The 1983 Fiesta Bowl was the twelfth edition of the college football bowl game, played at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona on Saturday, January 1. Part of the 1982âÂÂ83 bowl game season, it matched the eleventh-ranked Arizona State Sun Devils of the Pacific-10 Conference and the #12 Oklahoma Sooners of the Big Eight Conference. A slight underdog, Arizona State rallied in the fourth quarter to win on its home field, 32âÂÂ21.
This was the first-ever meeting between these two programs.
The Sun Devils opened with nine wins and were ranked third, but lost to Washington at home and at rival Arizona. This was ASU's sixth Fiesta Bowl appearance, which remains their only one since leaving the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) in 1978.
The Sooners' first two home games in September were losses, to West Virginia and USC. They won seven straight but lost to rival Nebraska on the road. This was their second appearance in the Fiesta Bowl.
Televised by NBC, the game kicked off shortly after 11:30 a.m. MST, as did the Cotton Bowl on CBS. The weather was sunny and .
Oklahoma scored first on a one-yard run from running back Stanley Wilson, giving the Sooners a 7âÂÂ0 lead. In the second quarter, Arizona State got a field goal from kicker Luis Zendejas to cut the lead to 7âÂÂ3. Their defense later forced a safety, to make it 7âÂÂ5. Zendejas kicked another 22-yard field goal to give Arizona State its first lead of the game at 8âÂÂ7.
Wilson scored on his second rushing touchdown of the game to give Oklahoma a 13âÂÂ8 lead. Zendejas answered with a 54-yard field goal to cut Oklahoma's lead to 13âÂÂ11 at halftime.
In the third quarter, Darryl Clack scored on a 15-yard run and Arizona State regained the lead at 18âÂÂ13. Sooner running back Fred Sims rushed 19 yards for a touchdown, and the ensuing two-point conversion attempt was successful, giving Oklahoma a 21âÂÂ18 lead.
In the fourth quarter, the Sun Devils got a one-yard touchdown run from Alvin Moore to take a 25âÂÂ21 lead. ASU quarterback Todd Hons threw a 48-yard touchdown pass to Ron Brown to make the score 32âÂÂ21. The Sun Devils hung on to post that final score.
Though Arizona State won the game, Oklahoma tailback Marcus Dupree was named the offensive MVP with 239 rushing yards on 17 carries (14.0 avg.). Amazingly, Dupree played only a little over half of the game, leaving three times due to a broken finger, an ankle injury, a rib injury, and a pulled hamstring. He set the rushing record for yards in the Fiesta Bowl, which still stands. ASU defensive lineman Jim Jeffcoat was the defensive MVP.
First quarter
Second quarter
Third quarter
Fourth quarter
Arizona State climbed to sixth in the final AP poll, and Oklahoma fell to sixteenth.