请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 1975 UCLA Bruins football team
释义

  1. Regular season

     Schedule 

  2. Game summaries

     Ohio State   Ohio State (Rose Bowl)  

  3. Players and coaches

     Roster  Offense  Defense  Specialists  Coaches 

  4. Awards and honors

  5. 1975 team players in the NFL

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Infobox NCAA team season
|Year=1975
|Team=UCLA Bruins
|Image=
|Conference=Pacific-8
|Division=
|ShortConference=Pac-8
|Record=9–2–1
|ConfRecord=6–1
|HeadCoach=Dick Vermeil
|HCYear = 2nd
|CoachRank=5
|APRank=5
|OffCoach=Rod Dowhower
|OCYear = 2nd
|DefCoach=Lynn Stiles
|DCYear = 2nd
|OScheme=
|DScheme=
|StadiumArena=Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
|Champion=Pac-8 co-champion
Rose Bowl champion
|BowlTourney=Rose Bowl
|BowlTourneyResult= W 23–10 vs. Ohio State
}}{{1975 Pacific-8 football standings}}

The 1975 UCLA Bruins football team represented the University of California, Los Angeles in the 1975 NCAA Division I football season. Led by second-year head coach Dick Vermeil, the Bruins won their first Pacific-8 championship in a decade and were 8–2–1 in the regular season. On New Year's Day, UCLA upset previously undefeated and top-ranked Ohio State in the Rose Bowl and climbed to fifth in the final rankings.[1][2]

Regular season

Coming off an injury-plagued 1974 season at 6–3–2, UCLA began the season ranked #16. A season-opening 37–21 win over Iowa State in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum saw them move up to twelfth;[3] this was followed by a 34–28 win over #10 Tennessee.[4] But they stumbled in a turnover-plagued 20–20 tie at Air Force;[5] second-ranked Ohio State traveled west and handed UCLA its first loss of the season, {{nowrap|41–20}} on October 4.[6] After the game, head coach Woody Hayes prophetically told his team that they would be facing UCLA again in the Rose Bowl. UCLA was the only opponent to score more than 14 points in a game all season against Ohio State, and they did it twice.

The Ohio State loss dropped the Bruins out of the top 20, but they returned to #13 after wins over Stanford,[7] Washington State,[8][9] and a key win over California. But another loss, this time to Washington 17–13, dropped them back out of the top 20 and resulted in a five-way tie at the top of the Pac-8 between UCLA, California, Stanford, USC, and Washington.[10]

After a pair of wins over the Oregon schools,[11][12] the Bruins went into their season-ending game against rival USC needing a win to go to the Rose Bowl; a loss or tie would send California to Pasadena. Despite fumbling 11 times and losing 8, UCLA beat the Trojans 25–22.[13] UCLA ended up tied with California for the Pac-8 championship, but advanced to the Rose Bowl on the strength of their 28–14 win over the Golden Bears.[14] The Bruins went into the Rose Bowl ranked #11. Ironically, the 1975 USC-UCLA game was legendary coach John McKay and Vermeil's final game at the Coliseum.

It was the only bowl appearance for Vermeil in his two seasons at UCLA; a month later he left for the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League.[15]

