James Franklin shares emotions of winning Rose Bowl, praise for Sean Clifford
After Penn State took down Utah in the Rose Bowl 35-21, coach James Franklin shared his emotions and happiness for his players winning. The Nittany Lions won the historic bowl game with a strong second half showing, and Franklin was quick to praise his team’s efforts in what he called “basically a home game” for the Utes.
James Franklin on winning the Rose Bowl
After the game, Franklin and his team celebrated the victory on the sidelines with a traditional Gatorade bath — as cameras showed the coach desperately trying to avoid it and tackling one of his players in the fun moment. While trying to dry himself off, ESPN’s Holly Rowe asked Franklin how it felt trying to escape the traditional coach’s bath.
“Yeah I’m just happy for our guys,” answered Franklin. “Come out and here and play that team, got so much respect for Utah and Coach [Kyle] Whittingham. Out here on the road it was basically a home game for them. And our guys played their tails off, I’m just so proud of them — offense, defense and special teams.”
Franklin was then asked about his defense’s second-half performance as they ramped up the pressure on Utah’s passing game — unfortunately as they were missing starting quarterback Cameron Rising due to injury.
Top 10
- 1Breaking
Dylan Raiola injury
Nebraska QB will play vs. USC
- 2
Elko pokes at Kiffin
A&M coach jokes over kick times
- 3New
SEC changes course
Alcohol sales at SEC Championship Game
- 4
Bryce Underwood
Michigan prepared to offer No. 1 recruit $10.5M over 4 years
- 5Trending
Dan Lanning
Oregon coach getting NFL buzz
“Yeah… [pressure] was the difference in the second half. We were able to get pressure on the quarterback which we weren’t able to do, through not only just four down but also bringing pressure.”
Rowe closed her post-game interview with the Penn State coach by asking him about his conversation with quarterback Sean Clifford after the win, as the two shared a moment on the field before the final whistle.
“I’m just happy for him. He’s kinda seen it all in his Penn State career. And at Penn State it’s important — not how we just do it on the football field — but in the classroom and in the community. And he’s done it with utmost class the entire time. That’s what college football is about, that’s what Penn State’s about.”