Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
1970 Ohio State Buckeyes football team
American college football season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The 1970 Ohio State Buckeyes football team represented Ohio State University in the Big Ten Conference during the 1970 NCAA University Division football season. The Buckeyes won all nine games in the regular season and were ranked second in both major polls. Ohio State won the Big Ten title and a berth in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena on New Year's Day against the Stanford Indians, ranked No. 12 and champions of the Pac-8. The Buckeyes were upset, 27–17, and finished with a 9–1 record.
This was the last year Ohio State played a nine-game regular-season schedule (the Big Ten first allowed a 10th regular season game in 1965). Many major colleges added an eleventh game in 1970, although no Big Ten school did so until the following season.
The Buckeyes were recognized as co-national champions, along with Texas, by the National Football Foundation at the end of the regular season. The teams were jointly awarded the MacArthur Bowl.[1]
This was the fifth and last national title that head coach Woody Hayes won for the Buckeyes; they did not win another national championship until 2002.
Both Ohio State and Texas would go on to lose their bowl games; the 11–0–1 Nebraska Cornhuskers won the AP national championship when they finished No. 1 in final post-bowl AP Poll.
Remove ads
Schedule
Remove ads
Game summaries
Summarize
Perspective
Texas A&M
Texas A&M Aggies (2–0) at Ohio State Buckeyes (0–0)
at Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio
- Date: September 26
- Game time: 1:30 p.m.
- Game weather: Cloudy, 80 °F (27 °C)
- Game attendance: 85,657
Top-ranked Ohio State rolled up 513 yards of offense and scored touchdowns off five Texas A&M turnovers in a 56–13 rout. Fullback John Brockington scored twice and six other players accounted for touchdowns. The Buckeyes' defense forced three fumbles and an interception which led to four scores in an eight-minute span in the third quarter even though head coach Woody Hayes pulled the starters a little after halftime.[5]
This was the first of nine consecutive losses for the Aggies, who were riding high into Columbus following a shocking 20-18 victory at LSU seven days earlier.
Duke
- Date: October 3
- Location: Ohio Stadium, Columbus, OH
- Game start: 1:30 p.m.
- Elapsed time: 2:27
- Game attendance: 86,123
- Game weather: Sunny; 63 °F (17 °C); wind 18 to 30 mph (29 to 48 km/h) W–NW
Q1 | 2:04 | DUKE | Pugh 38-yard field goal | DUKE 3–0 |
Q2 | :13 | OHST | Luttner 45-yard blocked punt return (kick blocked) | OHST 6–3 |
Q3 | 10:52 | OHST | Zelina 11-yard pass from Kern (Schram kick) | OHST 13–3 |
Q3 | 4:24 | OHST | Kern 3-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 20–3 |
Q3 | 1:27 | OHST | Brockington 3-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 27–3 |
Q4 | 5:51 | OHST | Galbos 3-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 34–3 |
Q4 | 1:23 | DUKE | Jones 2-yard run (Pugh kick) | OHST 34–10 |
Michigan State
- Date: October 10
- Location: Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, MI
- Game start: 1:30 p.m.
- Elapsed time: 2:33
- Game attendance: 75,511
- Game weather: Partly sunny; 50 °F (10 °C); wind 15 mph (24 km/h) SSW
- Referee: Howard Wirtz
Q1 | 8:17 | OHST | Brockington 2-yard run (kick failed) | OHST 6–0 |
Q1 | 1:36 | OHST | Schram 33-yard field goal | OHST 9–0 |
Q3 | 5:15 | OHST | Maciejowski 2-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 16–0 |
Q4 | 7:46 | OHST | Maciejowski 1-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 23–0 |
Q4 | 4:39 | OHST | Brockington 25-yard run (kick failed) | OHST 29–0 |
Minnesota
- Date: October 17
- Location: Ohio Stadium, Columbus, OH
- Game start: 1:30 p.m.
- Elapsed time: 2:30
- Game attendance: 86,667
- Game weather: Sunny; 52 °F (11 °C); wind 12 mph (19 km/h) W
Q1 | 11:14 | OHST | Kern 7-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 7–0 |
Q1 | 5:00 | OHST | Brockington 1-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 14–0 |
Q1 | 1:57 | OHST | Brockington 62-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 21–0 |
Q2 | 8:40 | OHST | Kern 10-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 28–0 |
Q4 | 6:09 | MINN | Hamm 12-yard pass from Curry (Cook pass from Curry) | OHST 28–8 |
Illinois
- Date: October 24
- Location: Memorial Stadium, Champaign, IL
- Game start: 1:30 p.m.
- Elapsed time: 2:39
- Game attendance: 46,208
- Game weather: 60 °F (16 °C); wind 4 to 10 mph (6.4 to 16.1 km/h) SE
- Referee: Dwight Wilkey
Q1 | 10:12 | OHST | Brockington 2-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 7–0 |
Q1 | 4:17 | ILL | Lewis 18-yard run (Wells kick) | Tie 7–7 |
Q2 | 12:10 | ILL | Dieken 11-yard pass from Wells (Wells kick) | ILL 14–7 |
Q2 | 11:53 | OHST | Kern 76-yard run (Schram kick) | Tie 14–14 |
Q2 | 2:34 | ILL | Robinson 1-yard run (kick failed) | ILL 20–14 |
Q3 | 11:48 | OHST | White 43-yard pass from Kern (Schram kick) | OHST 21–20 |
Q3 | 6:27 | ILL | Wells 30-yard field goal | ILL 23–21 |
Q3 | 3:59 | OHST | Brockington 5-yard run (kick failed) | OHST 27–23 |
Q4 | 14:56 | OHST | Brockington 11-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 34–23 |
Q4 | 9:30 | OHST | Hayden 31-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 41–23 |
Q4 | 4:19 | OHST | Coburn 1-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 48–23 |
Q4 | :37 | ILL | Dieken 4-yard pass from Wells (pass failed) | OHST 48–29 |
Northwestern
- Date: October 31
- Location: Ohio Stadium, Columbus, OH
- Game start: 1:30 p.m.