Schedule

{{CFB schedule
| rankyear = 1975
| poll = AP
| timezone = Pacific
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 13
| time = 8:05 pm
| w/l = w
| nonconf = y
| rank = 16
| opponent = Iowa State
| site_stadium = Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
| site_cityst = Los Angeles, CA [3]
| tv =
| score = 37–21
| attend = 31,260
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 20
| time = 12:50 pm
| w/l = w
| nonconf = y
| rank = 12
| opponent = Tennessee
| opprank = 10
| site_stadium = Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
| site_cityst = Los Angeles, CA [4]
| tv =
| score = 34–28
| attend = 33,356
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 27
| time = 2:30 pm
| w/l = t
| nonconf = y
| away = y
| rank = 10
| opponent = Air Force
| site_stadium = Falcon Stadium
| site_cityst = Colorado Springs, CO [5]
| tv =
| score = 20–20
| attend = 33,390
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 4
| time = 6:00 pm
| w/l = l
| nonconf = y
| rank = 13
| opponent = Ohio State
| opprank = 2
| site_stadium = Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
| site_cityst = Los Angeles, CA [6]
| tv = ABC
| score = 20–41
| attend = 55,482
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 11
| time = 1:30 pm
| w/l = w
| away = y
| rank =
| opponent = Stanford
| site_stadium = Stanford Stadium
| site_cityst = Stanford, CA [7]
| tv =
| score = 31–21
| attend = 52,500
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 18
| time = 1:30 pm
| w/l = w
| away = y
| rank = 18
| opponent = Washington State
| site_stadium = Joe Albi Stadium
| site_cityst = Spokane, WA [8][9]
| tv =
| score = 37–23
| attend = 28,500
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 25
| time = 3:00 pm
| w/l = w
| rank = 19
| opponent = California
| site_stadium = Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
| site_cityst = Los Angeles, CA
| tv =
| score = 28–14
| attend = 36,100
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 1
| time = 1:30 pm
| w/l = l
| rank = 13
| opponent = Washington
| site_stadium = Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
| site_cityst = Los Angeles, CA [10]
| tv =
| score = 13–17
| attend = 29,158
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 8
| time = 1:30 pm
| w/l = w
| away = y
| rank =
| opponent = Oregon
| site_stadium = Autzen Stadium
| site_cityst = Eugene, OR [11]
| tv =
| score = 50–17
| attend = 15,500
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 15
| time = 1:30 pm
| w/l = w
| rank = 19
| opponent = Oregon State
| site_stadium = Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
| site_cityst = Los Angeles, CA [12]
| tv =
| score = 31–9
| attend = 30,203
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 28
| time = 5:00 pm
| w/l = w
| neutral = y
| rank = 14
| opponent = USC
| gamename = Victory Bell
| site_stadium = Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
| site_cityst = Los Angeles, CA [13]
| tv = ABC
| score = 25–22
| attend = 80,927
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = January 1, 1976
| time = 2:00 pm
| w/l = w
| nonconf = y
| neutral = y
| rank = 11
| opponent = Ohio State
| opprank = 1
| gamename = Rose Bowl
| site_stadium = Rose Bowl
| site_cityst = Pasadena, CA [1]
| tv = NBC
| score = 23–10
| attend = 105,464
}}
}}

Game summaries

Ohio State

{{Linescore Amfootball
|Road= UCLA
|R1= 7
|R2= 0
|R3= 7
|R4= 6
|Home= Ohio State
|H1= 7
|H2= 21
|H3= 10
|H4= 3
}}{{See also| 1975 Ohio State Buckeyes football team}}

1st quarter scoring: UCLA – James Sarpy 13-yard pass from John Sciarra (Brett White kick); OSU – Greene 2-yard run (Klaban kick)

2nd quarter scoring: OSU – Johnson 3-yard run (Klaban kick); OSU – Johnson 2-yard run (Klaban kick); OSU – Greene 17-yard run (Klaban kick)

3rd quarter scoring: OSU – A. Griffin 17-yard run (Klaban kick); OSU – Klaban 34-yard field goal; UCLA – Eddie Ayers 2-yard run (White kick)

4th quarter scoring: UCLA – Ayers 1-yard run (kick failed); OSU – Klaban 42-yard field goal

Ohio State (Rose Bowl)

{{Linescore Amfootball
|Road= UCLA
|R1= 0
|R2= 0
|R3= 16
|R4= 7
|Home= Ohio State
|H1= 3
|H2= 0
|H3= 0
|H4= 7
}}{{See also|1976 Rose Bowl}}

1st quarter scoring: Ohio State – Tom Klaban 42-yard field goal

2nd quarter scoring: No score

3rd quarter scoring: UCLA – Brett White 33-yard field goal; UCLA – Wally Henry 16-yard pass from John Sciarra (White kick failed); UCLA – Henry 67-yard pass from Sciarra (White kick)

4th quarter scoring: Ohio State – Pete Johnson 3-yard run (Klaban kick); UCLA – Wendell Tyler 54-yard run (White kick)

{{Clear}}

Players and coaches

Roster

{{American football roster/Header
| year = 1975
| team = UCLA Bruins
| teamcolors = f
| offensive_players ={{American football roster/Player|num=|class=So|first=Severn|last=Reece|pos=WR}}{{American football roster/Player|num=15|class=Sr|first=John|last=Sciarra|pos=QB|link=y}}
| defensive_players={{American football roster/Player|num=40|class=Fr|first=Manu|last=Tuiasosopo|pos=LB|link=y}}
| special_teams_players=
}}{{American football roster/Footer
| head_coach = *Dick Vermeil
| asst_coach =
| accessdate=
}}

34 returning lettermen from Coach Dick Vermeil's first team that was 6–3–2 in 1974.[16]

{{Col-begin}}{{Col-1-of-2}}

Offense

  • 89 Norm Andersen, SE
  • 70 Gus Coppens LT
  • 73 Phil McKinnely, LG
  • 62 Mitch Kahn, C
  • 51 Randy Cross, RG
  • 75 Jack DeMartinis, RT
  • 7 Rick Walker, TE
  • 15 John Sciarra QB
  • 22 Wendell Tyler, LHB
  • 30 Eddie Ayers, RHB
  • 8 Wally Henry, FL

Defense

  • 68 Tim Tennigkeit, LT
  • 56 Terry Tautolo, ILB
  • 59 Pete Pele, NG
  • Kelly Stroich, ILB
  • 90 Bob Crawford, RT
  • 83 Dale Curry, OLB
  • 87 Raymond Burks, OLB
  • 29 Barney Person, LCB
  • 21 Oscar Edwards, RCB
  • Matt Fahl, S
  • 88 Pat Schmidt, S
{{Col-2-of-2}}

Specialists

  • 34 Brett White, PK
  • 6 John Sullivan, P

Coaches

  • Dick Vermeil, head coach
  • Lynn Stiles, assistant head coach/defensive coordinator
  • Jim Criner, linebackers/tight ends
  • Terry Donahue, offensive line
  • Rod Dowhower, offensive coordinator/quarterbacks/wide receivers
  • Jerry Long, offensive line/defensive line
  • Billie Matthews, running backs
  • Bill McPherson, defensive line
  • Carl Peterson, wide receivers/tight ends
  • Dick Tomey, defensive backs
  • Mike Flores, graduate assistant
{{Col-end}}

Awards and honors

  • John Sciarra, QB, All-Conference, NCAA Post-Graduate Scholarship, ESPN The Magazine/CoSIDA Academic All America, National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Scholarship, NCAA Top Eight Award, inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame (2014)
  • Randy Cross, G, All-Conference, inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame (2010)
  • Fulton Kuykendall, LB, All-Conference
  • Head coach Dick Vermeil will be inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame as a member of the Class of 2014.[17]
  • Barney Person, CB, Lead nation & UCLA in interceptions, made key Rose Bowl interception

1975 team players in the NFL

The following players were claimed in the 1975 NFL Draft.

Player Position Round Pick NFL club
Fulton Kuykendall Linebacker 6 132 Atlanta Falcons
Eugene Clark Offensive Guard 9 222 Pittsburgh Steelers
Art Kuehn Center 15 384 Washington Redskins
Myke Horton Offensive Tackle 17 428 New England Patriots

The following players were claimed in the 1976 NFL Draft.

Player Position Round Pick NFL club
Cliff Frazier Defensive Tackle 2 41 Kansas City Chiefs
Randy Cross Center 2 42 San Francisco 49ers
John Sciarra Defensive Back 4 103 Chicago Bears
Phil McKinnely Tackle 9 246 Atlanta Falcons
Norman Andersen Wide Receiver 11 299 Chicago Bears
Terry Tautolo Linebacker 13 353 Philadelphia Eagles
Brett White Punter 15 412 Philadelphia Eagles
Dale Curry Linebacker 15 430 Dallas Cowboys
[18]

The following player was claimed in the 1977 NFL Draft.

Player Position Round Pick NFL club
Wendell Tyler Running Back 3 79 Los Angeles Rams
Rick Walker Tight End 4 85 Cincinnati Bengals
Ray Burks Linebacker 12 318 Kansas City Chiefs

References

1. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=fr4RAAAAIBAJ&sjid=dO0DAAAAIBAJ&pg=7125%2C444489 |newspaper=Spokesman-Review |location=(Spokane, Washington)|agency=Associated Press|title=Dynamite Bruins stagger Ohio St. |date=January 2, 1976 |page=34}}
2. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=1CBOAAAAIBAJ&sjid=dO0DAAAAIBAJ&pg=7216%2C622552|location=(Spokane, Washington)|agency=Associated Press|title=Sooners poll champions |date=January 3, 1976 |page=13}}
3. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=rtVVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MuADAAAAIBAJ&pg=4161%2C3326266 |newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|agency=Associated Press |title=Sciarra scores three as UCLA tops Cyclones |date=September 14, 1975 |page=3C}}
4. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=tNVVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MuADAAAAIBAJ&pg=5407%2C4987110|newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|agency=Associated Press |title=Bruins stall late bid, upend 10th-rated Vols |date=September 21, 1975 |page=}}
5. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=utVVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MuADAAAAIBAJ&pg=6594%2C6991229|newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|agency=Associated Press |title=Long field goal ties UCLA at 20 |date=September 28, 1975 |page=6B}}
6. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=GdZVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=JuADAAAAIBAJ&pg=3546%2C1005796|newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|agency=Associated Press |title=Greene races by Bruins |date=October 5, 1975 |page=3B}}
7. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=H9ZVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=JuADAAAAIBAJ&pg=4620%2C3263719|newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|agency=Associated Press |title=Stanford fans boo as UCLA prevails |date=October 12, 1975 |page=6D}}
8. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=yPJLAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ce0DAAAAIBAJ&pg=6441%2C2041914 |newspaper=Spokesman-Review |location=(Spokane, Washington)|last=Missildine |first=Harry |title=Sciarra, Ayers lead UCLA win |date=October 19, 1975 |page=D1}}
9. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=JdZVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=JuADAAAAIBAJ&pg=5540%2C5595011|newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|agency=Associated Press |title=Bruin offense just too much |date=October 19, 1975 |page=3B}}
10. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=_HkzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=LeADAAAAIBAJ&pg=6452%2C303455 |newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|agency=Associated Press |title=Suddenly, five Pac-8 teams sniffing roses |date=November 2, 1975 |page=3B}}
11. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=AnozAAAAIBAJ&sjid=LeADAAAAIBAJ&pg=4016%2C2316525|newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|last=Withers |first=Bud |title=The athletes have their say, 50-17 |date=November 9, 1975 |page=1B}}
12. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=B3ozAAAAIBAJ&sjid=LeADAAAAIBAJ&pg=2334%2C4378214|newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|last=Rausch |first=Gary |title=Dee's day starts badly, gets no better |date=November 16, 1975 |page=1B}}
13. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=EnozAAAAIBAJ&sjid=LeADAAAAIBAJ&pg=6694%2C8256441|newspaper=Eugene Register-Guard |location=(Oregon)|agency=wire reports |title=Fumbling Bruins Pasadena-bound |date=November 29, 1975 |page=1B}}
14. ^Jeff Prugh – UCLA DROPS BALL BUT HOLDS ROSES; USC Loses in McKay's Farewell. Los Angeles Times. November 29, 1975
15. ^{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ymIsAAAAIBAJ&sjid=Os0EAAAAIBAJ&pg=3386%2C1428982 |newspaper=Spartanburg Herald-Journal |location=(South Carolina) |agency=Associated Press |title=Eagles hire Vermeil |date=February 9, 1976 |page=B1 }}
16. ^UCLA 1975 Press Guide, Compiled by UCLA Athletic News Bureau, Vic Kelley, Manager
17. ^Knute Rockne, Dick Vermeil and Ki-Jana Carter to be Inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame, Tournament of Roses Association, August 26, 2014
18. ^https://www.pro-football-reference.com/draft/1976.htm

External links

  • [https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/ucla/1975.html Sports Reference] - 1975 UCLA football season
{{UCLA Bruins football navbox}}{{Pac-12 Conference football champions}}

5 : 1975 Pacific-8 Conference football season|UCLA Bruins football seasons|Pac-12 Conference football champion seasons|Rose Bowl champion seasons|1975 in sports in California

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/11/11 21:52:32