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1957 Stanford Indians football team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football season

1957Stanford Indians football
ConferencePacific Coast Conference
Record6–4 (4–3 PCC)
Head coach
Home stadiumStanford Stadium
Seasons
← 1956
1958 →
1957 Pacific Coast Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Oregon State +620820
No. 17Oregon ^ +620740
No. 19UCLA520820
Washington State530640
Stanford430640
Washington340361
California160190
USC160190
Idaho030441
  • + – Conference co-champions
  • ^ – Selected asRose Bowl representative
    Oregon State won the rivalry game over Oregon, but PCC no-repeat rule was in effect
Rankings fromCoaches Poll

The1957 Stanford Indians football team representedStanford University in the1957 college football season. The team was coached byChuck Taylor in his seventh year as head coach. Taylor was a popular coach who had led Stanford to the1952 Rose Bowl, had been an All-American player for the Indians, and starred on the undefeated1940 "Wow Boys" team that won the1941 Rose Bowl and the national championship in several polls.[1] Just before the team's final game against archrival California, Taylor announced he was retiring as head coach to become assistant athletic director of the university.[2]

Schedule

[edit]
DateOpponentRankSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 21San Jose State*W 46–726,000
September 28Northwestern*No. 16
  • Stanford Stadium
  • Stanford, CA
W 26–619,000
October 5atRice*No. 17L 7–3454,000[3]
October 12Washington State
  • Stanford Stadium
  • Stanford, CA
L 18–2119,000
October 19atWashingtonW 21–1436,036
October 26No. 15UCLA
  • Stanford Stadium
  • Stanford, CA
W 20–646,000
November 2No. 15Oregon
  • Stanford Stadium
  • Stanford, CA
L 26–2756,000[4]
November 9atUSCW 35–751,923
November 16atOregon StateL 14–2420,000
November 23California
W 14–1291,300
  • *Non-conference game
  • Rankings fromAP Poll released prior to the game

[5]

Game summaries

[edit]

California

[edit]
Team1234Total
Bears060612
• Indians077014
Scoring summary
1STANChuck Shea 9-yard run (Al Harrington kick)STAN 7–0
2CALDarrell Roberts 1-yard run (Roberts kick blocked)STAN 7–6
3STANJack Douglas 1-yard run (Harrington kick)STAN 14–6
4CALSteve Glagola 44-yard pass fromJoe Kapp (2-point conversion failed)STAN 14–12

The 60thBig Game was held just a few days after Stanford head coach Taylor announced he would step down following the end of the season to serve as the school's assistant athletic director.[2] Coming into the game, the Indians had won just once in Taylor's 6 previous Big Games, but vowed to win this game for their beloved head coach.[2] Although Stanford had relied on its passing attack from quarterbackJack Douglas all season, it was the running game that gave the team the lead in the second quarter on fullback Chuck Shea's 9-yard run. Shea would rush for 155 yards on the day. California answered, but the point after was blocked, and Stanford nursed a 7–6 lead into the third quarter, when Douglas ran in for another score. California answered late, but the Indians held on to fulfill their vow to their outgoing coach and bring the overall Big Game series record at 25–25–10.[6] Taylor would become Stanford'sathletic director in 1963 and serve in that role until 1971.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Migdol, Gary (1997).Stanford: Home of Champions. Champaign, Illinois: Sports Publishing LLC. p. 104.ISBN 1-57167-116-1.
  2. ^abc"Chuck Taylor quits Stanford football post".The Register-Guard. November 22, 1957. RetrievedDecember 23, 2014.
  3. ^"Rice scalps Tribe".Oakland Tribune. October 6, 1957. RetrievedMarch 21, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.
  4. ^Strite, Dick (November 3, 1957)."Oregon wins high-powered offensive battle".Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. p. 1B.
  5. ^"Schedule/Results (1957 Stanford)".NCAA Statistics.National Collegiate Athletic Association. RetrievedMay 24, 2025.
  6. ^"Stanford gets past California by 14–12".The Register-Guard. November 24, 1957. RetrievedDecember 23, 2014.
  7. ^"Hall of Fame inductee detail: Chuck Taylor".National Football Foundation. RetrievedDecember 23, 2013.
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