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1965 NCAA University Division football season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football season

1965 NCAA University Division football season
PreseasonAP No. 1Nebraska[1]
Regular seasonSeptember 17 – December 4, 1965
Number of bowls8
Bowl gamesDecember 18, 1965 – January 1, 1966
Champion(s)Alabama (AP,FWAA)
Michigan State (Coaches, FWAA,NFF)
HeismanMike Garrett (halfback,USC)

During the 20th century, the NCAA had no playoff for the major college football teams in the University Division, later known asDivision I-A. The NCAA did recognize a national champion based upon the final results of"wire service" (AP and UPI) polls. The"writers' poll" byAssociated Press (AP) was the most popular, followed by the"coaches' poll" byUnited Press International) (UPI). Prior to 1965, both services issued their final polls at the close of the regular season, but before teams competed inbowl games. For the 1965 season, the AP took itsfinal poll after the postseason games, an arrangement made permanent in1968. The Associated Press presented the "AP Trophy" to the winner.

The AP poll in 1965 consisted of the votes of 55 sportswriters, each of whom would give their opinion of the ten best teams. Under a point system of ten points for first place, nine for second, etc., the "overall" ranking was determined. In the preseason poll for 1965, the writers cast first place votes for nine different teams, and the range of points between the highest six finishers ranged from 252 to 311 points.Nebraska was first, followed by Texas, Notre Dame, Michigan, Alabama, and Arkansas.[2] As the regular season progressed, new polls were issued weekly on Mondays.

At the end of the regular season, Michigan State, Arkansas, and Nebraska were all unbeaten at 10–0. As champions of their respective conferences (Big Ten,Southwest, andBig Eight), they played in three separate bowl games (Rose,Cotton, andOrange) onNew Year's Day.[3] Arkansas and Michigan State lost during the day, and Alabama defeated Nebraska at night inMiami. In thefinal poll, taken after the bowls, Alabama was crowned the national champion by the Associated Press. The Crimson Tide had been first in bothfinal polls at the end of the 1964 regular season and crowned as national champions, but lost theOrange Bowl.

In addition to 1964 and 1965, the UPI national champions in1970 and1973 also lost their respective bowl games. Beginning with the1974 season, the UPI released its final poll after the bowls.

Rule changes

[edit]
  • Free substitution is now permitted only on changes of possession, which brought back the two-platoon system to college football.
  • A two-inch (5 cm) kicking tee was allowed for kickoffs; this was reduced to one-inch (2½ cm) in2006.

Conference and program changes

[edit]
School1964 Conference1965 Conference
East CarolinaPiratesIndependentSouthern
DetroitTitansIndependentdropped program
VPIHokiesSouthernIndependent

September

[edit]

In Week One (September 18) No. 5 Alabama and No. 7 USC both fell out of the Top Ten. USC played Minnesota to a 20–20 tie on a Friday night game in Los Angeles while Alabama narrowly lost to Georgia, 18–17.No. 1 Nebraska beatTexas Christian (TCU) at home, 34–14. No. 2 Texas shut outTulane 31–0 in a game which was shifted fromNew Orleans toAustin due to the devastation ofHurricane Betsy across the Crescent City. No. 3 Notre Dame crushedCalifornia 48–6 at Berkeley, and No. 4 Michigan won 31–24 atNorth Carolina. No. 6 Arkansas beatOklahoma State 28–14. Following its big win, Notre Dame rose to No. 1 in the next poll, Nebraska and Texas fell to 2nd and 3rd, Michigan stayed at No. 4 and Arkansas was No. 5. In a matchup which would later have national championship implications,Michigan State defeatedUCLA 13–3 at East Lansing.

OnSeptember 25, No. 1 Notre Dame stayed in Indiana as it lost to No. 6Purdue 25–21 at West Lafayette. No. 2 Nebraska won 27–17 overAir Force in Colorado Springs, and No. 3 Texas beatTexas Tech 33–7. No. 4 Michigan barely won over unranked California 10–7 and No. 5 Arkansas defeatedTulsa 20–12. No. 7LSU won 42–14 overRice. In the next poll, Texas, Purdue and Nebraska had had 15, 14 and 13 first place votes in a tight race for No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3. Arkansas rose to No. 4, while LSU placed fifth. Michigan State entered the poll at No. 9 with a 23−0 shutout of Penn State.

