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2005 Texas Longhorn football team : ウィキペディア英語版
2005 Texas Longhorns football team

The 2005 Texas Longhorn football team represented the University of Texas at Austin during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season, winning the Big 12 Conference championship and the national championship. The team was coached by Mack Brown, led on offense by quarterback Vince Young, and played its home games at Darrell K. Royal – Texas Memorial Stadium.
The team's penultimate victory of the season, the Big 12 Championship Game, featured the biggest margin of victory in the history of that contest.〔 They finished the season by winning the 2006 Rose Bowl against the USC Trojans for the national championship. Numerous publications have cited this victory as standing among the greatest performances in college football history,〔 and ESPN awarded the 2006 ESPY Award for the "Best Game" in any sport to the Longhorns and the Trojans.〔Fisher, Gerren LaQuint〕 The Longhorns finished as the only unbeaten team in NCAA Division I-A football that year, with thirteen wins and zero losses.〔College football team records are conventionally expressed in number of wins/losses. 13–0 means 13 wins and zero losses.〕
Texas earned its second Big 12 Conference football championship〔 to make 27 conference championships total, including 25 in the Southwest Conference. It was their fourth national championship in football〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=NCAA History – Football Bowl Subdivision )〕 and the ninth perfect season in the history of Longhorn football.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=University of Texas – all time records )
The team set numerous school and NCAA records, including their 652 points which set an NCAA record for points scored in a season. After the season ended, six Longhorns from this championship team joined professional football teams through the 2006 NFL Draft. Seven more Longhorns followed suit in the 2007 NFL Draft and they were joined by two free agents.〔 Another nine followed through the 2008 Draft and free-agency to make a total of twenty-four players who entered into the National Football League (NFL).〔〔
==Before the season==

Media and fans of college football consider the UT program one of the great powerhouses of the game because of the school's winning record as well as their previous national championships in 1963, 1969 and 1970. From 1936 to 2004, the team finished the season in the top ten team of the Associated Press Poll 23 times, or one-third of the time.〔 At the start of the 2005 season, the Longhorns were one of the most victorious programs in college football history; they were third in total victories and fourth if measured by winning percentage.〔
In the 2004 season Vince Young led the team to the 2005 Rose Bowl, the school's first Bowl Championship Series (BCS) game, and a top 5 finish in the major polls. It should also be noted that Vince Young predicted that the Longhorns would return to the Rose Bowl next season in a post game interview where he proclaimed, "We'll be back!" Young returned for the 2005–2006 season, as did most of the other key players from 2004–2005, with the exception of Cedric Benson, Derrick Johnson, and Bo Scaife. Texas was given a pre-season No. 2 ranking (behind the defending National Champions, the University of Southern California) by ''Sports Illustrated'' magazine, the Associated Press Poll and the ''USA Today'' Coaches Poll.
During the summer of 2005, a period free of official team practices, Young and his receivers spent extra practice time working on their timing and team-work. The fall Orange and White intra-team scrimmage was held on August 21, 2005, as an event open to the public.〔UT's colors are burnt orange and white. Normally, they wear Orange when at home and White when playing "away" games. For intra-team scrimmages, one team wears orange while the other team wears white, leading to the name.〕〔 Running back Ramonce Taylor returned the opening kickoff 94 yards for a touchdown. Young completed five of seven passing attempts for 68 yards and one touchdown. Senior Richmond McGee made two 33-yard field goals and emerged as the top candidate to handle field goals, kickoffs and punts. Brown said of McGee, "We've never had one person do all three, so it's a concern, but right now, he would be the guy."
The success of the 2004 team and the efforts during the off-season fueled anticipation by sports writers that Texas would play for the national championship if they could win their away game against Ohio State University and end their five-game losing streak against Oklahoma.〔 The BCS system required any team competing in the championship game to be ranked either number one or number two in the BCS Standings at the end of the season.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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