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The 1956 Rose Bowl game, played on January 2,
1956 was the 42nd Rose Bowl game. The Michigan State
University Spartans defeated the UCLA Bruins 17-14. Michigan State
halfback Walt
Kowalczyk was named the Rose Bowl Player Of The Game.[1]
The game was played on January 2, because New Year's Day was a
Sunday. It featured two of the most racially integrated college
football teams of the day with six African American players for the
Bruins and seven for the Spartans.[2][3] This
stood in stark contrast to the 1956 Sugar Bowl, where there was
controversy over whether Bobby Grier from Pitt
should be allowed to play and whether Georgia Tech should even play
at all due to Georgia governor Marvin Griffin's opposition to
integration.[4][5][6] Only
one month previous, Rosa
Parks made her famous protest in the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The 1956
Rose Bowl has the highest TV rating of all college bowl games,
watched by 41.1% of all people in the US with TV sets.[7]
Teams
Michigan State College
Spartans
The Ohio State Buckeyes were the undefeated Big Ten conference
champions. However, Ohio State would not be invited to the Rose
Bowl because of the no-repeat rule in the Big Ten conference. This
left Michigan State to be accepted. Ohio State was ranked number 4
with a 7-2 record, and Michigan State was ranked number 2 with a
9-1 record.[8] The
teams did not play each other during the regular season. Michigan
State opened with a 20-13 win at Indiana. Then they lost to in
State rival Michigan 7-14. This was their only loss. They won 38-14
over Stanford. They defeated rival Notre Dame 21-7. The Spartans
did not play Northwestern, Iowa, or Ohio State. Ohio State had lost
at Duke, and also 0-6 to Stanford.
UCLA
Bruins
UCLA was the defending National Champion and had an undefeated
season in 1954. The Bruins began the 1955 season ranked number one.
In a showdown at #5 Maryland, the Bruins lost 0-7 to the Terrapins.
A 38-0 win over Oregon State ultimately proved to be the game for
the conference championship. The Bruins would win the rest of their
regular season games, including a 21-13 win over Stanford. With the
Pacific Coast conference championship already won, the Bruins won
their third straight game in the UCLA-USC rivalry
17-7.
Game
summary
This was the second meeting between the two schools, the first
being a 28-20 victory for the Spartans over the Bruins in the 1954
Rose Bowl. In a Sports Illustrated article preceding the 1956 Rose
Bowl, UCLA coach Red Sanders was quoted as saying "Sure, winning
isn't every thing, It's the only thing."[9]
The Spartans wore their green home jerseys and the Bruins wore
their white road jerseys.
Jim Decker of UCLA intercepted a pass from Michigan State
quarterback Earl
Morrall on the first play from scrimmage. Decker returned 4
yards to the MSU 16 yard line. Four plays later, Bob Davenport
scored on a 2-yard run over left guard to give the Bruins a 7-0
lead.
Midway through the second quarter, Michigan State put together
an 11-play, 80-yard drive to pull even at 7. Walt Kowalczyk's
30-yard run to the UCLA 17 set up Morrall's 13-yard touchdown toss
to Clarence Peaks. On the second play of the fourth quarter, the
Spartans took their first lead at 14-7 on Peaks’ 67-yard TD pass to
John Lewis, who caught the ball on the 50 and took it the distance.
Five minutes later, The UCLA Bruin passing game produced a big play
as UCLA quarterback Ronnie Knox connected with Jim Decker with a
47-yard pass play to the Spartan 7 yard line. Three plays later,
Doug Peters scored on a 1-yard plunge at center. Morrall directed
an 11-play, 59-yard drive to the UCLA 24, but Gerald Planutis
missed a 41-yard field-goal attempt.
