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1954 UCLA Bruins football team
American college football season
American college football season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| year | 1954 |
| team | UCLA Bruins |
| sport | football |
| conference | Pacific Coast Conference |
| CoachRank | 1 |
| APRank | 2 |
| short_conf | PCC |
| record | 9–0 |
| conf_record | 6–0 |
| head_coach | Red Sanders |
| hc_year | 6th |
| off_scheme | Single-wing |
| stadium | Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum |
| champion | Coaches' Poll national champion |
| FWAA national champion | |
| PCC champion |
FWAA national champion PCC champion The 1954 UCLA Bruins football team was an American football team that represented the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in the Pacific Coast Conference during the 1954 college football season. They played their home games at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and were coached by Red Sanders. It was Sanders' sixth season as the UCLA head coach; the Bruins finished 9–0 overall, and were Pacific Coast Conference Champions with a 6–0 record. In nine games, UCLA outscored their opponents 367 to 40.
The Bruins were not eligible to play in the Rose Bowl vs. Ohio State (ranked No. 1 in the AP poll) because of the PCC's "no repeat" rule, in effect for most of the decade, after California lost a third straight Rose Bowl in January 1951. Since UCLA had played in the 1954 Rose Bowl, they were excluded from the 1955 event. The game likely would have made for a de facto national championship game, but thus, rival USC (whom the Bruins soundly defeated 34–0) went instead, and lost 20–7 to Ohio State. Following the outcome, UCLA and Ohio State split the national championship.
UCLA was selected national champion by NCAA-designated major selectors of Dunkel, Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), Litkenhous, National Championship Foundation, and United Press International (Coaches Poll), and co-champion by both Football Research and Helms. This consensus national championship is claimed by the school. Ohio State was selected national champion by the AP poll among other selectors.
During the season, the Bruins debuted their powder blue uniforms, referred to as "powder-keg blue" by head coach Sanders, that featured two white stripes around the shoulders. The white uniforms with blue stripes were used the previous season during the game against USC but this was the earliest known instance of the stripes becoming a regular part of the UCLA uniform.
Schedule
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Rankings
Game summaries
San Diego Navy
Los Angeles, CA
The Bruins had originally scheduled Santa Clara to open their season but after the Broncos suspended football, the San Diego Naval Training Center was scheduled as a replacement. Although the San Diego NTC featured players such as All-American Bucky Curtis from Vanderbilt and All-PCC Earl Stelle from Oregon, UCLA was favored three touchdowns.
Primo Villanueva scored the first two touchdowns of the game and the Bruins led 13–0 within 7 minutes. Bruce Ballard, Sam Brown, Villaneuva, and Bob Davenport would each score another running touchdown giving the Bruins a 40–0 halftime lead. Davenport, Gerry McDougall, and Doug Peters would each score three more running touchdowns and Ronnie Loudd would score a passing touchdown from Gerry McDougal to give UCLA a punishing 67–0 victory.
Kansas
Lawrence, KS
The Bruins scored three consecutive touchdowns in the first quarter. Kansas player Ralph Moody scored the first Kansas touchdown on an 82-yard punt return. Jack Ellena would score on a 50-yard punt return in the fourth quarter. A 73-yard run by reserve fullback Don Shinnick down to the 9-yard line would set up Gerry McDougall for UCLA's final score of the day.
Maryland
Los Angeles, CA Maryland were the 1953 national champions. Bob Davenport gained 89 yard on 23 carries and scored both of UCLA's touchdowns. Maryland's Howard Dare scored a touchdown on a pass from Charley Boxold to give the Terrapins the lead early in the fourth quarter. Davenport scored the go ahead touchdown in the middle of the fourth quarter to give the Bruins the victory.
Washington
Seattle, WA Bob Davenport scored two rushing touchdowns, Primo Villanueva scored one rushing touchdown, and Johnny Herman converted all three extra points to give UCLA a 21–0 led midway through the third quarter. After Bruins Coach Sanders replaced his starters with his second and third string players, Washington quarterback Bob Cox threw a passing touchdown to Dean Derby and Bob Dunn converted the extra point to reduce UCLA's lead to 21–7 at the end of the third quarter.
In the fourth quarter, Sam Brown fumbled which allowed Washington to recover at the UCLA 25. Cox threw another touchdown, this time to Corky Lewis but Dunn missed the extra point kick. Brown fumbled again for a 13-yard loss and Washington scored another passing touchdown on a 56-yard drive. Dunn's extra point reduced the UCLA lead to 21–20 with 2:30 minutes left. The Bruins would hold out to win the game.
