Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Merry Christmas (2004 Texas vs. Michigan)

The bowl season is in full swing, which means it's time for me to head to Shreveport to see Alabama vs. Colorado. Unfortunately, that also means no blog posts the rest of this week/year. So Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Here's hoping it's a good game.

The first-ever meeting between Michigan and Texas at the 2005 Rose Bowl lived up to expectations as the Longhorns pulled out a 38-37 victory on a 37-yard field goal by Dusty Mangum as time expired. Sophomore quarterback Vince Young accumulated 372 yards of total offense and five touchdowns. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Monday, December 24, 2007

1964 Princeton

Merry Christmas Eve everyone.

I've been trying for three months to get this photo to work and today was the day. Go figure.

Although the game returned to two-platoon football in 1964, Princeton’s Cosmo Iacavazzi continued to play both ways and led the Tigers to a rare ranking, No. 13. The All-American also placed ninth in Heisman Trophy voting. Courtesy of the National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

1934 Alabama (and Stanford)

Well, we're now three days into bowl practices, and the Crimson Tide is beginning to install the game plan to play Colorado. It's hard to believe that Christmas is less than a week away, which has a different meaning for anyone associated with the team, including reporters, this year because we're all traveling to Shreveport that morning. So any gas stations between Tuscaloosa and there, please stay open. I promise, I'll stop at least twice, and so will everyone else.

Stanford All-American tackle Bob “Horse” Reynolds and coach C.E. Thornhill meet with Alabama coach Frank Thomas and All-American halfback Millar “Dixie” Howell prior to the 1935 Rose Bowl. Led by its passing game, Alabama won 29-13. Courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

1951 Tennessee

General Robert Neyland twice left the Volunteers to serve in the military, but compiled an amazing 173-31-12 record during his three stints leading Tennessee.

The 1939 team shut out 10 consecutive opponents and the 1950 team finished 11-1 to earn national title consideration. He followed that up with a 10-0 regular season and consensus national title, though Tennessee lost to Maryland 28-13 in the Sugar Bowl. Courtesy of the University of Tennessee.

By the way, he's the one in the coat.

Monday, December 17, 2007

1955 Michigan State

Coach Duffy Daugherty won his Rose Bowl debut when Dave Kaiser made a 41-yard field goal with seven seconds left to play as Michigan State defeated UCLA, 17-14. However the Spartans finished No. 2 behind Oklahoma. Courtesy of the Tournament or Roses archives.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

1951 Illinois

Wow, has it really been a week already? That's the thing about vacations, they never seen to last long enough. Such is life.

So now I have a week of football practice and then it's off to Shreveport on Christmas morning for the Independence Bowl. That's one of the problems with covering a team, where they go, you go, even on a big-time holiday.

Billy Tate had 150 rushing yards on 20 carries and scored two touchdowns as Illinois crushed Stanford in the 1952Rose Bowl, 40-7. John Karras, Don Stevens and John Ryan also scored in the second half when the game turned into a rout. Despite the 9-0-1 finish, most services had Maryland, Michigan State or Tennessee at No. 1. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

1996 Florida

Congratulations to Tim Tebow and the Florida Gators on winning the Heisman Trophy. It's nice to see that the voters have caught up with the times, and actually selected a sophomore. It's about time.
Obviously, it's the school's third Heisman. The first was won by the guy on the right.
As for the photo, with Arizona State losing in the 1997 Rose Bowl, the national championship came down to No. 1 Florida State vs. No. 4 Florida, which had closed the regular season with a No. 1 vs. No. 2 meeting won by the Seminoles. This time Steve Spurrier’s Gators dominated, 52-20, to win Florida’s first national championship. Courtesy of the Southeastern Conference.
FYI, the blog is going to be a little hit-and-miss the rest of the month as I'm off this week (yeah!), but finishing a project, and then I'll essentially be on the road off-and-on for a couple of weeks. I promise to do the best I can.

Friday, December 7, 2007

1950 Cal

Busy days.

First off I want to thank the Red Elephant Club in Florence for having me as a guest speaker last night. I had a very enjoyable time, and was blown away by the number of questions (45 minutes, wow).

Second, I want to thank the very nice police officer for not giving me a speeding ticket on the way home. Merry Christmas.

Yesterday, I did a fun radio interview with a station in Louisville. Saturday morning it's West Palm Beach's turn.

Coach Lynn “Pappy” Waldorf led the Bears to three straight appearances in the 1951 Rose Bowl after undefeated regular seasons, but wasn’t able to get a victory. The last came against Michigan, a 14-6 loss. His Cal record through 1956 was 67-32-4; his career record 170-94-22. Courtesy the Tournament of Roses archives.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

1946 Illinois

It's a busy couple of days for me, so I'll need to keep this one short. It's kind of fitting, though, with Illinois returning to the Rose Bowl.

