From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1963 Rose Bowl was a college
football bowl game
played on January 1, 1963 at the end of the 1962 college football
season. It was the 49th Rose Bowl Game. The USC
Trojans defeated the Wisconsin Badgers 42-37.
This was the first #1 versus #2 match-up to occur in a bowl
game[1],
although #1 versus #2 match-ups had occurred previously as regular
season games (typically referred to as "Games of the
Century"). Wisconsin Ron Vander Kelen, the Wisconsin
quarterback and Pete
Beathard, the USC quarterback, were both named the Rose Bowl
Player of the Game.[2]
Down 42-14 in the fourth quarter, Wisconsin quarterback Ron Vander
Kelen put together a number of drives to score 23 unanswered points
and put the Badgers in position to win the game. Due to the
historic #1 versus #2 bowl match-up, the number of Rose Bowl
records set, and the furious fourth quarter rally by Wisconsin,
this game frequently appears on lists of "greatest bowl games of
all time" [3][4].
Teams
This was the first time in the Rose Bowl where the #1 and #2
teams on the AP Poll played
– it was the first time this happened in any bowl game. It was the
seventh time overall that the #1 and #2 team faced each other since
the inception of the AP Poll in 1936.[5] The Bowl Championship Series (BCS)
was created much later to ensure a bowl game matchup of the top two
teams in the nation: prior to the BCS, #1 versus #2 games were rare
-- especially in bowl games. This was the second Rose Bowl meeting
between USC and Wisconsin (the first being the 1953 Rose Bowl)
and the fourth meeting, overall.
Wisconsin
Badgers
Wisconsin opened the season by defeating New Mexico State and
Indiana. On October 13, they
defeated Notre Dame 17–8,
which would propel them to a number 10 ranking. The Badgers then
defeated the Iowa Hawkeyes 42–15, which left
them ranked number 5 in the nation. A 14–7 loss to Ohio State the
next week dropped Wisconsin out of the polls (dropping out of the
top 10, not the top 25 as the polls are currently structured). On
November 3, the Badgers won in Michigan Stadium over the Wolverines 34-12. This set
up the November 10th homecoming game with the Badgers ranked number
8 and the #1 ranked Northwestern Wildcats at
Camp
Randall. Wisconsin smashed Northwestern 37-6. A win at Illinois set up a #3
Wisconsin vs #5 Minnesota battle for
Paul
Bunyan's Axe. Minnesota had represented the Big Ten the
previous two years in the Rose Bowl. Wisconsin was victorious 14-9,
and was awarded the Big Ten Rose Bowl berth. They finished the
season ranked number 2 in the nation.
USC
Trojans
After two consecutive losing season in 1960 and 1961, John
McKay turned the Trojans around in his third season as head
coach. The team opened with a defeat of number 8 ranked Duke. Consecutive wins
against SMU, at Iowa, California, and at
Illinois got the Trojans ranked higher in the top 10. On November
3, 1962, the Trojans played their biggest game of the season
against the Washington Huskies, who
were ranked number 9. In the homecoming game, the Trojans blanked
the Huskies 14–0.[6] With
that win, the Trojans were ranked number two behind Northwestern.
On November 17, by beating Navy and with Alabama losing to Georgia Tech 7–6,
USC ascended to the number one spot in the AP poll. In the UCLA-USC rivalry game, the Bruins led 3–0 until the fourth
quarter, when the Trojans scored two touchdowns.[7] In what
would be the final game for Notre Dame football coach Joe Kuharich, USC
shut out a 5-4 Notre Dame team at the Coliseum.[8] The
Trojans finished undefeated and ranked number 1 for the first time
since the 1939 USC Trojans team played in the 1940 Rose
Bowl.
Game
summary
USC tackle Marv Marinovich, the father of USC and Los Angeles
Raiders QB Todd
Marinovich, was ejected when he got caught elbowing Steve
Underwood, the Wisconsin captain.[9]
Wisconsin, under the direction of quarterback Ron VanderKelen put
together an incredible comeback attempt in the fourth quarter. Pete
Beathard had completed his fourth TD pass with 14:54 left in the
game to put USC up 42-14. Then the Badgers scored 23 points before
time ran out.
