From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1976 Rose Bowl was a college
football bowl game
played on January 1, 1976. It was the 62nd Rose Bowl Game. The UCLA Bruins defeated the number one ranked
and undefeated Ohio State Buckeyes 23-10. UCLA
quarterback John
Sciarra was named the Rose Bowl Player Of The Game.[1]
This was the first post season that football teams from the Big Ten
Conference and Pacific-10 Conference could
appear in other bowl games since the Rose Bowl agreement was signed
for the 1947 Rose
Bowl. This game marked Ohio State coach Woody Hayes' last
appearance in the Rose Bowl game.
Teams
This was the second meeting between the two schools that season.
Ohio State handed UCLA its first loss of the season, 41-20, on
October 4, 1975 at the Los Angeles Memorial
Coliseum. After the game, Woody Hayes prophetically told his team
that they would be facing UCLA again in the Rose Bowl. UCLA was the
only opponent to score more than 14 points in a game all season
against Ohio State, and they did it twice.
Ohio State
Buckeyes
Ohio State Buckeye coach Woody Hayes brought an undefeated team
featuring two-time Heisman Trophy winner Archie Griffin to Pasadena. It was the
record fourth consecutive appearance for Hayes. It was also eighth
and final appearance in the Rose Bowl for Hayes. It was a record
fourth and final Rose Bowl start for Griffin. As of 2007, Griffin
remains the only player to start in four Rose Bowls. Ohio State
capped an undefeated regular season by defeating Michigan 21-14 in
Ann Arbor for Woody's last outright Big Ten championship, and also
his last victory over Michigan in the Michigan-Ohio State rivalry. The Wolverines
held the Buckeyes 30 minutes without a score. Tied at 14-14, the
Wolverines needed a win to advance to the Rose Bowl. Freshman
Michigan quarterback Rick Leach threw an interception
caught by Ray
Griffin, which was run to the 3 yard line. Big Pete Johnson ran
it in for the winning touchdown. Michigan, which finished the
regular season 8-1-2, was invited to the Orange Bowl to face #3
ranked Oklahoma.[2]
UCLA
Bruins
It was the only Rose Bowl appearance for Dick Vermeil in only his second season
coaching at UCLA. He would leave to coach the Philadelphia Eagles after the
season. In addition to the 41-20 Ohio State loss, UCLA had also
lost at home to Washington 17-13 and was tied by Air Force 20-20,
but managed to win all their other Pac-8 games, including a
fumble-plagued 25-22 win over cross town rival USC in the UCLA-USC rivalry to clinch the Rose Bowl
berth. In that Friday night after Thanksgiving game, UCLA fumbled
11 times and lost 8 of them, but their maligned defense bailed them
out time and time again. UCLA ended up tied with California for the
Pac-8 championship, but advanced to the Rose Bowl on the strength
of their 28-14 win in an October matchup with the Golden Bears.[3] The
1975 USC-UCLA game was legendary coach John
McKay's final game at the Coliseum.
Game
summary
Both teams wore their home uniforms, Ohio State in scarlet
jerseys, and UCLA in powderkeg blue jerseys. The weather was clear
and 60 degrees.
In the game itself, Ohio State dominated the first half but
could only muster the 3 points that it got on its opening
possession. UCLA did not even pick up a first down until late in
the 2nd quarter, but a couple of Ohio State turnovers and a key
stop on 4th and 1 by the Bruin defense kept them in the game.
The second half saw UCLA open up its offense, utilizing play
action and passing on first down. This helped open up their veer
option rushing attack, and on their first possession of the 3rd
quarter, UCLA marched to a tying field goal. After stopping Ohio
State, UCLA then marched for a touchdown and a 9-3 lead (the extra
point was missed). After stopping the Buckeyes again, the Bruins
struck for the big play, a 67 yard touchdown pass from John Sciarra
to speedy flanker Wally Henry. Suddenly the 15 1/2 point underdog
Bruins were up 16-3. Ohio State, which inexplicably began passing
the ball with regularity, returned to its dominating ground attack
and scored early in the 4th quarter to cut UCLA's lead to 16-10.