Stanford
Los Angeles, CA
The Bruin defense intercepted Stanford quarterbacks Jerry Gustafson and John Neff eight times and returned them for 210 total yards. Sam Brown set a new conference record for punt returns with 132 yards in three returns. Villanueva, Davenport and Brown each scored twice while Decker, Loudd, Heydenfeldt and McDougall scored once each for a total of 10 touchdowns.
Oregon State
Corvallis, OR Sam Brown scored two touchdowns and Bob Davenport, Johnny Hermann, Primo Villanueva, Doug Peters, Don Shinnick, Russ Hampton, and Clarence Norris each scored a touchdown to give UCLA the 61–0 victory over Oregon State. The Bruins rushed for 498 yards and 593 total yards while holding Oregon State to 88 rushing yards and 111 total yards.
California
Berkeley, CA Primo Villanueva rushed for two touchdowns in the first half and threw a touchdown pass to Johnny Hermann in the fourth. Cal's Paul Larson set new Bears record for passes (38), pass completions (25), and pass yards (280) and Williams scored the Bears' lone touchdown on a 7-yard run.
Oregon
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Los Angeles, CA With the victory, UCLA set a new single scoring record of 333 points, surpassing the previous record of 327 points in just 8 games. Rommie Loudd scored the first points of the game on a 16-yard pass from Primo Villanueva. Bob Davenport, Jim Decker, Doug Bradley, Sam Brown, and Rommie Loudd each scored rushing touchdowns. Oregon only moved passed the 50 yard line two and the UCLA defense limited George Shaw, the country's leading passer with 178 yard per game, to only 29 yards.
USC
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Los Angeles, CA A 48-yard pass from Primo Villanueva to Bob Heydenfeldt gave UCLA a 7–0 first quarter lead. The Bruins poured on with four touchdowns in the fourth quarter: Bob Davenport scored from the one-yard line, Villanueva passed to Terry Debay for a 12-yard touchdown, Rommie Loudd caught a pass from Doug Bradley for an 8-yard touchdown, and Sam Brown passed to Bruce Ballard for a 17-yard touchdown. USC had only 5 yards rushing.
Personnel
Roster
| Sources: |
|---|
Coaching staff
Henry "Red" Sanders returned to coach the Bruins for the sixth season. The Bruin coaching staff included four future college head coaches, including three (Barnes, Dickerson, and Prothro) who would eventually serve as UCLA head coaches.
| Name | Position | Years |
|---|---|---|
| at UCLA | Alma mater (year) | |
| Henry "Red" Sanders | Head coach | 6 |
| William F. Barnes | Ends coach | 5 |
| Deke Brackett | Assistant coach | 5 |
| George W. Dickerson | Assistant line coach | 8 |
| Jim Myers | Line coach | 6 |
| Tommy Prothro | Backfield coach | 6 |
| Johnny Johnson | Freshman coach | 6 |
Statistics
Team
| UCLA | Opp |
|---|---|
| Points per game | 40.8 |
| First downs | 151 |
| Rushing | 119 |
| Passing | 31 |
| Penalty | 1 |
| Rushing yardage | 2,578 |
| Rushing attempts | 454 |
| Avg per rush | 5.6 |
| Avg per game | 286.4 |
| Passing yardage | 721 |
| Avg per game | 80.1 |
| Completions – attempts | 52-107 (48.6%) |
| Total offense | 3,299 |
| Total play | 561 |
| Avg per play | 5.9 |
| Avg per game | 366.6 |
| Fumbles lost | 23–12 |
| UCLA | Opp |
|---|---|
| Punts – yards | 40-1497 (37.4 avg) |
| Punt returns – total yards | 32-588 (18.4 avg) |
| Kick returns – total yards | 16-323 (20.2 avg) |
| Onside kicks | |
| Avg time of possession per game | |
| Penalties – yards | 34-400 |
| Avg per game | 44.4 |
| 3rd down conversions | |
| 4th down conversions | |
| Sacks By – yards | |
| Total TDs | 45 |
| Rushing | 35 |
| Passing | 10 |
| Field goals – attempts | 0-0 (0%) |
