词条 | 1969 Michigan Wolverines football team | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
|sport=football |Year=1969 |Team=Michigan Wolverines |Image = |Conference=Big Ten Conference |Division= |ShortConference=Big Ten |Record=8–3 |ConfRecord=6–1 |HeadCoach=Bo Schembechler |HCYear=1st |CoachRank=8 |APRank=9 |OffCoach= |DefCoach=Jim Young |DCYear=1st |OScheme= |DScheme= |MVP=Jim Mandich |Captain=Jim Mandich |StadiumArena= Michigan Stadium |Champion=Big Ten co-champion |BowlTourney=Rose Bowl |BowlTourneyResult= L 3–10 vs. USC }}{{1969 Big Ten football standings}} The 1969 Michigan Wolverines football team represented the University of Michigan in the 1969 Big Ten Conference football season. In their first year under head coach Bo Schembechler, the Wolverines compiled an 8–3 record (6–1 Big Ten), played in the 1970 Rose Bowl, and finished the season ranked #9 in the final AP poll and #8 in the final UPI poll. The 1969 Michigan vs. Ohio State football game was considered one of the biggest upsets in college football history, as Ohio State came into the game with an 8–0 record, a 22-game winning streak and the #1 ranking in the polls. Michigan defeated Ohio State 24–12 in front of a crowd of 103,588 at Michigan Stadium to win the Big Ten Conference's berth in the Rose Bowl. The game was also the first in a series that came to be known as "The Ten-Year War," a 10-year span during which Michigan under Bo Schembechler battled Ohio State under Woody Hayes, under whom Schembechler had served as both a player at Miami University and an assistant coach at Ohio State. Four times between 1970 and 1975, Ohio State and Michigan were both ranked in the top five of the AP Poll before their matchup. Bo Schembechler suffered a heart attack the night before the 1970 Rose Bowl game against an undefeated (but once tied) USC team. The Wolverines lost the Rose Bowl in a defensive struggle by a score of 10–3. Team captain and tight end Jim Mandich was selected as the 1969 team's most valuable player and as a first-team All-American. Defensive back Tom Curtis was also selected as a first-team All-American, and seven members of the team, including Dan Dierdorf, received first-team All-Big Ten honors. Sophomore tailback Billy Taylor was the team's leading rusher and an All-Big Ten honoree. Thirteen members of the 1969 team went on to play professional football, and four players (Mandich, Curtis, Dierdorf and offensive guard Reggie McKenzie) were inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. Schedule{{CFB schedule| rankyear = 1969 | poll = AP Poll / Coaches Poll released prior to game | timezone = Eastern |{{CFB schedule entry | date = September 20 | time = | w/l = w | nonconf = y | rank = | opponent = Vanderbilt | site_stadium = Michigan Stadium | site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI | tv = | score = 42–14 | attend = 70,183 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = September 27 | time = | w/l = w | nonconf = y | rank = 20/NR | opponent = Washington | site_stadium = Michigan Stadium | site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI | tv = | score = 45–7 | attend = 49,684 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = October 4 | time = | w/l = l | nonconf = y | rank = 13/11 | opponent = Missouri | opprank = 9/9 | site_stadium = Michigan Stadium | site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI | tv = | score = 17–40 | attend = 64,476 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = October 11 | time = | w/l = w | rank = | opponent = Purdue | opprank = 9/9 | site_stadium = Michigan Stadium | site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI | tv = | score = 31–20 | attend = 80,411 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = October 18 | time = | w/l = l | away = y | rank = 13/14 | opponent = Michigan State | gamename = Paul Bunyan Trophy | site_stadium = Spartan Stadium | site_cityst = East Lansing, MI | tv = | score = 12–23 | attend = 79,368 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = October 25 | time = | w/l = w | away = y | rank = | opponent = Minnesota | gamename = Little Brown Jug | site_stadium = Memorial Stadium | site_cityst = Minneapolis, MN | tv = | score = 35–9 | attend = 44,028 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = November 1 | time = | w/l = w | homecoming = y | rank = 20/NR | opponent = Wisconsin | site_stadium = Michigan Stadium | site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI | tv = | score = 35–7 | attend = 60,438 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = November 8 | time = | w/l = w | away = y | rank = 18/13 | opponent = Illinois | gamename = series | site_stadium = Memorial Stadium | site_cityst = Champaign, Il | tv = | score = 57–0 | attend = 35,270 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = November 15 | time = | w/l = w | away = y | rank = 14/15 | opponent = Iowa | site_stadium = Iowa Stadium | site_cityst = Iowa City, IA | tv = | score = 51–6 | attend = 45,981 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = November 22 | time = | w/l = w | rank = 12/12 | opponent = Ohio State | opprank = 1/1 | gamename = rivalry | site_stadium = Michigan Stadium | site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI | tv = ABC | score = 24–12 | attend = 103,588 }} |{{CFB schedule entry | date = January 1, 1970 | time = | w/l = l | nonconf = y | neutral = y | rank = 7/8 | opponent = USC | opprank = 5/4 | gamename = Rose Bowl | site_stadium = Rose Bowl | site_cityst = Pasadena, CA | tv = NBC | score = 3–10 | attend = 103,878 }} }} Season summaryPreseasonMichigan's 1969 recruiting class included Larry Cipa, Jim Coode, Randy Logan, and Bo Rather.[1] VanderbiltIn Bo Schembechler's first game as head coach and Michigan's first game against Vanderbilt since 1923, Don Moorhead scored a pair of touchdowns as a fourth quarter surge helped the Wolverines crush their Southeastern Conference foe, 42–14.[2] Washington{{AFB game box start|Title= |Visitor=Washington |V1= 0|V2=0 |V3=7 |V4=0 |Host=Michigan |H1=6 |H2=6 |H3=12 |H4=21 |Date=September 27 |Location=Michigan Stadium, Ann Arbor, Michigan |StartTime= |TimeZone= |ElapsedTime= |Attendance=49,684 |Weather= |Referee= |TVAnnouncers= |TVStation= }} {{AFB Game Box Scoring Entry |FirstEntry=yes |Quarter=Q1 |Time= |Team=MICH |Event=Mandich 9 yard pass from Moorhead (kick failed) |Score= MICH 6–0}} {{AFB Game Box Scoring Entry |Quarter=Q2 |Time= |Team=MICH |Event=Moorhead 5 yard run (run failed) |Score= MICH 12–0}} {{AFB Game Box Scoring Entry |Quarter=Q3 |Time= |Team=MICH |Event=Moorhead 1 yard run (run failed) |Score= MICH 18–0}} {{AFB Game Box Scoring Entry |Quarter=Q3 |Time= |Team=MICH |Event=Moorhead 9 yard run (run failed) |Score= MICH 24–0}} {{AFB Game Box Scoring Entry |Quarter=Q3 |Time= |Team=WASH |Event=Kennamer 7 yard pass from Hanzlik (Volbrecht kick) |Score= MICH 24–7}} {{AFB Game Box Scoring Entry |Quarter=Q4 |Time= |Team=MICH |Event=Doughty 19 yard run (Titas kick) |Score= MICH 31–7}} {{AFB Game Box Scoring Entry |Quarter=Q4 |Time= |Team=MICH |Event=Craw 1 yard run (Killian kick) |Score=MICH 38–7}} {{AFB Game Box Scoring Entry |Quarter=Q4 |Time= |Team=MICH |Event=Harris 59 yard pass from Betts (Killian kick) |Score=MICH 45–7 |LastEntry=yes}}{{AFB game box end}}[3]{{Clear}} Missouri{{Empty section|date=May 2014}}{{Clear}}Purdue