No. 4 UCLA was on pace for an undefeated season when it faced No. 5 Illinois at the 1947 Rose Bowl in the first meeting with a Big Ten/Pac-10 agreement. Led by “Orange” Julius Rykovich (107 yards) and Mr. Five by Five, Buddy Young (103 yards), Illinois won, 45-14. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

2003 Southern California

A quick update on the book front, things seem to be really picking up. It's in stores, interview requests are up (Louisville on Thursday and West Palm Beach on Saturday morning), and now there's this huge controversy about the BCS that's not going to go away.

Just to throw some more wood on the fire, people have been picking through the final coaches' poll and are finding some surprising ballots. For example, Dennis Franchione ranked Hawaii 22nd, while Hal Mumme had the Rainbows at No. 1. Tommy Bowden had Oklahoma behind Missouri, a team it beat twice this season. And Frank Beamer had his team, Virginia Tech at No. 2, which would have put it in the title game. Sorry, Frank.

Quarterback Matt Leinart celebrates after catching a touchdown pass from wide receiver Mike Williams in the 28-14 victory in the Rose Bowl against No. 4 Michigan. Although Southern California was No. 1 in both major polls, it was excluded from the BCS national championship, resulting in a split title. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Monday, December 3, 2007

Everyone has a claim this year

Guess which team the computers had No. 1 in the BCS rankings? Not Ohio State, or LSU. Try Virginia Tech, ahead of No. 2 LSU and followed by Ohio State, Missouri (which is not playing in a BCS game) and Kansas. By the way, LSU only crushed Virginia Tech this season, 48-7.

Ok, earlier in the season I wrote a column speculating on what if the BCS didn't exist and we had a playoff format in Division I-A (or whatever they're calling it these days) football.
It was a simple concept, and pretty much the same one they use in every other division. A committee puts together the field, and off we go.

Here's how it would work. The top team from each of the six major BCS conferences (ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-10 and SEC) gets an automatic bid, with the field filled out by the BCS rankings. If conferences want to have a championship game for the automatic bid, that's fine, and the world can still have a slew of bowl games for the non-playoff teams. The first round would be at home sites of the higher-ranked seeds, with advancing teams playing at neutral sites of the biggest bowls (Sugar, Orange, etc) along with other high bidders. The committee's primary job would be to switch teams out of playing conference opponents, and things like that.

So here's how a playoff would look:

16 at 1: Tennessee at Ohio State
9 at 8: West Virginia at Kansas
12 at 5: Boston College at Georgia
13 at 4: Florida at Oklahoma
14 at 3: Illinois at Virginia Tech
11 at 6: Arizona State at Missouri
10 at 7: Hawaii at Southern California
15 at 2: Clemson at LSU

The only change would be to swap Florida, Boston College and Illinois to avoid SEC and ACC first-round matchups, and minimize chances of two teams playing for a third time (after meeting in a conference title game).
1934 Alabama: After defeating Stanford in the Rose Bowl, the Crimson Tide (10-0) was able to make a claim on the national title, although Minnesota was the consensus choice. Courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

1968 Ohio State

Wow.

The season's over and the only thing we pretty know for sure is that Ohio State is in the title game. I was joking with friends about "When did the Buckeyes become the lock?"

This year, though. It seems fitting.

Oh, and there's a new poll. I would have listed 10 possible answers, but for some reason the site wouldn't let me.

After an early 13-0 upset of No. 1 Purdue, Woody Hayes’ Buckeyes rolled all the way to a 9-0 record, the national championship, and a 27-16 victory against Southern California in the Rose Bowl. Although O.J. Simpson had 171 yards on 28 carries, including an 80-yard touchdown, he also contributed to five Trojan turnovers. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Friday, November 30, 2007

1956 Tennessee

Next week is the awarding of the Heisman Trophy, and this year's voting is already drawing a lot of attention. A certain newspaper covering one of the finalists is conducting an informal media poll and asked for my thougths. Although my newspaper has a vote, I don't, but here's how I would.

My initial thought is that I think a lot of voters are simply going to look at Tim Tebow's touchdown numbers and then nothing else, which shouldn't be the case. That Darren McFadden's season numbers are better than last year, and his career total tops Bo Jackson, could make this one of the interesting and intriguing votes in Heisman history.

1. McFadden, Arkansas
2. Tim Tebow, Florida
3. Glenn Dorsey, LSU

An SEC trifecta, but only because Oregon's Dixon unfortunately got hurt.

Halfback Johnny Majors finished second in 1956 Heisman Trophy voting to Notre Dame’s Paul Hornung (considered one of the most controversial finishes in the award's history), and after a 10-0 regular season Tennessee finished No. 2 in the final polls as well. Courtesy of the Southeastern Conference.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

1962 Southern California

Incoming!

Short and sweet today. Southern California and Wisconsin set numerous passing records as they combined for 853 yards of offense in the 1963 Rose Bowl. Pete Beathard threw four touchdowns passes, including two to Hal Bedsole, as the Trojans held on for a 42-37 victory. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

1948 Northwestern (and Cal)

I've always really liked this photo. Besides, my mother went to Northwestern.

Aided by a disputed touchdown by fullback Art Murakowski, whose fumble while crossing the goal-line was ruled a score despite photographic evidence to the contrary, Northwestern defeated Cal in the Rose Bowl, 20-14.

