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The 1966 Rose Bowl game, played on January 1,
1966 was the 52nd Rose Bowl Game. The UCLA Bruins defeated
the #1 ranked Michigan State Spartans by a score of 14-12. UCLA
Defensive back Bob Stiles was named the Rose Bowl Player Of The
Game.[1]
Teams
The game was a rematch of the season opener in East Lansing, MI
that was won by Michigan State, 13-3. Unknown Gary Beban had a long
TD pass play nullified by a penalty in that game. As it turned out,
UCLA gave MSU one of its toughest games of the season in its home
opener, a fact that was forgotten when the 14 point odds came out
favoring MSU for the Rose Bowl re-match. The two previous meetings
also were won by Michigan State, the 1954 Rose Bowl and 1956 Rose
Bowl.
Michigan
State Spartans
Michigan State was undefeated and ranked #1 in the nation. Their
key victory was a 32-7 win over Ohio State that ultimately decided
the Big 10 title as the Spartans finished 1 game ahead of the
Buckeyes. The Spartans featured Bubba Smith and George Webster.
UCLA
Bruins
UCLA lost the season opener at Michigan State 13-3, upset highly
regarded Syracuse and Penn State, tied at Missouri 14-14, then won
4 straight. Going into the 1965 UCLA-USC rivalry
football game ranked number 7, the conference championship and 1966
Rose Bowl were on the line. Number 6 ranked USC, led by Heisman
trophy winner Mike
Garrett led 16-6 until UCLA got a touchdown on a pass from Gary
Beban to Dick
Witcher with 4 minutes to play. After the 2-point conversion
made it 16-14, UCLA recovered an onside kick. Beban then hit Kurt
Altenberg on a 50 yard bomb and UCLA won, 20-16.[2][3][4][5] Los
Angeles Times columnist Jim Murray did not like the
Bruins chances.[6]
UCLA then faced Tennessee in the newly built Liberty Bowl Memorial
Stadium in Memphis, Tennessee, Prothro's native
city. On the last play of a wild game, Tennessee defensive back Bob
Petrella intercepted a UCLA pass to save a Volunteer win by a score
of 37-34. Coach Prothro, was uncharacteristically upset. He
criticized a pass interference call, a phantom holding call on end
Byron Nelson that nullified a key UCLA play, claimed that the clock
had been wrongly stopped twice on Tennessee's winning drive, and
said that a dropped pass was a lateral and a fumble. He stated,
"For the first time in my life, I am ashamed to be a
Southerner."[7]
The 1965 team was nicknamed the "Gutty little Bruins" as the
defensive line was small with John Richardson at
225 pounds, Steve Butler at 220, and 200-pound defensive tackles Al
Claman and Terry
Donahue.[8]
Game
summary
The weather was sunny and 65 degrees. Michigan State was a two
touchdown favorite and the consensus #1 ranked team, but the
undersized Bruins held their own through a scoreless first quarter.
In the second quarter, UCLA recovered a muffed punt inside the
Michigan State 5 yard line; QB Gary Beban eventually took it in
from one yard out to give the Bruins a surprising lead over the
stunned Spartans. Then UCLA coach Tommy Prothro went into his bag of tricks
and called for an onside kick. Kicker Kurt Zimmerman executed it
perfecty and Dallas
Grider fell on the ball. UCLA QB Gary Beban then threaded a pass between 3
Spartan defenders to Kurt Altenbeg, who made a great catch that put
UCLA on the 1 yard line. Beban then scored on a short run to make
it 14-0. UCLA's undersized defense continued to play well, but the
larger Spartans were beginning to wear them down and began picking
up bigger and bigger chunks of yardage on the ground. Midway
through the 4th quarter, Michigan State finally broke through for a
touchdown, but failed on the try for a 2-point conversion and UCLA
led 14-6. Michigan State go the ball back and began to march down
field in the waning moments. With under a minute to play the
Spartans scored again, and trailing 14-12, lined up for a two point
conversion attempt. They pitched out to their large Samoan fullback
Bob Apisa, and as he turned the corner, it appeared he would fall
into the end zone to tie the game. But UCLA defensive back Bob
Stiles ran full speed and threw himself into Apisa, keeping Apisa
out of the end zone and knocking himself out in the process.[9] [10] [11]
Scoring
Second
quarter
- UCLA — Gary Beban, one-yard run. Kurt Zimmerman converts.
- UCLA — Beban, one-yard run. Zimmerman converts.
Fourth
quarter
- MSU — Bob Apisa, 38-yard run. Jimmy Raye’s pass failed.
- MSU — Juday, 1-yard run. Apisa run failed.
Aftermath
Back in 1966, the final UPI poll was taken before the bowl games
so Michigan State retained its #1 ranking in the UPI. Alabama, led
by quarterback Steve
Sloan and with a record of 8-1-1, handed undefeated and #2
ranked Nebraska a 39-28 loss in the Orange Bowl; the
Crimson Tide was then voted #1 in the AP. UCLA ended up ranked #4
AP, #5 UPI.