Michigan State{{Empty section|date=November 2018}}Minnesota{{Empty section|date=November 2018}}WisconsinBilly Taylor ran 37 and 51 yards for touchdowns in the first quarter and Barry Pierson added a 51-yard punt return in the second as Michigan overwhelmed Wisconsin in front of a wet, homecoming crowd. Taylor, playing in place of the injured Glenn Doughty, ran for 143 of Michigan's 183 rushing yards in the first half.[5]{{Clear}}Illinois{{Empty section|date=November 2018}}Iowa
Ohio State{{Main|1969 Ohio State vs. Michigan football game}}{{Seealso|1969 Ohio State Buckeyes football team}}{{Americanfootballbox|bg= |bg2= |titlestyle={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Michigan Wolverines|border=2}}; text-align:center |state=collapsed |title=#1 Ohio State Buckeyes (8–0) at #12 Michigan Wolverines (7–2) |date=November 22 |time=1:30 p.m. |road=Ohio St |R1= 6|R2=6 |R3=0 |R4=0 |home=Michigan |H1=7 |H2=17 |H3=0 |H4=0 |stadium=Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, Michigan |attendance=103,588 |weather=Sunny • 45°F |referee= |TV=ABC |TVAnnouncers= |reference=[https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/1969-9-Michigan.pdf Ohio State Football Archives] |stats={{Col-start}}{{Col-2}}
}}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryStart|VisitorName=OSU|HomeName=MICH|state=collapsed}}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEntry | Quarter=1 | Time=7:38 | Team=Ohio St | DrivePlays=5 | DriveLength=16 | DriveTime= | Type=RushTD | Runner=Otis | yards=1 | kickresult=no good | Kicker=S. White | 2pt type=run/pass | 2pt result=good/failed/incomplete | Visitor=6 | Home=0 }}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEntry | Quarter=1 | Time=3:35 | Team=Michigan | DrivePlays=10 | DriveLength=55 | DriveTime= | Type=RushTD | Runner=Craw | yards=2 | kickresult=good | Kicker=Titas | 2pt type=run/pass | 2pt result=good/failed/incomplete | Visitor=6 | Home=7 }}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEntry | Quarter=2 | Time=14:52 | Team=Ohio St | DrivePlays=10 | DriveLength=74 | DriveTime= | Type=RecTD | Receiver=J. White | QB=Rex Kern | yards=22 | kickresult= | Kicker= | 2pt type=run | 2pt result=failed | Visitor=12 | Home=7 }}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEntry | Quarter=2 | Time=11:54 | Team=Michigan | DrivePlays=9 | DriveLength=77 | DriveTime= | Type=RushTD | Runner=Craw | yards=1 | kickresult=good | Kicker=Titas | 2pt type=run/pass | 2pt result=good/failed/incomplete | Visitor=12 | Home=14 }}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEntry | Quarter=2 | Time=10:10 | Team=Michigan | DrivePlays=2 | DriveLength=3 | DriveTime= | Type=RushTD | Runner=Moorhead | yards=2 | kickresult=good | Kicker=Titas | 2pt type=run/pass | 2pt result=good/failed/incomplete | Visitor=12 | Home=21 }}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEntry | Quarter=2 | Time=1:15 | Team=Michigan | DrivePlays=16 | DriveLength=72 | DriveTime= | Type=FG | yards=25 | Kicker=Killian | Visitor=12 | Home=24 }}{{AmFootballScoreSummaryEnd|Visitor=12|Home=24}} Rose Bowl{{Empty section|date=May 2014}}{{Clear}}PlayersOffensive letter winnersThe following players received varsity letters for their participation on the offensive unit of the 1969 Michigan football team. Players who were starters in the majority of Michigan's games are displayed in bold.
Defensive letter winnersThe following players received varsity letters for their participation on the defensive unit of the 1969 Michigan football team. Players who were starters in the majority of Michigan's games are displayed in bold.