Although the Bears came in 10-0 and ranked fourth by the Associated Press, it essentially ended their claim to the national championship. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

1946 Illinois

Last month I wrote a column speculating on what if the BCS didn’t exist and we had a playoff format in Division I-A (or whatever they’re calling it these days) football.

It was a simple concept, and pretty much the same one they use if every other division. A committee puts together the field, and off we go.

Here’s how it would work. The top team from each of the six major BCS conferences (ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-10 and SEC) gets an automatic bid, with the field filled out by the BCS rankings. If conferences want to have a championship game for the automatic bid, that’s fine, and the world can still have a slew of bowl games for the non-playoff teams.

The first round would be at home sites of the higher-ranked seeds, with advancing teams playing at neutral sites of the biggest bowls (Sugar, Orange, etc) along with other high bidders. The committee’s primary job would be to switch teams out of playing conference opponents, and things like that.

Here were the pairings heading in to the Oct. 20 games:

16 at 1: Missouri at Ohio State
9 at 8: West Virginia at Arizona State
12 at 5: Cal at Oklahoma
13 at 4: Kansas at LSU
14 at 3: Southern California at Boston College
11 at 6: Virginia Tech at South Carolina
10 at 7: Oregon at Kentucky
15 at 2: Florida at South Florida

Here’s an update, based on where we are today:

16 at 1: Clemson at Missouri
9 at 8: Florida at Southern California
12 at 5: Boston College at Kansas
13 at 4: Arizona State at Georgia
14 at 3: Tennessee at Ohio State
11 at 6: Hawaii at Virginia Tech
10 at 7: Oklahoma at LSU
15 at 2: Illinois at West Virginia

Florida and Oklahoma are switched to avoid a potential second-round meeting between Oklahoma and Missouri
Boston College and Hawaii are switched to avoid Boston College vs. Virginia Tech

Even if you took the top eight teams, one could make the argument that it would still be much better than what we’re about to see this year, and trust me, that's exactly what people are going to be claiming for the next six weeks or so.
As for the photo, No. 4 UCLA was on pace for an undefeated season when it faced No. 5 Illinois at the 1947 Rose Bowl in the first meeting with a Big Ten/Pac-10 agreement. Led by “Orange” Julius Rykovich (107 yards) and Mr. Five by Five, Buddy Young (103 yards), Illinois won, 45-14. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Covering Alabama (1926)

In an effort to do something different, here's something I wrote for our newspaper blog about what it's like to cover an event like Saturday's Iron Bowl.

With kickoff scheduled for 7 p.m., time would be critical. Even if the game ended in three hours (which would be ridiculously fast), that's 10 p.m., and normally the entire sports section has to completely done and sent to the printer by 11:30 so we can have the paper on subscribers' doorsteps in the morning. Since it was a special event we would get a little extra time, but since the game was being broadcast on ESPN, which meant lots of commercials, we assumed the worst, that it would last at least four hours.

So Executive Sports Editor David Wasson put together our game plan. In addition to photographers, we sent five sports writers and one news writer, Jason Morton. Jamon Smith would write the Page 1A news story, with Jason Smith handling the local scene in Tuscaloosa. Between writers and photographs, that's already more than 10 people covering one event. As usual, Cecil Hurt would write his column, and I handled the game story. That left Tommy Deas to write two Alabama sidebars, Aaron Suttles to hit the home-team locker room for two Auburn sidebars, and Michael Southern to blog during the game, write a final sidebar and contribute an item or two to the notebook (for those not into newspaper lingo, a sidebar is a secondary story usually focusing on one thing, and notes are all the small items we can't fit in anywhere else).


Noon _ Five of the six writers meet at the office in Tuscaloosa. Since Auburn is synonymous with traffic problems, we left seven hours prior to kickoff.

4 p.m. _ With Aaron and Michael crammed into my car, we quickly cruise down through Prattville (I goof on the turn for Steak & Shake, and instead of turning around settle for Hardee's, oh the sacrifices we make) and arrive at Jordan-Hare Stadium in good time, and walk through the crowd to go to work. Thankfully, media is in a new parking lot because in the past we had a problem with fans claiming our spots, and if we argued with them you never knew how you would find your car after the game.

5 p.m. _ After stopping for ribs, Tommy and Jason arrive along with Cecil, whom they met up with in Montgomery. While everyone's watching Kentucky-Tennessee go to four overtimes, I'm dispelling the rumor that some of the Alabama players had been suspended for the game.

7 p.m. _ Kickoff at 7:10. With the wind blowing straight into the press box, it's very cold and Aaron doesn't have a jacket. We tease him unmercifully. Before kickoff, I write up what will be the majority of the lead note regarding Alabama's bowl possibilities. However, a lot will obviously depend on the game's outcome, and I remind myself to double-check everything at the end.