Scoring
First
quarter
- USC Touchdown Pete Beathard to Ron Butcher
- Wisconsin Touchdown 1 yard run by fullback
Second
quarter
- USC touchdown Ben Wilson run
- USC touchdown Ron Heller 25 yard run
Third
quarter
- USC Touchdown Beathard pass to Hal Bedsole (57 yards)
- Wisconsin touchdown VanderKelen 17-yard run
- USC touchdown pass by Pete Beathard to Hal Bedsole
Fourth
quarter
- USC touchdown pass by Pete Beathard to Fred Hill
- Wisconsin touchdown Lou Holland (13-yard run)
- Wisconsin touchdown Gary Kroner (four-yard reception)
- Wisconsin safety A bad snap on USC punt resulted in a UW
safety.
- Wisconsin touchdown VanderKelen 19-yard pass to Pat Richter for
the final 42-37 score
Aftermath
Eleven Rose Bowl records were set and five still stand as of
2008: most intercepted passes (3 by Ron VanderKelen), most
touchdown passes (4 by USC, and six by both USC and Wisconsin),
most first downs by one team (32 by Wisconsin), and most penalties
(USC 12 for 93 yards). The Rose Bowl record 79 total points scored
in this game stood for nearly thirty years (subsequently broken in
the 1991 Rose
Bowl)[10]. The
omitted records stood for more than thirty years were broken by
Danny O'Neill of the Oregon Ducks in the 1995 Rose
Bowl.
The 1964 Cotton Bowl Classic subsequently became the second #1
versus #2 bowl game, while the 1969 Rose Bowl became the second #1
versus #2 Rose Bowl.
References
- ^
"No. 1 Vs. No. 2". http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/1999-01-04/sports/9901040193_1_notre-dame-alabama-sugar-bowl.
- ^ 2008 Rose Bowl Program, 2008 Rose Bowl.
Accessed January 26, 2008.
- ^
"The List: Greatest bowl
games". http://espn.go.com/page2/s/list/bestbowls.html.
- ^
"Tuesday Question - Ten Greatest Bowl
Games". http://cfn.scout.com/2/564658.html.
- ^
"Games Where #1 Faced
#2". http://www.kiko13.com/cflrankings/aponevstwo.htm.
- ^
Zimmerman, Paul - EVERYTHING'S ROSY! TROJANS WIN, 14-0. Los Angeles
Times, November 4, 1962
- ^
Zimmerman, Paul - TROJANS ALMOST TRIP ON WAY TO BOWL. 86,740 See
Stubborn Bruins Bow in 4th Quarter, 14-3. Los Angeles Times,
November 25, 1962
- ^
Zimmerman, Paul - PERFECT ENDING: TROJANS, 25; IRISH, 0. Los
Angeles Times, December 2, 1962
- ^
Stiegman, Pat - 1963: The greatest Rose Bowl
ever. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, December 23, 1993. ...
the Trojans were a few quarts low in the second half, losing
several players to injury and tackle Marv Marinovich (yes, father
of Los Angeles Raiders QB Todd Marinovich) to ejection when he got
caught elbowing Underwood in the skull AFTER a play in the third
quarter. "I was walking back to the huddle and BAM, I felt this
bump in the back of the head," [Steve] Underwood said. "I turned
around here here's Marinovich and the ref standing right there,
watching the whole thing. It was so stupid, it was
unbelievable."
- ^
"UW's Rally Falls Short vs.
USC in Rose Bowl". http://www.uwbadgers.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/010163aaa.html. Retrieved January 9,
2010.
External
links
Bibliography
- University of Southern California football media guide. (PDF
copy available at www.usctrojans.com)
- University of Wisconsin football media guide. (PDF copy
available at www.uwbadgers.com)
- Stiegman, Pat - 1963: The greatest Rose Bowl
ever. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, December 23, 1993
- Crowns, Crystal - A Rose Bowl for the ages,
Wisconsin’s last shot at a national title. The Daily Cardinal,
September 27, 2007
- Mishler, Todd (2004). Great
Moments in Wisconsin Sports. Big Earth Publishing. ISBN
1931599459.
- Murray, Jim - A Close Second. Los
Angeles Times, January 2, 1963. Reprinted as "One Flinging Badger
Made Trojans Sweat", January 4, 2006
- Kopriva, Don (1998). On
Wisconsin!: The History of Badger Athletics from 1896-1998.
Jim Mott. Sports Publishing LLC. doi:1571670386.
Southern California Trojans bowl
games |
|
|
|
Wisconsin Badgers bowl
games |
|
|
|