Ohio State got the ball right back, but again tried to resume an
air attack. Quarterback Cornelius Greene was intercepted by Pat
Schmidt, and on the ensuing possession with just under 5 minutes to
play, running back Wendell Tyler took an option pitchout, sped up
the sideline, cut back at the perfect instant, and held the ball
aloft as he crossed the goal line on a 54 yard run to clinch the
game, 23-10. Another Greene interception killed any chance of a
Buckeye last gasp comeback attempt. Woody Hayes then trudged across
the field to congratulate Vermeil before the game was over.[4]
Scoring
First
quarter
- Ohio State: Tom Klaban, 42-yard field goal.
Second
quarter
None
Third
quarter
- UCLA: Brett White, 33-yard field goal.
- UCLA: Wally
Henry, 16-yard pass from John Sciarra. White kick failed.
- UCLA: Henry, 67-yard pass from Sciarra. White converts.
Fourth
quarter
- Ohio State: Giovanni Strassini, 8-yard Pass from Greene. Klaban
converts.
- UCLA: Wendell
Tyler, 54-yard run. White converts.
Aftermath
Woody Hayes had a very short meeting with the press in which he
stated, "We got outcoached and just got beat." Aware of the Buckeye
loss, the 1975 Oklahoma Sooners played for the number 1 ranking in
the 1976 Orange Bowl, with Alabama lurking after already beating
Penn State in the Sugar Bowl 13-6. Texas A&M, ranked #2 at the
end of the regular season, lost to Arkansas for the Cotton Bowl
berth, and then to USC in the Liberty Bowl. Oklahoma would finish
#1 in the AP poll after defeating Michigan 14-6 in the Orange Bowl.
Ohio State would finish 3rd , and UCLA Fifth. Woody Hayes would
finish with a 4-4 record in the Rose Bowl, and would be denied by
Bo
Schembechler, Rick Leach, and the rest of the Michigan
Wolverines from reaching the Rose Bowl ever again. Dick Vermeil was
able to move to the Philadelphia Eagles, whom he would lead to the
Super Bowl in five years. This was the second time UCLA had
defeated the #1 team in the Rose Bowl after having lost to that
same team during the season. The other time was in the 1966 Rose Bowl
vs. Michigan State. In the The Official Ohio State Football
Encyclopedia, this loss is listed as one of the most devastating
setbacks in Ohio State football history.
By the 1982 college football season, UCLA would make the Rose
Bowl their home stadium, moving from the Los Angeles Coliseum. As
of 2008, the attendance of 105,464 still stands as the largest
crowd to ever watch a UCLA football game in the Rose Bowl stadium.
It is a record that is not likely to be broken, as the Rose Bowl
seating has been reduced to 91,136 for UCLA Bruins Football[5]
and 92,542 for the Rose Bowl Game[6]
References
- ^ 2008 Rose Bowl Program, 2008 Rose Bowl.
Accessed January 26, 2008.
- ^
Buckeyes Win Crown, Roses. Late Interception, TD beat Michigan
21-14. Bo Left Holding The Bag (Of Oranges). Columbus
Dispatch, November 23, 1975
- ^
Jeff Prugh - UCLA DROPS BALL BUT HOLDS ROSES; USC Loses in McKay's
Farewell. Los Angeles Times. November 29, 1975
- ^
"When it Came to Pass, UCLA Knew How." Sports
Illustrated Volume 44, Issue 1, January 5, 1976.
- ^ UCLA Football
– 2007 UCLA Football (Media Guide). UCLA Athletic Department
(2007), page 165 (PDF copy available at www.uclabruins.com)
- ^ Rose Bowl Stadium –
History of the Rose Bowl Stadium
Bibliography
- Park, Jack (2003). The Official
Ohio State Football Encyclopedia: National Championship
Edition. Sports Publishing LLC. ISBN
1582616957.
- UCLA Football Media Guide (PDF Copy available at www.uclabruins.com)
- Ohio State Football Media Guide (individual sections available
at www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com)
External
links
| Ohio State Buckeyes bowl
games |
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