October

[edit]

October 2, No. 1 Texas hosted Indiana and won 27–12. No. 2 Purdue playedSMU to a 14–14 tie inDallas. No. 3 Nebraska shut outIowa State 44–0, while No. 4 Arkansas blanked TCU 28–0. In an SEC matchup at Gainesville, visiting No. 5 LSU fell to theFlorida Gators 14–7. No. 10Georgia beat No. 7 Michigan 15–7 in Ann Arbor, while No. 9 Michigan State beatIllinois at home, 22–12. The next poll was No. 1 Texas, No. 2 Nebraska, No. 3 Arkansas, No. 4 Georgia, and No. 5 Michigan State.

InOctober 9 play, all five of the top teams remained unbeaten. No. 1 Texas shut out Oklahoma, 19–0 at Dallas. No. 2 Nebraska held visitingWisconsin scoreless 37–0. No. 3 Arkansas won atBaylor 38–7 and No. 4 Georgia beatClemson at home, 23–9. No. 5 Michigan State followed Georgia's visit to Ann Arbor with one of its own, beating Michigan 24–7. The Spartans and Bulldogs traded places in the next poll, which was No. 1 Texas, No. 2 Nebraska, No. 3 Arkansas, No. 4 Michigan State, and No. 5 Georgia.

OnOctober 16, No. 1 Texas met No. 3 Arkansas at Fayetteville in a Southwest Conference matchup between two 4–0 teams, and Arkansas won 27–24. Meanwhile, No. 2 Nebraska recorded its third straight shutout, a 41–0 win atKansas State. In a game that ultimately decided the Big Ten title, No. 4 Michigan State beatOhio State 32–7, and No. 5 Georgia lost 10–3 toFlorida State atTallahassee. No. 6 USC beatStanford 14–0 and remained unbeaten at 4–0–1. Arkansas was the new No. 1 in the next poll, followed by No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 Nebraska, No. 4 USC, and No. 5 Texas.

October 23: No. 1 Arkansas defeatedNorth Texas State 55–20 atLittle Rock, No. 2 Michigan State won 14–10 at No. 6 Purdue, and No. 3 Nebraska beatColorado 38–13. No. 4 USC fell 28–7 to No. 7 Notre Dame at South Bend, and No. 5 Texas lost its second straight game, falling 20–17 to Rice. After their 4–0 start, the Longhorns finished the season at 6–4. No. 9 LSU beatSouth Carolina 21–7. In the next poll, Michigan State received fewer first place votes than Arkansas, but had seven more points overall, 473–466, while Nebraska was third. The three teams were the last to remain unbeaten, all with 6–0 records. Notre Dame was No. 4 and LSU was No. 5.

October 30 No. 1 Michigan State overwhelmed Northwestern 49–7 at home in East Lansing. Playing in Little Rock, No. 2 Arkansas shut outTexas A&M 31–0. No. 3 Nebraska won a close one, 16–14, atMissouri and No. 4 Notre Dame won 29–3 overNavy. No. 5 LSU was shut out at home by Mississippi, 23–0. Meanwhile, No. 10Alabama beatMississippi State 10–7 atJackson. The next poll featured No. 1 Michigan State, No. 2 Arkansas, No. 3 Nebraska, No. 4 Notre Dame, and No. 5 Alabama.

November

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OnNovember 6, No. 1 Michigan State won 35–0 atIowa, No. 2 Arkansas won 31–0 at Rice, and No. 3 Nebraska won 42–6 overKansas. All three remained unbeaten, with 8–0 records. No. 4 Notre Dame rolled over hostPittsburgh 69–13, and No. 5 Alabama won 31–7 at LSU. The top five remained the same.

November 13 The top three extended their records to 9–0. No. 1 Michigan State beat Indiana 27–13 to guarantee itself the Big Ten title and a trip to Pasadena for theRose Bowl. No. 2 Arkansas beat SMU 24–3 at Dallas. No. 3 Nebraska had a surprisingly difficult game against 1–6 Oklahoma State, winning 21–17 at Stillwater, but still clinched the Big 8 title and a berth in theOrange Bowl. No. 4 Notre Dame shut out visiting North Carolina, 17–0, and No. 5 Alabama beat South Carolina 35–14 at home. The top five again remained the same.