8:45 _ Halftime. With both teams trying to run the ball, the game is moving along very quickly, which is something you can't mention in the press box because you'll jinx it (trust me, the sports gods are cruel that way, especially in baseball). David, sitting in his command chair back in Tuscaloosa and enjoying Florida's win against Florida State, informs us that the deadline for all stories is midnight. It'll be a challenge, and I write up 3-4 paragraphs on the first half and a possible lead for the game story. There are times I'll write 4-5 different leads for a story depending on how a game changes, but for the most part this one held true. Besides, there won't be time to mess with it too much.
Also, the writers huddle and discuss possible sidebars because through the first half there were very few good storylines. Michael is focusing on the defense for his story, but Tommy has very little to work with. Hopefully that will change.

10ish _ When Keith Saunders is called for roughing the passer, I start heading down to the field because I already know what's going to happen. My lead will hold up, the flavor of what I see and hear will add to the story, and, quite frankly, I love being on a field during a game (FYI, reporters are allowed for the final few minutes. That's in part why the sidelines look so much more congested at the end of a game). Replay officials review the touchdown call they nullify as I walk through the concourse, and Auburn punches in the decisive score before I can navigate down a first-level aisle to the ground level. The first thing I notice is that the wind is a lot worse that it appears upstairs. That and I see a whole lot of orange.

10:21 _ The game ends. Now the fun begins. After watching Auburn celebrate and Alabama head off, it's time to hit the interview room, where Saban will have his press conference roughly 15 minutes after the conclusion of the game. Tommy tells me he's greatly concerned about which players will be available, because he can't do a story without quotes. He's right, and now I'm worried too. We figure one story will be on the running game, and talk about backup plans, but everything else will be a question mark.

10:38 _ Dave asks for the rundown of stories, but I can't answer as I obviously don't know yet myself. That and I missed his message because I'm already wedged into a tiny room designed for about 20-25 people with 75-100 journalists and scores of television cameras. Coach Nick Saban is contrite with his remarks and answers about 10 questions. His comment on going recruiting this week stands out to me and I immediately know that will be the last line in my story.
Then the sports information department brings in players to be interviewed. Normally, it's between 12 and 20 players, especially after a win. Instead, we get Travis McCall, John Parker Wilson, Darren Mustin, Wallace Gilberry and Glen Coffee. That's it, or it was when I left the room at about 11 p.m. (Note: I later saw some DJ Hall quotes, so I probably just missed him).

11:10 _ Back upstairs in the press box, check with everyone to see how they're doing and give Dave the rundown, although most of the guys have already done so on their own. Tommy got Coffee for the running backs story, and somehow was going to do a story on how the Alabama players were sick of losing to Auburn. How he would pull that off was beyond me, and the deadline is already looming.

11:50 _ After transcribing three quotes just to make sure I got them right, cranked out the game story in about 30 minutes, gave it a quick read to make sure I didn't have any major mistakes and sent it to the office. As usual, Cecil's the first one done, but everyone else is frantically trying to type with cold fingers and wondering why we don't have the final packet of game stats that are supposed to be handed out after the game.

Midnight _ Finished the notes, checked to see that everyone had sent their stories (incredibly, they all made it on time, or within a couple minutes of deadline), checked my lead note just in time to get the game stats from an Auburn intern. Five minutes later sent a quick correction after realizing I didn't factor in something about Tennessee for the bowl note.

12:15 _ We get the all-clear from the newsroom, but make sure our cell phones ringers are on just in case. By 12:45, David, Harold Stout and Edwin Stanton have laid out the four inside pages -- which includes editing, placing photos, checking cutlines and writing headlines -- along with the photo page, and the front page. With Michael and Aaron back in my small car, we start the long trek home, and it isn't until 1 a.m., when I get a phone signal again, that I find out that the headline is "Deep-Sixed." I like it.

Michael and I realize we had the same Darren Mustin quote in our stories and we duplicated a couple of items about the offense in the notes, but under the circumstances we'll live with it. Knowing Dave, Harold and Edwin the way we do, we know the section will look really good.
3:30 a.m. _ Except for seeing the remains of a horrific accident on 495 (which will unfortunately stay with me for a long time), the drive home is otherwise uneventful and we drop Michael off at the office. After taking Aaron to his place, I head straight for a store to buy orange juice to combat the sore throat that had been bothering me since the fourth quarter. I expect a lot of writers will be under the weather for the next few days. I'm home at 4 a.m. and in bed by 5 a.m. Just another day.
[FYI, if this is something you enjoyed, you may want to check out my book, "No Time Outs: What It's Really Like To Be A Sportswriter Today."
FYI, the photo is from a practice during the 1926 season. Alabama returned to the Rose Bowl and tied Stanford, earning a share of the national championship. Courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

1971 Auburn

Ok, I'm actually out of Auburn photos for "Who's No. 1?" but stole this from one of my other books, "Where Football is King: A History of the SEC."

Hey, sometimes you have to do what you have to do.

Auburn’s Terry Beasley (left) was the favorite target of quarterback Pat Sullivan (right) when he won the Heisman Trophy in 1971. Beasley is one of only two Tigers to reach 1,000 receiving yards in a season. Courtesy of the Bryant Museum.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

The Iron Bowl

Yep, it's more than seven hours prior to kickoff at Auburn, which means it's time to get going because even though the Plains might be a nice to visit, traffic there is about the worst anywhere in sports. Actually, that's only half true, because getting out is a lot worse than getting in. Hopefully it will be a good game.