Five penalties were called in the closing minutes and field
position shifted in Michigan State's favor when UCLA was whistled
for three-straight penalties. UCLA was called for an intentional
grounding infraction which pushed the ball back to its own one-yard
line. The Bruins' punt gave the Spartans the ball at the UCLA 40
yard line. The Bruins were cited for interference with the kick
returner on the punt play and the Spartans received the ball at the
Bruin 19 yard line. Replacing Gerald Planutis, Dave Kaiser of
Michigan State converted his first career field-goal attempt, a
41-yard kick, with seven seconds remaining in the game to give the
Spartans a 17-14 win.
Scoring
First
quarter
- UCLA – Bob Davenport 2 run (Jim Decker kick), 11:48 left.
Drive: 4 plays, 16 yards.
Second
quarter
- MSU – Clarence Peaks 13 pass from Earl Morrall (Gerald Planutis
kick), 5:52 left. Drive: 11 plays, 80 yards.
Third
quarter
Fourth
quarter
- MSU – John Lewis 67 pass from Clarence Peaks (Gerald Planutis
kick), 14:11 left. Drive: 3 plays, 80 yards.
- UCLA – Doug Peters 1 run (Jim Decker kick), 6:07 left. Drive: 5
plays, 56 yards.
- MSU – FG Dave Kaiser 41, 0:07 left. Drive: 3 plays, -5
yards
Aftermath
Although it was UCLA penalties in the final minutes that gave
field position to Michigan State, the Spartans' 98 yards given up
on 10 penalties are a Rose Bowl game record as of 2008. The
Spartans were named National Champions by Boand.[10][11]
Oklahoma would be named National champion by all the other
organizations. In the 1956 Orange Bowl, the #1 Oklahoma Sooners
defeated the #3 Maryland Terrapins 20-6 in a battle of undefeated
teams. The Sugar Bowl was the last bowl game to be integrated. The
Cotton Bowl, Orange Bowl, and Sugar Bowl were not integrated until
1948, 1955, and 1956 respectively.[12]
References
- ^ 2008 Rose Bowl Program, 2008 Rose Bowl.
Accessed January 26, 2008.
- ^
MICHIGAN STATE VS. UCLA JET'S ROSE BOWL PREVIEW * * *. Jet
Magazine, December 1955, Quote:"A record number of Negro football
players-13-are eligible for the 42nd annual Rose Bowl game to be
played by Michigan State and UCLA on January 2."
- ^
Smith, John Matthew - "Breaking the Plane":
Integration and Black Protest in Michigan State University Football
during the 1960s. The Michigan Historical Review Vol. 33, Issue
2.
- ^
Mulé, Marty - A Time For Change: Bobby
Grier And The 1956 Sugar Bowl. Black Athlete Sports Network,
December 28, 2005
- ^
*Zeise, Paul - Bobby Grier broke bowl's color
line. The Panthers' Bobby Grier was the first African-American to
play in Sugar Bowl Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October 07,
2005
- ^
Thamel, Pete - Grier Integrated a Game and
Earned the World's Respect. New York Times, Published: January
1, 2006.
- ^
Harvey, Randy - Bucking Tradition: Rose Bowl,
Planted in the Past, No Longer the Flower of Football. Los
Angeles Times, December 29, 1988 Of the 10 highest-rated college
bowl games of all time, 9 are Rose Bowls. At the top of the list is
the 1956 game between UCLA and Michigan State, which was watched by
41.1% of all people in the United States who had television sets at
the time.
- ^
AP Poll archive
11/21/1955
- ^
Sayre, Joe - He Flies On One Wing. Sports Illustrated, December 26,
1955
- ^
Past Division I-A Football
National Champions. NCAA, January 11, 2006
- ^
Boand, William F. "Azzi Ratem." 1930. Booklet. "Azzi Ratem - Boand
Football Ranking System."
- ^
football, gridiron. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved
January 28, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: www.britannica.com/eb/article-234274. Football
in the United States - The racial transformation of American
football. Encyclopædia Britannica
Bibliography
External
links
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games |
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