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Year: 2007

When we look back at the 16-year run of the BCS, we'll recall plenty of great games and some fantastic finishes. Most of those will have come in the national championship game, though the other BCS games also provided us with some amazing action.

And one of those games gave us the greatest trick play of the BCS era.

Boise State's monumental Fiesta Bowl victory over Oklahoma needed trickery just to get to overtime, as noted in an earlier slide. But the extra session required even more magic, especially after Oklahoma went up 42-35 almost immediately thanks to Adrian Peterson's touchdown run.

The Broncos naturally tied the game on a fourth-down pass from a wide receiver to a backup tight end, a play that was just getting the stage set for what would come next. That's when Boise decided to go for two instead of kick for the extra point and send it into a second overtime.

Quarterback Jared Zabransky looked right, faked a throw to pull Oklahoma's defense in that direction and then held the ball behind his back to allow Ian Johnson to grab it and execute one of the best Statue of Liberty plays in college football history.

Johnson told reporters after the game how excited he was when learning what the play would be.

"When he said Statue I thought, 'Ohhh, brother, we're going to do it in style,'" Johnson said.

Johnson scampered into the end zone for the two points, giving Boise the lead, then he pulled out his own trick by instantly proposing to his Broncos cheerleader girlfriend.

Follow Brian J. Pedersen on Twitter at @realBJP.