From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
1969 Rose Bowl
American college football game
American college football game
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| year_game_played | 1969 |
| game_name | Rose Bowl |
| subheader | 55th Rose Bowl Game |
| National Championship Game | |
| football_season | 1968 |
| visitor_name_short | Ohio State |
| visitor_nickname | Buckeyes |
| visitor_school | Ohio State University |
| home_name_short | USC |
| home_nickname | Trojans |
| home_school | University of Southern California |
| visitor_record | 9–0 |
| visitor_conference | Big Ten |
| home_record | 9–0–1 |
| home_conference | Pac-8 |
| visitor_coach | Woody Hayes |
| home_coach | John McKay |
| visitor_rank_AP | 1 |
| visitor_rank_coaches | 1 |
| home_rank_AP | 2 |
| home_rank_coaches | 2 |
| visitor_1q | 0 |
| visitor_2q | 10 |
| visitor_3q | 3 |
| visitor_4q | 14 |
| home_1q | 0 |
| home_2q | 10 |
| home_3q | 0 |
| home_4q | 6 |
| date_game_played | January 1 |
| stadium | Rose Bowl |
| city | Pasadena, California |
| MVP | Rex Kern (Ohio State QB) |
| odds | Ohio State by 3.5 points |
| anthem | The Ohio State University Marching Band |
| referee | Charles Moffett (Pacific-8) |
| (split crew: Pac-8, Big Ten) | |
| halftime | Spirit of Troy, The Ohio State University Marching Band |
| attendance | 102,063 |
| us_network | NBC |
| us_announcers_link | List of announcers of major college bowl games |
| us_announcers | Curt Gowdy, Kyle Rote |
| ratings | 33.5 |
| navigation_2 | National championship game |
| (AP Poll) | |
| different_previous_2 | [1967](1967-ucla-vs-usc-football-game) |
| different_next_2 | [1969 (Dec)](1969-texas-vs-arkansas-football-game) |
National Championship Game (split crew: Pac-8, Big Ten) (AP Poll)](college-football-national-championships-in-ncaa-division-i-fbs-national-championship-games) The 1969 Rose Bowl was the 55th edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, on Wednesday, January 1. The game was a de facto national championship game, as both teams were competing for the Associated Press (AP) title. The top-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes of the Big Ten Conference defeated the defending national champions - #2 USC Trojans of the Pacific-8 Conference, 27-16, to claim their sixth national championship and first consensus national championship since 1942. Sophomore quarterback Rex Kern of Ohio State was the Player of the Game.
Heisman Trophy winner O. J. Simpson rushed for 171 yards and an 80-yard touchdown run, but USC had five turnovers, including an interception and a fumble by Simpson. It was only the second #1 vs. #2 matchup in the Rose Bowl, the first was six years earlier. It was the first time in the history of the Big 9(Ten) – PCC/Big Ten – AAWU agreements that two unbeaten teams met in the Rose Bowl.
It was the first of four Rose Bowl matchups between the head coaches; Woody Hayes of Ohio State and USC's John McKay. It was the first of three with the national championship on the line for both schools.
Teams
This was only the second time in the Rose Bowl where the #1 and #2 teams in the AP poll played and only the third time in a bowl game: the 1963 Rose Bowl was the first and the 1964 Cotton Bowl Classic was the second. It was the 12th time overall that the #1 and #2 team faced each other since the inception of the AP poll in 1936. The Bowl Coalition, Bowl Alliance, BCS, and College Football Playoff were created later to make at least one matchup of the top two teams in the nation.
Ohio State Buckeyes
Main article: 1968 Ohio State Buckeyes football team
The Buckeyes featured a group called "The Super Sophomores" playing in their first varsity season: John Brockington, Leo Hayden, Rex Kern, Jim Otis, Jim Stillwagon, and Jack Tatum. The Buckeyes throttled #4 Michigan 50–14 to complete the regular season, and were favored in the Rose Bowl by 3½ points.
USC Trojans
Main article: 1968 USC Trojans football team
The defending national champion Trojans finished undefeated with one tie, which occurred at the end of the regular season against ninth-ranked Notre Dame. They had been ranked first since October 14, but dropped to second after Ohio State routed #4 Michigan; They were captained by Heisman Trophy winner O. J. Simpson; it was the third of four consecutive Rose Bowl appearances for USC.
Game summary
This Rose Bowl was also the beginning of a celebration of a century of college football. Later during the 1969 season, many teams wore uniform patches or helmet stickers with "100" to signify the centennial.