| PAT – attempts | 37-55 (67.3%) |
| Total attendance | 317,707 |
| Games – avg per game | 5 – 63,541 |
|}
Scores by quarter
| {{Linescore Amfootball | Road=Opponents | R1=0 | R2=13 | R3=7 | R4=20 | R5= | Home=UCLA | H1=91 | H2=82 | H3=62 | H4=132 | H5= |
|---|
Offense
Rushing
| Name | GP-GS | Att | Gain | Loss | Net | Avg | TD | Long | Avg/G |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bruce Ballard | 8-0 | 18 | 141 | 19 | 122 | 6.8 | 2 | 15.3 | |
| Doug Bradley | 9-1 | 31 | 116 | 27 | 89 | 2.9 | 1 | 9.9 | |
| Sam Brown | 8-2 | 23 | 165 | 30 | 135 | 5.9 | 5 | 16.9 | |
| Bob Davenport | 9-9 | 105 | 505 | 26 | 479 | 4.6 | 11 | 53.2 | |
| Jim Decker | 9-8 | 47 | 523 | 15 | 508 | 10.8 | 4 | 56.4 | |
| Johnny Hermann | 9-1 | 23 | 171 | 16 | 155 | 6.7 | 2 | 17.2 | |
| Bob Heydenfeldt | 9-3 | 1 | 0 | 8 | -8 | -8 | 2 | -0.9 | |
| Rommie Loudd | 9-6 | 3 | 7 | 3 | 4 | 1.3 | 5 | 0.4 | |
| Gerry McDougall | 8-0 | 43 | 254 | 28 | 226 | 5.3 | 2 | 28.3 | |
| Clarence Norris | 9-0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | |
| Doug Peters | 9-0 | 42 | 193 | 12 | 181 | 4.3 | 2 | 20.1 | |
| Don Shinnick | 9-0 | 28 | 210 | 0 | 210 | 7.5 | 1 | 23.3 | |
| Al Tanner | 2-0 | 1 | 11 | 0 | 11 | 11 | 0 | 5.5 | |
| Primo Villanueva | 8-6 | 87 | 544 | 58 | 486 | 5.6 | 4 | 60.8 | |
| *Bad Center Pass | 1 | 0 | 20 | -20 | -20 | ||||
| Total | 115-36 | 454 | 2,860 | 262 | 2,578 | 5.7.6 | 42 | 22.4 |
Passing
| Name | GP-GS | Effic | Att-Cmp-Int | Pct | Yds | TD | Lng | Avg/G |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doug Bradley | 9-1 | 31-20-2 | 0.645 | 229 | 2 | 25.4 | ||
| Sam Brown | 8-2 | 12-3-1 | 0.25 | 54 | 1 | 6.8 | ||
| Bob Davenport | 9-9 | 1-0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Gerry McDougall | 8-0 | 14-6-0 | 0.429 | 38 | 2 | 4.8 | ||
| Primo Villanueva | 9-6 | 49-23-7 | 0.469 | 400 | 5 | 44.4 | ||
| Total | 107-18 | 107-52-10 | 0.486 | 721 | 10 | 6.73 |
Receiving
| Name | GP-GS | No. | Yds | Avg | TD | Long | Avg/G |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bob Ballard | 8-0 | 2 | 36 | 18 | 1 | 4.5 | |
| Terry DeBay | 9-8 | 1 | 12 | 12 | 1 | 1.3 | |
| Jim Decker | 9-8 | 4 | 78 | 19.5 | 0 | 8.7 | |
| Russ Hampton | 7-0 | 5 | 60 | 12 | 1 | 8.6 | |
| Johnny Hermann | 9-1 | 5 | 73 | 14.6 | 2 | 8.1 | |
| Bob Heydenfeldt | 9-3 | 6 | 110 | 18.3 | 1 | 12.2 | |
| Bob Long | 9-9 | 11 | 157 | 14.3 | 0 | 17.4 | |
| Rommie Loudd | 9-6 | 13 | 157 | 12.1 | 4 | 17.4 | |
| Clarence Norris | 9-0 | 3 | 21 | 7 | 0 | 2.3 | |
| Gerry Okuneff | 8-0 | 2 | 17 | 8.5 | 0 | 2.1 | |
| Total | 86-35 | 52 | 721 | 13.9 | 10 | 8.4 |
Defense
| Name | GP | Tackles | Sacks | Pass defense | Interceptions | Fumbles | Blkd | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| kick | Solo | Ast | Total | TFL-yds | No-Yds | BrUp | QBH | No.-yds | Avg | TD | Long | Rcv-Yds | FF | |||||||
| Bruce Ballard | 8 | 4-60 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Warner Benjamin | 9 | 1-9 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Bob Bergdahl | 8 | 1-8 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Doug Bradley | 9 | 2-31 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Richard Braunbeck | 5 | 1-5 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Sam Brown | 8 | 1-21 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Bob Davenport | 9 | 1-64 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Terry DeBay | 9 | 3-73 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Jim Decker | 9 | 2-91 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Russ Hampton | 7 | 1-0 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Johnny Hermann | 9 | 2-44 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Bob Long | 9 | 2-37 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Rommie Loudd | 9 | 1-6 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Gerry Okuneff | 8 | 2-5 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Steve Palmer | 9 | 1-0 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Doug Peters | 9 | 1-30 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Primo Villanueva | 8 | 2-21 | ||||||||||||||||||