- Elapsed time: 2:31
- Game attendance: 86,673
- Game weather: Sunny; 60 °F (16 °C); wind 10 mph (16 km/h) SW
Q1 | 2:58 | NW | Adamle 1-yard run (Planisek kick) | NW 7–0 |
Q2 | 12:13 | OHST | Schram 32-yard field goal | NW 7–3 |
Q2 | 1:22 | NW | Planisek 29-yard field goal | NW 10–3 |
Q3 | 11:27 | OHST | Kern 6-yard run (Schram kick) | Tie 10–10 |
Q3 | 4:01 | OHST | Brockington 8-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 17–10 |
Q4 | 4:14 | OHST | Kern 3-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 24–10 |
Wisconsin
- Date: November 7
- Location: Camp Randall Stadium, Madison, WI
- Game start: 1:00 p.m.
- Elapsed time: 2:33
- Game attendance: 72,758
- Game weather: Sunny; 45 °F (7 °C); wind 5 to 10 mph (8.0 to 16.1 km/h) W
- Referee: Dwight Wilkey
Q1 | 3:00 | OHST | Schram 23-yard field goal | OHST 3–0 |
Q2 | 14:27 | OHST | Brockington 11-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 10–0 |
Q2 | 1:17 | WIS | Mialik 15-yard pass from Graff (Jaeger kick) | OHST 10–7 |
Q3 | 8:31 | OHST | Brockington 4-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 17–7 |
Q3 | 5:58 | OHST | Brockington 1-yard run (Schram kick) | OHST 24–7 |
Purdue
Ohio State Buckeyes (7–0) at Purdue Boilermakers
at Ross–Ade Stadium, West Lafayette, Indiana
- Date: November 14, 1970
- Game time: 1:00 p.m.
- Game weather: Overcast, 37 °F (3 °C)
- Game attendance: 68,157
- TV announcers (ABC): Chris Schenkel, Bud Wilkinson
Woody Hayes received a congratulatory phone call from President Richard Nixon after the game and then asked to speak to Fred Schram, who made the game-winning field goal. John Brockington carried the ball for 136 yards and Leo Hayden added 64 yards on 16 carries.[16]
Michigan
Michigan Wolverines at Ohio State Buckeyes (8–0)
at Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio
- Date: November 21, 1970
- Game weather: 44 °F (7 °C)
- Game attendance: 87,331
- Referee: Ross Dean (Big Ten)
- TV announcers (ABC): Bill Flemming and Forest Evashevski
Ohio State clinched a Big Ten title, a Rose Bowl berth and some measure of revenge for the 1969 upset.
Stanford
- Date: January 1, 1971
- Location: Rose Bowl, Pasadena, CA
- Game start: 2:05p.m. PST
- Elapsed time: 2:59
- Game attendance: 103,839
- Game weather: Clear, 70 °F (21 °C)
- TV announcers (NBC): Curt Gowdy, Kyle Rote
Q1 | 10:20 | STAN | Brown 4 yard run (Horowitz kick) | STAN 7–0 |
Q1 | 6:50 | STAN | Horowitz 37 yard field goal | STAN 10–0 |
Q1 | 3:45 | OSU | Brockington 1 yard run (Schram kick) | STAN 10–7 |
Q2 | 14:24 | OSU | Brockington 1 yard run (Schram kick) | OSU 10–14 |
Q3 | 12:29 | STAN | Horowitz 48 yard field goal | OSU 13–14 |
Q3 | 8:33 | OSU | Schram 32 yard field goal | OSU 13–17 |
Q4 | 10:03 | STAN | Brown 1 yard run (Horowitz kick) | STAN 20–14 |
Q4 | 8:18 | STAN | Plunkett 10 yard pass to Vataha (Horowitz kick) | STAN 27–14 |
Remove ads
New Year's Day
In the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, top-ranked and defending national champion Texas was upset 24–11 by #6 Notre Dame, ending the Longhorns' 30-game winning streak.
Heavily favored Ohio State could claim their second outright national title in three years that afternoon with a Rose Bowl victory over Stanford in Pasadena. Stanford (8–3) was led by quarterback Jim Plunkett, the 1970 Heisman Trophy winner. The Indians had climbed to a 6–0 conference record and 8–1 overall, but lost their final two regular season games, to Sugar Bowl-bound Air Force and arch-rival California. Stanford lost earlier in the season at home to Purdue, a team OSU defeated on the road.
The Buckeyes led Stanford by four points after three quarters, but were outscored 14–0 in the fourth quarter and lost 27–17. Later that night, #3 Nebraska won the Orange Bowl 17–12 over #5 LSU in Miami to claim the top spot in the AP writers poll.
Personnel
Summarize
Perspective
Roster
Depth chart
Remove ads
1971 NFL draftees
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads