The 1936 Sun Bowl was the second edition of the game, and the first Sun Bowl held between college teams, the idea devised by Dr. Charles M. Hendricks. The festivities included a parade and a Sun Court.

1936 Sun Bowl
2nd Sun Bowl
1234 Total
New Mexico A&M 0077 14
Hardin–Simmons 0770 14
DateJanuary 1, 1936
Season1935
StadiumJones Stadium
LocationEl Paso, Texas
RefereeHarry Phillips
Attendance11,000
Sun Bowl
 < 1935  1937

Background

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The Cowboys finished second in the Border Conference to Arizona, who gave the Aggies (then known as New Mexico A&M) their only loss of the season.

Game summary

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  • Hardin Simmons – Scroggins 15-yard touchdown pass from Tyler (Calloway kick)
  • New Mexico State – Spanogle 1-yard touchdown run (A. Apodaca kick)
  • Hardin-Simmons – Cherry 1-yard touchdown run (Green kick)
  • New Mexico State – L. Apodaca 35-yard touchdown run, lateral from A. Apodaca on pass from Lem Pratt (A. Apodaca kick)

Despite four touchdowns combined in the game, play was marred by 15 turnovers that had 10 fumbles and five interceptions. An NCAA record was set for most punts combined, with 29. It was a physical game that was only 7–7 at halftime. After Ed Cherry gave the Cowboys the lead again on a touchdown run, the Aggies went to work again. Despite four interceptions on the day, Lem Pratt managed to throw a pass to Hooky Apodaca that he lateraled to Lauro Apodaca, who ran 35 yards to score the tying touchdown. The game had no more points from that point on despite desperate efforts on both sides, clinching the first tie game in Sun Bowl history.[1][2][3]

Aftermath

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The Cowboys would make four more appearances, the last in 1958. The Aggies would make two more appearances, the last in 1960. There would not be a tie Sun Bowl game again until the 1940 Sun Bowl.

Statistics

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Statistics New Mexico A&M Hardin-Simmons
First Downs 8 15
Yards Rushing 83 210
Yards Passing 121 92
Total Yards 204 302
Fumbles-Lost 3-1 7-5
Interceptions 4 1
Penalties-Yards 8-75 10-86

References

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  1. ^ "2010 Football". Archived from the original on December 27, 2014. Retrieved December 28, 2014.
  2. ^ "Hardin-Simmons 14, New Mexico State 14 - Recaps - Hyundai Sun Bowl - December 27, 2014 - El Paso, Texas". Sunbowl.org. Archived from the original on December 27, 2014. Retrieved December 28, 2014.
  3. ^ "2016 Football Media Guide". Archived from the original on October 14, 2016. Retrieved January 13, 2017.