Non-letter winners
Awards and honors
1969 team players in the NFLThe following players were claimed in the 1970 NFL Draft.[12]
Eighteen members of the 1969 team went on to play professional football. They are: Tom Beckman (St.Louis Cardinals, 1972, Memphis Grizzlies, 1974–1975), Tom Curtis (Baltimore Colts, 1970–1971), Thom Darden (Cleveland Browns, 1972–1981), Dan Dierdorf (St. Louis Cardinals, 1971–1983), Glenn Doughty (Baltimore Colts, 1972–1979), Fred Grambau (Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Montreal Alouettes);[13][14] Marty Huff (San Francisco 49ers, 1972; Edmonton Eskimos, 1973; Charlotte Hornets, 1974–1975), Mike Keller (Dallas Cowboys, 1972), Jim Mandich (Miami Dolphins, 1970–1977; Pittsburgh Steelers, 1978), Reggie McKenzie (Buffalo Bills, 1972–1982; Seattle Seahawks, 1983–1984), Guy Murdock (Houston Oilers, 1974; Chicago Fire/Winds, 1974–1975), Pete Newell (BC Lions, 1971);[15] Cecil Pryor (Memphis Southmen),[16] Fritz Seyferth (Calgary Stampeders, 1972); Paul Seymour (Buffalo Bills, 1973–1977), Paul Staroba (Cleveland Browns, 1972; Green Bay Packers, 1973), Billy Taylor (Calgary Stampeders, 1972), and Mike Taylor (New York Jets, 1972–73). Mandich was the starting tight end for the unbeaten 1972 Miami Dolphins who won Super Bowl VII. Dierdorf would later be enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. StatisticsRushing
Passing
Receiving
Kickoff returns
Punt returns
Coaching staff
References1. ^{{cite web|title=1969 Michigan Football Roster|publisher=Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan|accessdate=December 3, 2017|url=http://bentley.umich.edu/athdept/rosters/search.php?data=football&year_option=equals&year=1969&sortby=lastname%2C+firstname%2C+year&find=FIND}} 2. ^Eugene Register Guard. 21 Sept 1969. 3. ^"Michigan crushes Huskies." Eugene Register-Guard. 1969 Sept 28. 4. ^Eugene Register-Guard. 1969 Oct 12. 5. ^Eugene Register-Guard. 1969 Nov 2. 6. ^University of Michigan Football Record Book Pt. 1 7. ^{{cite news|title=Guard Baumgartner plans California trip|newspaper=The Michigan Daily|date=November 6, 1968|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=7AxKAAAAIBAJ&sjid=cR4NAAAAIBAJ&pg=955,3426406&dq=bob-baumgartner+michigan&hl=en}} 8. ^Harpring's son, Matt Harpring, played 12 years in the NBA. 9. ^Coin set the NCAA record in 1971 with 55 consecutive extra points without a miss. He also broke the Michigan record for longest field goal with a 42-yard field goal against Arizona in 1970. 10. ^Wadhams later became the CEO of Masco, a Fortune 400 company. See here. 11. ^{{cite news|title=Bay County Sports Hall of Fame: Tom Huiskens brought passion to football field at Bay City Central, University of Michigan|newspaper=Mlive.com|date=August 1, 2010|url=http://www.mlive.com/sports/bay-city/index.ssf/2010/08/bay_county_sports_hall_of_fame_8.html}} 12. ^{{cite web|title=1970 NFL Draft|publisher=Sports Reference LLC|work=pro-football-reference.com|url=https://www.pro-football-reference.com/draft/1970.htm}} 13. ^{{cite news|title=Grambau Signs|work=The Robesonian|date=March 12, 1976|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=qbBVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=hUANAAAAIBAJ&pg=1851,1089196&dq=fred+grambau&hl=en}} 14. ^{{cite news|title=Awards race at a glance|newspaper=Edmonton Journal|date=October 23, 1974|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=0SJlAAAAIBAJ&sjid=QYgNAAAAIBAJ&pg=1255,1154951&dq=fred+grambau&hl=en}} 15. ^CFLpedia 16. ^{{cite web|title=Former U-M Gridder, Board Member Pryor Passes Away|publisher=University of Michigan|date=October 20, 2005|url=http://www.mgoblue.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/091305aaa.html}} 17. ^{{cite news|author=Elliot Legow|title=Freshman football key to varsity Success|newspaper=The Michigan Daily|date=October 15, 1969|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2706&dat=19691015&id=2wxKAAAAIBAJ&sjid=cR4NAAAAIBAJ&pg=2583,2408377}} External links{{Portal|Michigan|College football|1960s}}
4 : 1969 Big Ten Conference football season|Michigan Wolverines football seasons|Big Ten Conference football champion seasons|1969 in sports in Michigan |
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