November 20: With its Big Ten title assured, No. 1 Michigan State visited its most difficult opponent yet, No. 4 Notre Dame, with hopes of finishing its season unbeaten. The Spartans won, 12–3. Though unbeaten,No. 2 Arkansas was only a game ahead of No. 9 Texas Tech (6–0 vs. 5–1) in SWC play. The two met at Arkansas, and the Razorbacks beat the Red Raiders 42–24 to get a spot in theCotton Bowl. No. 3 Nebraska and No. 5 Alabama had the week off. In Los Angeles, No. 7 UCLA beat No. 6 USC 20–16 to win the AAWU (Pac-8) title, a Rose Bowl berth, and the opportunity to avenge their early-season loss to Michigan State. Unranked LSU destroyed Tulane 62–0 (the third time in the past eight meetings the Tigers defeated the Green Wave by that score) and earned a berth in the Cotton Bowl opposite Arkansas. The next poll featured No. 1 Michigan State, No. 2 Arkansas, No. 3 Nebraska, No. 4 UCLA, and No. 5 Alabama.

Thanksgiving Day, No. 3 Nebraska beat Oklahoma at home in Lincoln, 21–9 to finish with a 10−0 record. No. 5 Alabama met Auburn (which was surprisingly undefeated in SEC play despite losing three of their four non-conference games) in their annual season closer at Birmingham on Saturday. The Crimson Tide beat the Tigers 30–3. For the second straight year, SEC champion Alabama would play in the Orange Bowl rather than the Sugar Bowl;the latter game matched No. 6 Missouri against Florida. The next AP Poll was No. 1 Michigan State, No. 2 Arkansas, No. 3 Nebraska, No. 4 Alabama, and No. 5 UCLA.[3]

On the followingDecember 4, No. 5 UCLA lost to No. 7 Tennessee 37–34 in a game marred by a questionable pass interference call and the clock stopping for no apparent reason during Tennessee's last-minute drive. However, the Bruins were not penalized by the AP voters, who did not release a poll after this week. Instead, the AP planned to take its final poll after the bowl games, as its top six teams were all playing on New Year's Day.

Conference standings

[edit]
1965 Athletic Association of Western Universities football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 4UCLA $400821
No. 10USC410721
Washington State210730
Washington430550
Stanford230631
California230550
Oregon State130550
Oregon050451
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1965 Atlantic Coast Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
NC State +520640†
Clemson +520550†
Duke420640
Maryland330460
North Carolina330460
Virginia330460†
Wake Forest240370†
South Carolina060550†
  • + – Conference co-champions
  • † South Carolina forfeited its 4 conference wins (Clemson, NC State, Virginia, Wake Forest) due to use of ineligible players. This improved Clemson and NC State from 4–3 to 5–2, making them co-champions. Overall records did not change due to the forfeits. Duke and South Carolina were originally co-champions with records of 4–2.
1965 Big Eight Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 5Nebraska $7001010
No. 6Missouri610821
Colorado421622
Iowa State331541
Oklahoma340370
Oklahoma State250370
Kansas250280
Kansas State0700100
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1965 Big Sky Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Weber State +310810
Idaho +310550
Montana220460
Idaho State130351
Montana State130370
  • + – Conference co-champions
1965 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 2Michigan State $7001010
Ohio State610720
Purdue520721
Minnesota520541
Illinois430640
Northwestern340460
Michigan250460
Wisconsin250271
Indiana160280
Iowa070190
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1965 Ivy League football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Dartmouth $700900
Princeton610810
Harvard322522
Cornell331432
Yale340360
Penn241441
Brown160270
Columbia160270
  • $ – Conference champion
1965 Mid-American Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Bowling Green +510720
Miami (OH) +510730
Western Michigan321621
Kent State321541
Marshall240550
Toledo240551
Ohio0600100
  • + – Conference co-champions
1965 Middle Three Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Rutgers +110360
Lafayette +110370
Lehigh +110180
  • + – Conference co-champions
1965 Missouri Valley Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Tulsa $400830
Louisville210640
North Texas State220370
Cincinnati120550
Wichita State040270
  • $ – Conference champion
1965 Southeastern Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 1Alabama $611911
Auburn411551
No. 7Tennessee312812
Florida420740
Ole Miss530740
No. 8LSU330830
Georgia330640
Kentucky330640
Vanderbilt150271
Tulane150280
Mississippi State150460
  • $ – Conference champion
  • Tennessee's game againstSouth Carolina and Georgia's game againstClemson counted in the conference standings.
Rankings fromAP Poll
1965 Southern Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
West Virginia $400640
William & Mary510640
East Carolina310910
VMI320370
George Washington430550
The Citadel440460
Davidson230640
Furman230550
Richmond0600100
  • $ – Conference champion
1965 Southwest Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 3Arkansas $7001010
Texas Tech520830
TCU520650
Texas340640
Baylor340550
SMU340451
Texas A&M160370
Rice160280
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings fromAP Poll
1965 Western Athletic Conference football standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
BYU $410640
Arizona State310640
Wyoming320640
New Mexico230370
Utah130370
Arizona140370
  • $ – Conference champion
1965 NCAA University Division independents football records
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
New Mexico State  820
Utah State  820
Xavier  820
Texas Western  830
No. 9Notre Dame  721
Southern Miss  720
Syracuse  730
Virginia Tech  730
Georgia Tech  731
Boston College  640
West Texas State  640
Boston University  531
Buffalo  532
Miami (FL)  541
Penn State  550
Memphis State  550
San Jose State  550
Navy  442
Colgate  451
Florida State  451
Army  451
Houston  451
Colorado State  460
Air Force  361
Pittsburgh  370
Dayton  370
Holy Cross  271
Villanova  180
Rankings fromAP Poll