A number of celebrities were present, including President-elect Richard Nixon, Bob Hope, California Governor and future United States President Ronald Reagan and his wife Nancy Reagan, and former Oklahoma head coach and then-ABC analyst Bud Wilkinson. First Lady Pat Nixon was a graduate of USC, but President Nixon spent time on both sidelines. Richard Nixon called the Rose Bowl Game, "the prize game of all bowl games."
After O. J. Simpson scored on an 80-yard run to give USC a 10–0 lead, a Trojans fumble at their 21-yard line set up a Rex Kern pass to Leo Hayden for the final four yards. A fumbled reception cost Southern Cal the ball again at its own 16. USC had five turnovers, including two by Simpson. Simpson, besides having a fumble and interception, also underestimated the speed of Jack Tatum, the Ohio State cornerback. This happened on a swing pass that should have been a touchdown, and then on the same series when Simpson overthrew a touchdown pass to Ted DeKraai. Ohio State had one fumble, but managed to keep possession.
Scoring
First quarter
- No scoring
Second quarter
- USC - Ron Ayala 21 field goal, 9:40
- USC - O. J. Simpson 80 run (Ayala kick), 6:38
- OSU - Jim Otis 1 run (Jim Roman kick), 1:45
- OSU - Roman 26 field goal, 0:03
Third quarter
- OSU - Roman 25 field goal, 1:40
Fourth quarter
- OSU - Leo Hayden 4 pass from Rex Kern (Roman kick), 13:52
- OSU - Ray Gillian 16 pass from Kern (Roman kick),10:05
- USC - Sam Dickerson 19 pass from Steve Sogge (Sogge pass failed), 0:45
Aftermath
The following season, Ohio State was stunned in defense of their national title against Michigan, led by first-year head coach Bo Schembechler, in one of the most notable games in the rivalry. When the Super Sophomores were seniors in 1970, OSU went undefeated in the regular season and returned to Pasadena in January 1971, but was upset by Stanford, led by Heisman Trophy winner Jim Plunkett, the first pick of the 1971 NFL draft.
After losing this Rose Bowl, the Pac-8/10 dominated the series for the next two decades, winning the next four Rose Bowls, ten of the next eleven, and sixteen of the next eighteen.
The next Rose Bowl that matched the #1 and #2 teams was thirty-three years later in January 2002, with Miami (Big East) and Nebraska (Big 12), in the BCS National Championship Game.
Notes
References
Bibliography
- University of Southern California football media guide. (PDF copy available at www.usctrojans.com)
- Ohio State University football media guide. (PDF copy available at www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com)
- College Football's Twenty-Five Greatest Teams: The Sporting News.
- {{cite book
- Jenkins, Dan - Defense And Rex Make A King. Ohio State's Buckeyes came from 10 points behind to win the Rose Bowl and the national championship with a crushing display of excellence that kept USC's offense in hand and its defense dismayed. Sports Illustrated, January 13, 1969 https://vault.si.com/vault/1969/01/13/defense-and-rex-make-a-king --
References
- (January 3, 1988). "Should there be college Super Bowl?". The Courier–News.
- Sullwold, Chet. (January 1, 1969). "Rose Bowl theme simple: Who's No.1?". Toledo Blade.
- (December 31, 1968). "Young Buckeyes slight favorites over Trojans". Eugene Register-Guard.
- Jenkins, Dan. (December 23, 1968). "Bouquets of Roses for No. 1".
- (December 3, 1968). "Poll Matches Rose Foes — One-Two Fracas Set". Moberly Monitor–Index.
- (January 2, 1969). "Hayes: 'Greatest bowl victory'; SC falls, 27-16". Eugene Register-Guard.
- Sullwold, Chet. (January 2, 1969). "Play to O.J., day to Bucks". Toledo Blade.
- Kahn, Alex. (January 2, 1969). "Ohio State quiets skeptics, proves No. 1 rating by beating Trojans, 27-16". Youngstown Vindicator.
- Jenkins, Dan. (January 13, 1969). "Defense and Rex make a king".
- link. (March 6, 2008 , [[2008 Rose Bowl]]. Accessed January 26, 2008.)
- [http://www.kiko13.com/cflrankings/aponevstwo.htm Games Where #1 Faced #2] {{webarchive. link. (August 28, 2008 (kiko13.com))
- (November 24, 1968). "Rose Bowl next for Bucks". Eugene Register-Guard.
- Jenkins, Dan. (December 2, 1968). "The subject is Roses".
- (December 1, 1968). "Trojans salvage 21-21 tie with Irish". Eugene Register-Guard.
- Jenkins, Dan. (December 9, 1968). "The day they tied up O.J.".
- (December 3, 1968). "USC clings to second in grid poll". Eugene Register-Guard.
- Welcome Home. Time Magazine, January 10, 1969
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 1969 Rose Bowl — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report