In a 1995 vote of the greatest moments in Los Angeles sports
history, Bob Stiles' stop of Bob Apisa on the goal line ranked #26.
The defeat of USC in the UCLA-USC rivalry
game to get to the Rose Bowl ranked #35.[12]
Prothro would never be able to bring the Bruins to the Rose Bowl
again. In 1966, the USC Trojans were voted in ahead of the Bruins
despite UCLA's 14-7 win over USC. In the 1967 USC vs. UCLA football
game, a spectacular run by O.J. Simpson would
give USC the bid and the National Championship. In the 1969
USC-UCLA football game, a battle of undefeated teams, USC would
again prevail, 14-12.
Kurt Altenberg died in 2005.[13]
Game
Facts
- Future UCLA head coach Terry Donahue was a 195 pound defensive
lineman for UCLA.
- Dallas Grider, who recovered the 2nd quarter onside kick that
led to UCLA's second touchdown in the Rose Bowl, also recovered the
onside kick in the UCLA - USC game that led to the Bruins' winning
touchdown.
- Tommy Prothro became the first coach to take two different
schools to the Rose Bowl, and he did it in successive seasons.
Prothro guided Oregon State to the 1965 Rose Bowl. It was also
Prothro's last Rose Bowl appearance. The AAWU conference voted 7-3
USC (a team 9-1 UCLA had beaten 14-7) in over the Bruins in
1966.
- Prothro was a quarterback for Duke University in the 1942 Rose
Bowl.
- This was UCLA's first Rose Bowl win after 5 losses. It was
Michigan State's first loss after two wins - both over UCLA.
- This game began a streak of West Coast dominance in the Rose
Bowl as Pac-8/Pac-10 teams would win all but 4 of the next 22 Rose
Bowls, often as the underdog.
- Both teams wore their home color uniforms, Michigan State in
green jerseys, and UCLA in powder blue jerseys.
Bibliography
- UCLA Football Media Guide (PDF Copy available at www.uclabruins.com)
- Football's Bowl Week. Sports Illustrated, January 10, 1966
Volume 24, Issue 2
See also
References
- ^ 2008 Rose Bowl Program, 2008 Rose Bowl.
Accessed January 26, 2008.
- ^
UCLA Athletics: 1964-1965
UCLA.edu
- ^
Lonnie White. Grider made big plays for Bruins - Los Angeles Times.
November 28, 2007. Linebacker (Dallas Grider) came up with a
big hit and recovery of onside kick to help UCLA rally in
1965
- ^
Wolf, Al - Altenberg Was 'Decoy' on Winning TD Pass. Los Angeles
Times, November 21, 1965. One of the new plays UCLA put in for
Saturday's Rose Bowl decider with USC was a pass in which Mel Farr
was the intended receiver and Kurt Altenberg a deep decoy and
secondary target.
- ^
Zimmerman, Paul - BEBAN PULLS THE TRIGGER, AND PRESTO!...
...Prothro's in the Rose Bowl Again It's Bombs Away! Bruins Win,
20-16. Los Angeles Times, November 21, 1965. Like a badly
mauled fighter getting up off the floor, UCLA's fantastic football
team came from behind to defeat USC 20 to 16 before 94,085
unbelieving fans at Memorial Coliseum Saturday.
- ^
Murray, Jim - Roses... and Thorns. Los Angeles Times, November 21,
1965 A terrible thing happened to the UCLA Bruins in the
Coliseum Saturday afternoon. They won the right to go to the Rose
Bowl--an invitation to bleed. Shows you what trouble a couple of
simple mistakes can get you.
- ^
John Shearer - Memories: 1965 UT Football
Team, Coach Bill Majors. The Chattanoogan, December 5,
2005
- ^
Stewart, Larry - For Pete’s Sake, Don’t Paint Town Cardinal. Los
Angeles Times, September 20, 2003.
- ^
Al Wolf - Bruin Crowd Brimming With Joy...It's 'Everybody's Win'.
Los Angeles Times - Los Angeles, California. January 2, 1966
- ^
Larry Sharkey; Ben Olender; Joe Kennedy - Bruins Perform Surgery on
Spartans' Line. Los Angeles Times - Los Angeles, California.
January 2, 1966
- ^
Bruins Won It Easily. Los Angeles Times - Los Angeles, California.
January 2, 1966
- ^
L.A.'s greatest moments 100
greatest #26 1966: Heavy underdog UCLA outlasts Michigan State
in the Rose Bowl, 14-12, as 175-pound Bruin defensive back Bob
Stiles stops 212-pound MSU fullback Bob Apisa on the goal line on a
last-minute two-point conversion try. #35 1965: Bruin sophomore
Gary Beban heaves fourth-quarter touchdown passes to Dick Witcher
and Kurt Altenberg to stun USC and Heisman Trophy winner Mike
Garrett, 20-16.
- ^
White, Lonnie - Kurt Altenberg, 61; Ex-Bruin’s Touchdown Beat USC
in 1965. Los Angeles Times, April 5, 2005
External
links
| Michigan State Spartans bowl
games |
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