J. Fiedorowicz 5 Yd Pass From James Vandenberg (Mike Meyer Kick) | 7 | 21 |
![]() | TD | 06:56 | Jordan Canzeri 9 Yd Pass From James Vandenberg (Mike Meyer Kick) | 14 | 21 |
![]() | FG | 02:28 | Michael Hunnicutt 35 Yd | 14 | 24 |
![]() | TD | 00:45 | Blake Bell 21 Yd Run (Michael Hunnicutt Kick) | 14 | 31 |