Quarterback Jeff Rutledge, here taking a snap in the Crimson Tide’s 34-16 victory against Auburn in 1978, led Alabama to 11-1 seasons in both 1977 and a 1978. Alabama finished No. 2 in 1977, but could claim a controversial national championship in 1978. Courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum.

Friday, November 23, 2007

1985 UCLA vs. Iowa

So what was my first inkling of a football rivarly? Believe it or not, it was Iowa-Minnesota, especially since the Iowa fans would invade the Twin Cities whenever they player. The first REAL rivarly game I ever saw was Yale at Harvard. Considering Yale had me up last year to speak to some students, and I have not received a call from Harvard yet, choosing sides on that one is pretty easy for me now.

At 10-1, the 1985 Hawkeyes were still in the title picture heading into a Rose Bowl against UCLA, only to see Bruins backup Eric Ball, who replaced injured Gaston Green, accumulate 227 rushing yards and four touchdowns to lead a 45-28 victory. Photo courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Thursday, November 22, 2007

1968 Ohio State

Happy Thanksgiving everyone.

It's a holiday, so I'm going to keep this short and sweet ... besides, it's just a few minutes before kickoff for Southern California and Arizona State (FYI, I used to cover the Sun Devils for a bit).

Quarterback Rex Kern was one of 11 sophomores to start for the 1968 Buckeyes, who averaged 32 points and 440 yards per game on offense, while giving up just 15 points and 292 yards on defense. Seven of the sophomore were named All-Americans during their careers. Photo courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.
Happy shopping everyone.


Wednesday, November 21, 2007

1947 Michigan

It's the day before Thanksgiving and everyone is in a rush to get somewhere. Me? I'm just looking forward to a couple of days of peace and quiet.

Meanwhile, for some reason, the national media totally jumped on Nick Saban's comments from Monday about reaching rock bottom, more than 24 hours after he made them. Granted, he shouldn't have used 9/11, Pearl Harbor and alcoholism like that, but really, it was pretty obvious to anyone at the press conference that he was trying to make a simple analogy that good things can come out of bad times. Is that a huge national story to me? Not really. Especially not a day after the fact.

Meanwhile, a van driven by former Alabama running back Siran Stacy was struck by a pickup at an intersection and six people were killed, including Stacy's wife and four of his children. The truck was in the wrong lane. If that isn't gut-wrenching, I don't know what is.

Ok, enough of that. Although Notre Dame had already been named the Associated Press’ national champion, Michigan made a very powerful claim by crushing Southern California, 49-0. Jack Weisenburger scored three touchdowns and the Trojans crossed midfield only twice. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Please people, a little perspective.

Happy Thanksgiving. Gobble, gobble.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

1981 Clemson

So today I went down to the new local Barnes & Noble and signed every book that had of mine, including Who's No. 1? Where Football is King; and Crimson Storm Surge. They had a bunch, and I think they're going to order some copies of No Time Outs.

So if you're looking for a good gift and would like me to sign a book, no problem. I'll sign anything. I'll even sign someone else's book.

Obviously there are numerous other rivarly games this weekend, including Clemson vs. South Carolina. The 1981 Tigers began the season unranked, but quickly began to rise after defeating No. 4 Georgia 13-3 in the only regular loss during Herschel Walker’s career. Photo courtesy of Clemson University.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Rivalry Week (Alabama)

It didn't quite feel like it was Alabama-Auburn week for me until I asked a player today if it felt like it for him, and his eyes got real wide.

Ok, that's good enough for me.

Paul W. “Bear” Bryant’s first national championship with the Crimson Tide came after a 10-0 regular season in 1961 and 10-3 victory against No.9 Arkansas in the Sugar Bowl. Alabama shut out its last five opponents of the regular season. Courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Rivalry Week (Auburn)

Wow, is it here already? Geez, it seems like last week Michigan was getting beat by a I-AA school (and yes, I know there's another name for it, but I really don't care. People are more confused by the NCAA's new names than my mom is with technology. She still can't figure out the VCR).

Ralph “Shug” Jordan’s 1957 Tigers finished 10-0 for a No. 1 ranking in the final Associated Press poll, but voted No. 2 by the coaches. The Tigers shut out six opponents and never gave up more than seven points, but had been banned from playing in a bowl game due to recruiting violations.

Thus, this month's poll question ...

Photo courtesy of the Southeastern Conference.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

1930 Alabama (and Washington State)

Off to the stadium for the last home game of the season. Funny, I don't think I've ever covered a game before that wasn't at least on pay-per-view. Either that means I'll get more text messages from people wondering what's going on , or far less. It'll probably depend on if there's a significant injury (hope not, I never like to see those).

Alabama captain “Foots” Clement, left, meets the Washington State captain, believed to be Elmer Schwartz, during 1931 Rose Bowl festivities. Unfortunately, we don't know who the woman was, so if anyone does know please drop me a line.