| Total | 142 | 28-505 |
Special teams
| Name | Punting | Kickoffs | No. | Yds | Avg | Long | TB | FC | I20 | Blkd | No. | Yds | Avg | TB | OB | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doug Bradley | 1 | 42 | 42 | |||||||||||||
| Sam Brown | 4 | 134 | 33.5 | |||||||||||||
| Bob Heydenfeldt | 26 | 1038 | 39.9 | |||||||||||||
| Gerry McDougall | 2 | 45 | 22.5 | |||||||||||||
| Primo Villanueva | 7 | 238 | 34 | - | ||||||||||||
| Total | 40 | 1,497 | 37.4 |
| Name | Punt returns | Kick returns | No. | Yds | Avg | TD | Long | No. | Yds | Avg | TD | Long |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bob Ballard | 1 | 17 | 17 | |||||||||
| Doug Bradley | 5 | 127 | 25.4 | 1 | 23 | 23 | ||||||
| Sam Brown | 10 | 262 | 26.2 | 1 | 28 | 28 | ||||||
| Bob Davenport | 4 | 74 | 18.5 | |||||||||
| Jim Decker | 1 | 18 | 18 | 2 | 29 | 14.5 | ||||||
| Jack Ellena | 1 | 50 | 50 | |||||||||
| Johnny Hermann | 2 | 4 | 2 | |||||||||
| Rommie Loudd | 1 | 15 | 15 | |||||||||
| Gerry McDougall | 1 | 29 | 29 | |||||||||
| Clarence Norris | 1 | 21 | 21 | |||||||||
| Doug Peters | 1 | 18 | 18 | |||||||||
| Primo Villanueva | 12 | 106 | 8.8 | 4 | 80 | 20 | ||||||
| Total | 32 | 588 | 18.3 | 9 | 313 | 34.7 |
(Statistics compiled from individual NCAA game summaries)
Awards and honors
All-American
- First Team All-American (Consensus)
- Jack Ellena (AAB, AFCA, AP, INS, NEA, SN, UP)
- First Team All-American
- Bob Davenport (AP-2, FWAA, INS-2, NEA-2, UP-3, CP-2)
- Jim Salsbury (AFCA, AP-3, FWAA, INS-2, NEA-2, UP-2, CP-3)
- Second Team All-American
- Primo Villaneva (AP-HR, UP-2, CP-HR, NEA-HR)
- Honorable Mention All-American
- Sam Boghosian (UP-HR)
- Hardiman Cureton (UP-HR, UP-HR)
- Bob Heydenfeldt (UP-HR)
- Bob Long (AP-HR)
- Ronnie Loudd (UP-HR)
- Terry Debay (UP-HR)
- Jim Decker (UP-HR)
- John Peterson (UP-HR, CP-HR)
- Joe Ray (AP-HR, UP-HR) Coaches' All-PCC
- All-PCC First Team
- Bob Davenport
- Jim Salsbury
- Primo Villaneva
- Jack Ellena
- All-PCC Second Team
- Sam Boghosian
- Herdiman Cureton
- Bob Long
- Jim Decker
- Joe Ray
- Honorable Mention
- John Hermann
- Terry Debay
- Gil Moreno
- John Peterson UP All-Coast Team
- All-Coast First Team
- Bob Davenport
- Jack Ellena
- Jim Salsbury
- Primo Villaneva
- All-Coast Second Team
- Sam Boghosian
- Herdiman Cureton
- Bob Heydenfeldt AP All-Pacific Coast Team
- All-Pacific First Team
- Bob Davenport
- Jack Ellena
- Bob Long
- Jim Salsbury
- All-Pacific Second Team
- Sam Boghosian
- Herdiman Cureton
- Joe Ray
- Primo Villaneva
1955 NFL draft
Main article: 1955 NFL draft
References
References
- "2011 UCLA Football Media Guide". UCLABruins.com.
- (August 2018). "2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records". National Collegiate Athletic Association.
- "UCLA Football 2017 Information Guide". University of California at Los Angeles.
- (19 September 1954). "Bruin Grid Players Sport Shoulder Hoops". Los Angeles Times.
- (5 April 2014). "The first use by UCLA of "UCLA stripes" on pale-blue jerseys: the 1954 San Diego Navy game . . .".
- (1920). "Southern Campus". Associated Students, University of California at Los Angeles.
- "UCLA vs San Diego Navy Summary of Football Game Statistics". NCAA.
