Louisiana Tech beats Illinois 35-18 in Heart of Dallas Bowl
DALLAS – Louisiana Tech’s Houston Bates had a career day against his former team – his 4 1/2 sacks in the Heart of Dallas Bowl matched the number he had in three seasons at Illinois.
Bates, who graduated and transferred to finish his eligibility closer to home was chosen MVP of the game after the Bulldogs beat the Illini 35-18 on Friday.
“It wasn’t Houston Bates vs. Illinois. It was Louisiana Tech vs. Illinois,” Bates said.
Kenneth Dixon scored one of his two touchdowns on an 80-yard reception and Xavier Woods scored on a 69-yard interception. The Bulldogs (9-5) also got touchdown runs of 16 yards from Jarred Craft and 28 yards from Blake Martin on a dark, overcast day at the Cotton Bowl stadium.
Illinois (6-7) struggled early with penalties and missed field goals, but got within three points on David Reisner’s 43-yard field goal early in the fourth quarters. But Dixon scored his second TD from a yard out with six minutes left to make it 28-18 and the Illini couldn’t answer.
Illinois appeared to have received a break when LaKeith Walls sacked Cody Sokol, causing him to fumble. Jihad Ward returned it 19 yards before Dixon forced a fumble and Sokol recovered. That drive was capped by Dixon’s TD.
“The way the guys played, Kenneth and Cody and throughout the whole season, it’s truly outstanding,” Bates said. “It’s something I’m going to live for the rest of my life. And if I die tomorrow, my life would be complete.”
Tech coach Skip Holtz then asked Bates to skip the humble answer and say what it really meant to him to win.
“Unbelievable,” Bates added with a huge smile.
“I know it’s been an emotional week for him,” Holtz said, “and I know it’s been an emotional week to see him go out and do the things that he did.”
Dixon became Louisiana Tech’s career leader in yards rushing, finishing with 63 for a total of 3,410 in three seasons. He is also the only FBS player with both a run and a reception of at least 80 yards this season.
Louisiana Tech went into the game tied for first place among FBS schools with 25 interceptions and first with 40 total turnovers forced. With Monday’s two Illini turnovers, Tech converted turnovers into 198 points this season.
“I was just not giving up on the play,” Dixon said. “I mean, he got the ball. He was running. I got behind him and just tried to do my best to get the ball back.”
“I saw Kenneth coming and, what went through my head?” Holtz said. “ ‘Get ’im, Kenneth! Get ’im! Get ’im! Get ’im!’ And he got there. Great strip on the ball.”
“That’s the game of football to me,” Illinois coach Tim Beckman said of the turnovers.