Bowl games

[edit]

Major bowls

[edit]

Saturday, January 1, 1966

BOWL
COTTONNo. 14LSU Tigers14No. 2Arkansas Razorbacks7
SUGARNo. 6Missouri Tigers20No. 12Florida Gators18
ROSENo. 5UCLA Bruins14No. 1Michigan State Spartans12
ORANGENo. 4Alabama Crimson Tide39No. 3Nebraska Cornhuskers28

The top three teams in the polls were upset,[4] starting with LSU's 14–7 win over No. 2 Arkansas in the Cotton Bowl. Then came an even bigger stunner, as 13-point underdog UCLA bested top-ranked Michigan State in the Rose Bowl, 14–12. Trailing by eight points, Michigan State scored a touchdown in the final minute but the two-point conversion attempt to tie was stopped just short of the goal line. With the top two teams defeated, the Orange Bowl game that night between No. 3 Nebraska and No. 4 Alabama would determine the national champion. Alabama, led by QBSteve Sloan, beat Nebraska 39–28 to claim the national title.[5] Thefinal AP poll, released three days after the bowls, was No. 1 Alabama, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 Arkansas, No. 4 UCLA, and No. 5 Nebraska.[6][7]

Other bowls

[edit]
BOWLLocationDateWinnerScoreRunner-up
SUNEl Paso, TXDecember 31Texas Western13–12TCU
GATORJacksonville, FLDecember 31Georgia Tech31–21No. 10Texas Tech
BLUEBONNETHouston, TXDecember 18No. 7Tennessee27–6No. 16Tulsa
LIBERTYMemphis, TNDecember 18No. 17Mississippi13–7Auburn

Heisman Trophy voting

[edit]

TheHeisman Trophy is given to the year's most outstanding player

PlayerSchoolPosition1st2nd3rdTotal
Mike GarrettUSCRB179143103926
Howard TwilleyTulsaWR1017869528
Jim GrabowskiIllinoisFB977246481
Donny AndersonTexas TechHB785760408
Floyd LittleSyracuseHB514250287
Steve JudayMichigan StateQB534042281
Tommy NobisTexasLB273750205
Bob GriesePurdueQB323625193
Steve SpurrierFloridaQB17141493
Steve SloanAlabamaQB1815892

Source:[8][9]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Archived copy". Archived fromthe original on October 2, 2011. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^"Archived copy". Archived fromthe original on October 2, 2011. RetrievedJanuary 11, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ab"1965 college grid title to be decided in 1966".Lewiston Morning Tribune. Idaho. Associated Press. December 26, 1965. p. 20.
  4. ^"Grid bowl results".Youngstown Vindicator. Ohio. Associated Press. January 2, 1966. p. D1.
  5. ^"39-28 win for 'Bama in Miami".Youngstown Vindicator. Ohio. Associated Press. January 2, 1966. p. D1.
  6. ^"'Bama wins 2nd straight AP grid title".Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. Associated Press. January 4, 1966. p. 2B.
  7. ^"11/22/1965 A.P. Poll Results - databaseFootball.com/College". Archived from the original on November 30, 2015. RetrievedNovember 25, 2012.
  8. ^"Vote Garrett best in U.S."Chicago Tribune. UPI. November 24, 1965. p. 1, sec. 3.
  9. ^"Mike Garrett".Heisman Trophy. 1965. RetrievedJanuary 25, 2017.
Pre-NCAA
NCAA pre-divisional
NCAA University Division
NCAA Division I
NCAA Division I-A/FBS
NCAA Division I-AA/FCS
NCAA College Division
NCAA Division II
NCAA Division III
1965–66 NCAA University Division championships
University Division only
Single championship
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