- "U. C. L. A. WHIPS KANSAS.". Chicago Daily Tribune.
- (October 2, 1954). "UCLA stuns highly-favored Terps, 12–7". The Arizona Daily Star.
- "UCLA vs Maryland Summary of Football Game Statistics". NCAA.
- "Washington vs UCLA Summary of Football Game Statistics". NCAA.
- (October 10, 1954). "UCLA skins past rallying Huskies". The Spokesman-Review.
- "UCLA vs Stanford Summary of Football Game Statistics". NCAA.
- (October 17, 1954). "UCLA buries Stanford in record 72–0 avalanche". The San Bernardino Sun-Telegram.
- "Oregon State vs UCLA Summary of Football Game Statistics". NCAA.
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- (October 31, 1954). "Bruins rin through Bears, 27–6". Oakland Tribune.
- "UCLA vs Oregon Summary of Football Game Statistics". NCAA.
- (November 7, 1954). "Top rated UCLA blasts Oregon, 41–0". Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
- "UCLA vs USC Summary of Football Game Statistics". NCAA.
- (November 21, 1954). "Rose Bowl bound Trojans fall before 102,548". San Francisco Chronicle.
- (29 September 1954). "Notre Dame's Footballers Top AP Poll". Los Angeles Times.
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- (19 October 1954). "Bruins Remain Third in Poll: Oklahoma, Wisconsin Top Teams in Nation". Los Angeles Times.
- (26 October 1954). "Bruins Take First Place in UP Poll: Oklahoma, Ohio St. Tie for Second in Weekly Balloting". Los Angeles Times.
- (2 November 1954). "Bruins Top Nation in AP and UP Polls". Los Angeles Times.
- (10 November 1954). "Bruins Expand Lead in Polls: UCLA Voted Tops by 117 on AP Football Ballots". Los Angeles Times.
- (24 November 1954). "UP's Coaches Poll: Men Who Know Best Tab UCLA UP POLL". Los Angeles Times.
- (30 November 1954). "Bruins Voted UP National Champion: Coaches Tab UCLA Over OSU". Los Angeles Times.
- (17 September 1954). "SC, UCLA GRIDDERS: Bruins Taper Off for Navy Opener". Los Angeles Times.
- (19 September 1954). "Bruins Scuttle Navy, 67 to 0, in Grid Opener". Los Angeles Times.
- (20 September 1954). "Bruin Backfield Sharp in Victory". Los Angeles Times.
- [https://www.newspapers.com/article/pasadena-independent-bruins-in-romp-fas/144105135/ "Bruins in Romp: Fast TDs by UCLA Win, 32–7,"] ''Pasadena Independent,'' Sept. 26, 1954, p. 25.
- (26 September 1954). "Bruins Rip Jayhawks for 32-7 Victory". Los Angeles Times.
- "Kansas vs UCLA Summary of Football Game Statistics". NCAA.
- (7 October 1954). "UCLA Surprises Maryland; Play Washington Saturday". Los Angeles Times.
- (3 October 1954). "UCLA Rally Beats Maryland, 12-7". Los Angeles Times.
- (10 October 1954). "Bruins Edge Past Pesky Huskies, 21-20". Los Angeles Times.
- (17 October 1954). "Bruins scalp Indians in 72-0 Massacre". Los Angeles Times.
- Dick Hyland, [https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times-bruins-run-wild-ag/144107705/ "Bruins Run Wild Again, Win 61–0,"] ''Los Angeles Times,'' Oct. 24, 1954, part 2, pp. [https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times-point-a-minute-bru/144107827/ 6], 9.
- (31 October 1954). "Villanueva Sparks Bruins to 27-6 Win". Los Angeles Times.
- (7 November 1957). "Uclans Run Over Duck Grids, 41-0: Bruins Ruin Ducks". Los Angeles Times.
- (21 November 1954). "102,548 Watch UCLA Crush SC: Zimmerman's Report of UCLA Win". Los Angeles Times.
- (1920). "Southern Campus". Associated Students, University of California at Los Angeles.
- "All-Time Grantland Rice Trophy Winners".
- "LINE-UPS FOR UCLA-OREGON CONTEST: COLISEUM LINE-UPS". Los Angeles Times.
- (1920). "Southern Campus". Associated Students, University of California at Los Angeles.
- "John L. Johnson, a former UCLA football player and teammate of Jackie Robinson, dies at 96". Los Angeles Times.
- "2016 UCLA Football Information Guide". UCLA Athletics.
- "NFL Draft History". NFL Enterprises LLC.
- "1955 NFL Player Draft". databaseSports.com.
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