Alabama (10-0) won 24-0, though Notre Dame was considered the consensus national champion. Courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

1937 Cal

I'm going to have to keep this one simple because I've been under the weather the past couple of days (and can only imagine how much worse it would be if I hadn't had a flu shot).

Vic Bottari had 137 rushing yards on 34 carries and scores two touchdowns as Cal defeated Alabama 13-0 to stake a claim for the national title. It six trips to the Rose Bowl, it was Alabama’s only loss, with one tie. Courtesy of the Tournament of Rose achieves.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

1937 Vanderbilt

Even though the conference has been really beating up on itself, the SEC already has 10 teams bowl eligible, and Vanderbilt is only one win shy with two games to go. The bad news (possibly) for Commodore fans is that the last two games are at Tennessee, which is playing for a spot in the SEC Championship game, and Wake Forest. The really bad news is that even Vandy it gets the sixth W, it doesn't guarantee a bowl invitation because only the Pac 10 and Big 12 will likely not qualify enough teams to meet their postseason commitments.

Led by All-American center Carl “Iron Man” Hinkle, the SEC’s most valuable player, only a last-second field goal by Alabama kept the Commodores out of the Rose Bowl. Courtesy of the Southeastern Conference.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

1938 Duke (and Southern California)

Any stake Duke had on the national championship vanished with its 7-3 loss to Southern California. The Trojans scored in the final minute when substitute quarterback Doyle Nave completed the last of four straight passes to “Antelope” Al Krueger. The touchdown was the only points scored against Duke all season.

Instead, only Tennessee and Texas Christian were able to claim the national championship. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Monday, November 12, 2007

1933 Michigan

What? Is it really time for Michigan-Ohio State? Somehow I used to associate the game with the end of the season, but it's anything but now. They play, and then they sit while everything else gets sorted out. It just doesn't seem right, and who knows how much it hurt the Buckeyes in the national championship game. Of course, we don't have to worry about that this year, but Saturday's winner will be heading to the Rose Bowl.

Anyway, Despite having no prior football experience, tackle Francis “Whitey” Wistert helped lead the Wolverines to the 1933 national championship, and was the first of three brothers to be enshrined into the College Football Hall of Fame. The others were Albert, who played in 1940-41, and Alvin, 1947-49. Courtesy the Bentley Historical Library (photo BL001313), the University of Michigan.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

1949 Southern Methodist

For Saturday's paper I did a column about the computer polls the BCS uses to compile its rankings. Considering that the computers now have Kansas No. 2 and Arizona State at No. 4, and Hawaii tied for 27th, I thought a few of you might be interested in it.

Here's the link: http://www.tidesports.com/article/20071110/NEWS/71110021/1210/COLUMNS




Doak Walker wasn’t able to win a national championship, but he did just about everything else. He won the Maxwell Award in 1947, the Heisman in 1948, and was named Player of the Year by Collier’s Magazine in 1949. In 35 games he accumulated 288 points, 2,076 rushing yards, 1,786 passing yards (128 of 222 attempts), 454 receiving yards, 750 yards on 50 punt returns, 764 yards on kickoff returns, and averaged 39.6 yards on punts. Courtesy of Southern Methodist University.

Friday, November 9, 2007

1954 Ohio State

I walked into a Books A Million store today and found the book, so I'm two-for-two, and pleased that it's finally getting out there. Now everyone, please go buy it (subtle, huh?).

Having already been named the national champion by the Associated Press, Woody Hayes made a successful debut at the Rose Bowl with a 20-7 victory against Southern California, 20-7. The 1954 Buckeyes were led by quarterback Dave Leggett, while Hopalong Cassady, Bob Watkins and Dick Harkrader all scored a touchdown. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

It's out!

True story.

For those who don't know, this is my fourth book, and after the first three I celebrated by opening a bottle of champagne. I'm not sure why, but this time I didn't ... until last night.

If you haven't noticed, the book has been a little slow getting to stores, primarily because the big database they use listed it as a January 2008 release. So none of them ordered it and the college football season is already beginning to wind down (hey stores, it's available and a perfect holiday gift!).

In order to end the jinx, some friends (Patrick, Carrie, Leah and Ian) helped me kill a bottle of Barefoot Bubbly before watching a movie. Sure enough, today I walked into a Barnes & Noble and there it was, the bright yellow cover I could see all the way across the room.

The champagne worked!

By the way Barefoot Wines, I'm available for endorsements.

Also, thank you Books A Million for updating your website and saying that the book is in stock. Much appreciated.

Although the 1966 Crimson Tide finished a perfect 11-0, neither the Associated Press nor the coaches’ poll awarded Alabama its third consecutive national title, instead ranking it behind both Notre Dame and Michigan State, which tied 10-10. Courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

1945 Army

Hmmmm ... the talk today on the SEC coaches' conference call was if the six-win minimum for bowl games should be raised. It's a worthwhile question, but no one jumped out and said yes. Can't say I blame them, especially when the question was asked to Vanderbilt's Bobby Johnson (what's he going to say, no?).

So for anyone who thinks the Darren McFadden-Felix Jones backfield at Arkansas might be the best in college football history, I present “Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside.”

