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College football game
College football game
The 1999 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game was a postseason college football game between the Georgia Southern Eagles and the Youngstown State Penguins . The game was played on December 18, 1999, at Finley Stadium , home field of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga . The culminating game of the 1999 NCAA Division I-AA football season , it was won by Georgia Southern, 59–24.[ 3]
The participants of the Championship Game were the finalists of the 1999 I-AA Playoffs , which began with a 16-team bracket .[ 4]
Youngstown State Penguins [ edit ]
Youngstown State finished their regular season with a 9–2 record (5–1 in conference); one of their losses had been to Western Michigan of Division I-A.[ 5] Seeded ninth in the playoffs, the Penguins defeated eight-seed Montana , 16-seed North Carolina A&T , and 13-seed Florida A&M to reach the final. This was the sixth appearance for Youngstown State in a Division I-AA championship game, having won four titles (1991, 1993, 1994, and 1997) against one loss (1992).
Georgia Southern Eagles [ edit ]
Georgia Southern finished their regular season with a 9–2 record (7–1 in conference); one of their losses had been to Oregon State of Division I-A. The Eagles, seeded second, defeated 15-seed Northern Arizona , 10-seed UMass , and sixth-seed Illinois State to reach the final. This was the seventh appearance for Georgia Southern in a Division I-AA championship game, having four prior wins (1985, 1986, 1989, 1990) and two prior losses (1988, 1998).
Scoring summary
Quarter
Time
Drive
Team
Scoring information
Score
Plays
Yards
TOP
GSU
YSU
1
10:20
9
44
4:40
GSU
25-yard field goal by Chris Chambers
3
0
1
4:51
11
76
5:29
YSU
Adrian Brown 2-yard touchdown run, Mark Griffith kick good
3
7
1
2:51
5
72
2:00
GSU
Greg Hill 42-yard touchdown run, Chambers kick good
10
7
2
14:34
8
73
3:17
YSU
Jeff Ryan 3-yard touchdown run, Griffith kick good
10
14
2
10:25
11
78
4:09
GSU
Adrian Peterson 3-yard touchdown run, Chambers kick good
17
14
2
9:05
1
57
0:10
GSU
Bennie Cunningham 57-yard touchdown run, Chambers kick good
24
14
2
5:27
2
72
0:40
GSU
Peterson 22-yard touchdown run, Chambers kick good
31
14
2
2:09
GSU
Punt returned 72 yards for touchdown by Anthony Williams, Chambers kick good
38
14
3
4:47
5
41
1:15
YSU
30-yard field goal by Griffith
38
17
3
3:05
5
66
1:42
GSU
Peterson 1-yard touchdown run, Chambers kick good
45
17
4
9:57
10
90
4:34
GSU
Mark Myers 5-yard touchdown run, Chambers kick good
52
17
4
7:13
2
71
1:11
GSU
J. R. Revere 66-yard touchdown run, Chambers kick good
59
17
4
3:48
8
71
3:25
YSU
Brown 1-yard touchdown run, Griffith kick good
59
24
"TOP" = time of possession . For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football .
59
24
[ 6]
1
2
3
4
Total
No. 2 Eagles
10
28
7
14
59
No. 9 Penguins
7
7
3
7
24
Georgia Southern running back Adrian Peterson
Statistics
GSU
YSU
First downs
24
17
Plays–yards
63–655
64–338
Rushes–yards
59–638
44–163
Passing yards
17
175
Passing: comp –att –int
1–4–0
11–20–1
Time of possession
27:47
32:13
Team
Category
Player
Statistics
Georgia Southern
Passing
Greg Hill
1–4, 17 yds
Rushing
Adrian Peterson
25 car, 247 yds, 3 TD
Receiving
Dedric Parham
1 rec, 17 yds
Youngstown State
Passing
Jeff Ryan
11–20, 175 yds, 1 INT
Rushing
Adrian Brown
22 car, 160 yds, 2 TD
Receiving
Renauld Ray
4 rec, 90 yds
[ 2] [ 7]
^ a b "1999 I-AA National Championship - Georgia Southern vs Youngstown State" . August 21, 2013. Retrieved February 16, 2019 – via YouTube .
^ a b "Division I-AA Championship" . The News Journal . Wilmington, Delaware . December 19, 1999. p. E9. Retrieved February 16, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
^ Walker, Teresa M. (December 19, 1999). "Eagles win one for the thumb" . The Anniston Star . Anniston, Alabama . AP . Retrieved February 16, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
^ "Playoff Results & Bracket" . The Pantagraph . Bloomington, Illinois . November 28, 1999. p. F1. Retrieved February 8, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
^ "Youngstown St. Penguins 1999 Schedule" . cfbinfo.com . Retrieved February 16, 2019 .
^ "NCAA I-AA Championship" . GATAdb . December 20, 1999. Retrieved February 16, 2019 .
^ "2009 Southern Conference Football Media Guide" (PDF) . soconsports.com . p. 67. Retrieved February 16, 2019 .
Games through 2009 were played in December. Subsequent games have been played in January (*) or May (†).
Venues Bowls & rivalries Culture & lore People Seasons National championship seasons in bold
Venues Bowls & rivalries Culture & lore People Seasons National championship seasons in bold
1999–2000 NCAA Division I championships
† Not an officially sanctioned NCAA championship