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Okla-homey
11/19/2009, 07:36 AM
November 19, 1966: Golden Domers (NDU) and Green Meatchickens (MSU) play to a classic tie

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43 years ago today, on November 19, 1966, first-ranked Notre Dame and second-ranked Michigan State play to a 10-10 tie at Spartan Stadium.

The Irish, per coach Ara Parseghian’s instructions, ran out the clock at the end of the game instead of passing to score and risking an interception. After the game, Parseghian defended his decision. "We’d fought hard to come back and tie it up," he told reporters in the locker room. "After all that, I didn’t want to risk giving it to them cheap."

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Notre Dame was playing without several of its star players that day. Back Nick Eddy had slipped on the ice at the East Lansing train station. The Spartans’ 290-lb defensive end Bubba Smith had flattened quarterback Terry Hanratty at the beginning of the game, dislocating his shoulder and sending him to the bench and Hanratty’s backup, Coley O’Brien, was diabetic and plainly not feeling like himself.

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Notre Dame's famed 1966 backfield with Rocky (l) Larry Conjar (c) and Nick Eddy (r).

As a result, the Spartans took an early 10-0 lead. The Irish managed to tie the score in the second half, and with a little more than a minute left to go in the game, they got the ball back in plenty of time to score--but Parseghian was reluctant to chance a run at the end zone. After all, MSU’s defense was practically impenetrable, and a turnover would have given the Spartans a chance at victory. So he opted to run out the clock instead, preserving his tie and, for the moment, his team’s ranking.

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Neither the Irish nor the Spartans would play in a bowl game that year, Notre Dame because the university thought postseason play would interfere with the football team’s studies and Michigan State because they’d gone to the Rose Bowl the year before, and going twice in a row was against the Big Ten’s rules.

Since the national championship hadn’t been settled on the field, it went to a vote: the end-of-year AP and UPI polls. Complicating matters was Bear Bryant’s undefeated--and, crucially, unintegrated--University of Alabama team, a stark contrast especially to an MSU squad that had welcomed many black players from the South.

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Coach Bear Bryant memorialized on the back of Mr. Cletus S. Hogswallow of Firecross, AL; current president of the International Crimson Tide Club

In the end, in a vote that many people viewed as a rebuke to the segregated, obstructionist Alabamians, Notre Dame kept its No. 1 ranking. MSU came in second, and Alabama came in third. (It’s worth noting that all-white teams from the South had won six of the previous nine championships, and a stubbornly unintegrated Texas team captured the first-place ranking in 1969.

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Still, many voters were certainly aware of, and dismayed by, Alabama’s racist stance. Meanwhile, MSU DE Bubba Smith, in an era before universities were careful to control the comments of student ath-u-leets, had another explanation for Notre Dame’s triumph: "All the sportswriters," he said, "are Catholic.")

The Notre Dame-MSU tie was the first college football game to be broadcast to U.S. troops in Vietnam. At first, ABC wasn’t going to show the game at all, but 50,000 fans wrote letters and signed petitions in protest and the network changed its mind. And the reversal paid off: The game got higher ratings than the next year’s first-ever Super Bowl did.

BTW, the 1966 Sooners went 6-4 under Coach Jim Mackenzie and lost to the Domers on 10/22/66 (0-38.) The bright spots of the 1966 season were wins over texass and the bugeaters and road wins vs. ISU and KU. The following year, the Sooners went 10-1 under Coach Chuck Fairbanks, beat Tennessee in the Orange Bowl and finished 3rd in the country.

Frozen Sooner
11/19/2009, 08:21 AM
Since the above might confuse people into thinking that Bear Bryant was against recruiting black players, while at A&M he was vehemently opposed to the University's stance on integration, stating when told that A&M would be the last team in the SWC to integrate that that's where they'd be in the standings as well.

Edit:

It seems odd that the AP and UPI were sending a rebuke to Alabama for not having black players when that season was bracketed by national championships by non-integrated teams.

MrJimBeam
11/19/2009, 09:10 AM
Since the above might confuse people into thinking that Bear Bryant was against recruiting black players, while at A&M he was vehemently opposed to the University's stance on integration, stating when told that A&M would be the last team in the SWC to integrate that that's where they'd be in the standings as well.

Edit:

It seems odd that the AP and UPI were sending a rebuke to Alabama for not having black players when that season was bracketed by national championships by non-integrated teams.

The book, "One Night, Two Teams: Alabama vs. USC and the Game that Changed a Nation" tells the story of Bryant and his attempt to integrate his team. An intregated USC team beat the all white Crimson Tide that night 42-21 and changed football in the south forever.

TUSooner
11/19/2009, 10:32 AM
I only remember my dad and his friends and my uncles and older cousins unanimously deriding Parseghian as a rank coward for playing it safe.

TUSooner
11/19/2009, 10:39 AM
Since the above might confuse people into thinking that Bear Bryant was against recruiting black players, while at A&M he was vehemently opposed to the University's stance on integration, stating when told that A&M would be the last team in the SWC to integrate that that's where they'd be in the standings as well....

Tha reminds me of this joke I overheard back in the day, before Bama was integrated.

A black player (so goes the story) was allowed to attend an Alabama practice (or he sneaked in, I forget). As he took the ball and blazed through the entire all-white team of defenders to run the length of the field, Bryant was heard shouting, "Look at that Indian run !!!!"

I guess you had to be there. :O