Doc Blanchard (right) and Glenn Davis (left) became the only members of the same backfield to both win Heisman Trophies, and be named three-time consensus All-Americans. Blanchard won the Heisman in 1945, Davis In 1946. Davis finished second for the award in both 1944 and 1945. Courtesy of the United States Military Academy.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

1927 Illinois

A quick book update: Things appear to be progressing nicely now, so if the book isn't in a store near you already it should be very, very soon. Sorry about any delays, and hopefully I can get on with some book signings soon.

Illinois was 7-0-1, with the lone tie against Iowa State, 12-12. However, with Georgia, Notre Dame and Yale all sustaining a loss, Illinois is considered the consensus national champion. Courtesy Illinois Sports Information Archives.

Monday, November 5, 2007

1940 Stanford

Here's something to mull over during the final three weeks of the college football regular season:

Houston became the 49th team to become eligible for postseason play after Sunday's win over SMU. Twenty-six other squads are just one victory away from achieving the necessary six wins in a 12-game regular season to play in a bowl game.
There's just one problem, there are only 32 bowl games, with obviously 64 teams. The SEC alone has nine teams with six wins or more, with two more at five. In short, some teams are going to be left out.
Remember, you heard it here first.
With Clark Shaughnessy’s new innovation, the T-formation, Pete Kmetovic had 141 rushing yards and returned a punt for a touchdown to lead Stanford’s 21-13 victory against Nebraska in the 1941 Rose Bowl. Stanford received national title consideration, but Minnesota was the consensus choice. Courtesy of the Tournament of Roses archives.

Sunday, November 4, 2007

1931 Southern California

Southern California coach Howard Jones led the Trojans to five appearances in the Rose Bowl and won them all, including the 21-12 victory against Tulane to help secure the 1931 national championship. Courtesy of Tournament of Roses archives.








Bonus picture

This is actually a photo I took last year, but you have to give props to the Tigers for pulling out last night's game, even though they all but tried to give it away at times.

Overall, I have to say that LSU-Alabama was one of the more entertaining games I've seen in a long time, and considering the Tide has already had five games go down to the wire this season that's really saying something.

So congrats to LSU.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

1992 Alabama

Well, I severely doubt we're going to see anything like this today, but it still should be an interesting day.

Coach Gene Stallings is carried off the field at the 1993 Sugar Bowl after Alabama (13-0) became the first team to win the national championship under the new Bowl Coalition. Courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum.

Friday, November 2, 2007

1966 Notre Dame

The October poll is obviously over, and here are the results:

For the question, which Notre Dame title (or non-title) is the most controversial?
1966: "Tie one for the Gipper" 56 (84%)
1946: The most famous tie in college football history 6 (9%)
1947: The vote that didn't count 3 (4%)
1993: "But we beat Florida State" 1 (1%)

Basically, you're all in line with the book, which does include a top 10 list of all-time.
Nick Eddy (No. 47), here making a move with Rocky Bleier just below him (No. 28), was Notre Dame’s leading rusher and finished third in Heisman Trophy voting, but didn’t play in the biggest game of the year, the 10-10 tie against Michigan State. He slipped getting off the train at East Lansing and aggravated his shoulder injury. Courtesy of the University of Notre Dame.

Bonus picture

So yes, I did take off from the blog yesterday, but primarily because it was one of those days I left home and didn't come back until incredibly late. It's also because I went and saw Cowboy Mouth last night - excellent show, had a great time. FYI, a lot of CBS people were there as well.

Tuscaloosa is being invaded by Alabama, LSU and college football fans in general. I'm having a quiet night to rest up for what should be a heck of a big day Saturday. I'm looking forward to it.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

1940 Michigan

Ok, I'm stealing from my work blog today because it's kind of fun and humorous.

I think it's safe to say that Nick Saban is getting sick of questions about facing LSU and would just assume play the game right now. Wednesday, in his final meeting this week with reporters (and this is after we gave him a birthday card for his 56th), Saban went off a little bit (and in a fun way) after a Louisiana reporter asked about LSU people who are staying at the Saban house this weekend.

"As much as you guys try and make it a fact that everyone hates my guts in Louisiana, everybody doesn't," he said. "I hate to say that, but we do have a few friends left, and they are lifelong friends that are probably, like us, us being me and Terry, like who we are, not what we do. We respect the fact that they went to LSU, like LSU and root for LSU. I don't have a problem with that.
"My neighbor in Michigan is a very, very good friend of line, was the biggest Michigan guy in the world and I was at Michigan State. We're good friends, we went to church together ...
"I know you guys want to make it like it's people want to blowup everyone's house. It sells newspapers and all that kind of stuff, but I don't feel that way about anybody."

Saban went on to say that all LSU and Alabama supporters are always welcome at his house, but for some reason didn't give the address. He also didn't invite reporters.
So happy birthday coach, and here's a picture for your old neighbor. Coach Fritz Crisler and “Ole’ 98” Tom Harmon hold up a torn jersey in 1940. Ranked third the Wolverines missed out on the national championship, but Harmon outdistanced Texas A&M’s John Kimbrough in voting for the Heisman Trophy. Courtesy the Bentley Historical Library (photo BL001067), the University of Michigan.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

1919 Illinois

Ok, let's get away from Alabama-LSU for a bit, especially since the biggest stories so far have to do with suspensions.

Sophomore end Chuck Carney’s key reception set up the game-winning field goal as Illinois defeated Ohio State 9-7 to clinch the 1919 Big Ten title. Illinois (6-1) received national title consideration, but Harvard was the consensus choice. Courtesy Illinois Sports Information Archives.

Monday, October 29, 2007

1925 Alabama

So today was the primary media day for the Alabama-LSU game, and I can honestly tell you that the Crimson Tide is trying to to be as low-key as possible. It was 2-3 hours of "This is a big game, right?" followed by Nick Saban and the players answering, "Not really." Sure.

FYI, Alabama did this two weeks ago before it thumped Tennessee, 41-17. I guess it works for these guys, and figure LSU will be fired up enough as it us.

Yesterday I had a photo of LSU's most recent title, so here's one from the Tide's first, 1925. Coach Wallace Wade instructs his players on the sideline during the 1926 Rose Bowl, where Alabama defeated Washington, 20-19. Courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum and the Tournament of Roses archives.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

2003 LSU

What, like I wasn't going to use this photo to kick off this week?

First, some book news.

For some reason that I don't quite understand, the book is still on its way to various stores around the country, primarily because some big database somewhere had the release date listed as January, 2008 (and thus, it was either sitting in warehouses or waiting to be ordered -- like I said, I don't really understand the details). I've been told that this has been corrected and you all should start seeing the book all over the place very, very soon ... if not sooner (really, that soon).

One place that does have the correct release date listed is amazon.com, which not only reports good sales, but also of my book from last year, "Where Football is King: A History of the SEC." Go Amazon.
So, LSU vs. Alabama this weekend. Hmmmmm ....

Nick Saban holds up the national championship trophy after LSU defeated Oklahoma in the Sugar Bowl, 21-14. Even though the Tigers wound up the BCS champion, it was still a split title with the Associated Press voters opting for Southern California. Photo by Steve Franz. Courtesy of Louisiana State University.

Bonus picture

Ok, so a few of you may have noticed that I didn't post for a couple of days. That's because I got my first vacation days of the year, and usually when that happens I don't just like to just leave the town, but the country.

Thank you Vancouver for your hospitality over the weekend. Thank you to the person who turned in my missing driver's license. Thank you to a certain airline (which for now will remain nameless) for losing my luggage.

I also made side trips to Whistler and Seattle, so it was a busy trip, but a nice break.

Ok, back to college football. I remember hearing something about Alabama vs. LSU this week ....

Thursday, October 25, 2007

1992 Southern California

Here's hoping the fires in California get under control, and then are completely put out, in the very near future, without any more loss of life.
After Pasadena financed and built a 57,000 seat stadium in Arroyo Seco for $272,198, Southern California defeated Penn State in the 1923 Rose Bowl. The 14-3 contest attracted 52,000 spectators. Courtesy of Tournament of Roses archives.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

1987 Miami

I made a crack last week about how Florida State was playing Miami and no one seemed to noticed. Well, apparently, the Hurricanes won 37-29 (seriously, they did. I looked it up and everythying). So here's a Miami photo to mark the victory.

Running back Cleveland Gary, here playing against No. 1 Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl, helped lead Miami to its first undefeated season and the national championship in 1987. Jimmy Johnson’s Hurricanes beat six ranked teams, including Oklahoma 20-14. Courtesy of the University of Miami.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

1932 Michigan

Since the Wolverines are in the Top 25 again, does that mean we have to stop with the Appalachian State jokes? No? Ok, good. I didn't think so.

But hey, Michigan now has company with Minnesota losing to North Dakota State. Maybe it's a good thing my dad isn't around to see it. He went to Minnesota. Besides, most of the Gophers I know at least saw this one coming.

On a much more serious note, Willis Ward was the first black football player to play for Michigan in 40 years. He helped the Wolverines win two national titles and in 1933 was honorable mention All-American at right end. In 1934, Georgia Tech refused to play against a black player and despite numerous protests Michigan benched Ward. The Wolverines won anway, 9-2. Courtesy the Bentley Historical Library (photo BL001108), the University of Michigan.

Monday, October 22, 2007

1975 Arizona State









Unfortunately, I can't get the picture of the 1970 Sun Devils playing North Carolina in the snow at the Peach Bowl, where they won 48-26, to work, but feel the need to give ASU some love today -- and not just because I used to work in Phoenix.

(Actually, like most other people, I can't understand why Arizona State isn't a regular college football power. Maybe that corner has finally been turned).

The 1975 Sun Devils topped an 11-0 season with a 17-14 upset of Nebraska in the Fiesta Bowl. Although the Sporting News proclaimed Arizona State its national champion, Associated Press voters weren’t swayed by a 12-0 team from the Western Athletic Conference, and had it at No. 2. Courtesy of Arizona State University.