Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1971 Rose Bowl

American college football game


American college football game

FieldValue
year_game_played1971
game_nameRose Bowl
subheader57th Rose Bowl Game
football_season1970
visitor_name_shortStanford
visitor_nicknameIndians
visitor_schoolStanford University
home_name_shortOhio State
home_nicknameBuckeyes
home_schoolOhio State University
visitor_record8–3
visitor_conferencePac-8
home_record9–0
home_conferenceBig Ten
visitor_coachJohn Ralston
home_coachWoody Hayes
visitor_rank_AP12
visitor_rank_coaches10
home_rank_AP2
home_rank_coaches2
visitor_1q10
visitor_2q0
visitor_3q3
visitor_4q14
home_1q7
home_2q7
home_3q3
home_4q0
date_game_playedJanuary 1
stadiumRose Bowl
cityPasadena, California
MVPJim Plunkett (QB, Stanford)
oddsOhio State by 10 points
refereeJohn Presley (Pacific-8)
(split crew: Pac-8, Big Ten)
attendance103,839
us_networkNBC
us_announcers_linkList of announcers of major college bowl games
us_announcersCurt Gowdy, Kyle Rote
ratings27.2

(split crew: Pac-8, Big Ten) The 1971 Rose Bowl was It was the 57th edition of the college football bowl game, played at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, on Friday, January 1. The Stanford Indians of the Pacific-8 Conference defeated the second-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes of the Big Ten Conference, 27–17. The Player of the Game was Stanford quarterback Jim Plunkett, the Heisman Trophy winner.

Teams

Ohio State

Ohio State started the season ranked first in the nation and proceeded to roll off five easy wins by a combined score of 195–60. In their fifth game, the Buckeyes won 48–29 at Illinois. But for some reason, Texas leapfrogged Ohio State to #1 after beating unranked Rice 45–21. The next week the Buckeyes defeated #20 Northwestern 24–10, but dropped to third in the rankings as Notre Dame moved up to second after a rout of Navy.

After a 10–7 win with a late field goal at Purdue on November 14, they fell to fifth despite still being undefeated, as Nebraska and Michigan passed them. They earned the Rose Bowl berth on the strength of their 20–9 victory over #4 Michigan in their rivalry game that decided the Big Ten title and rose back to second, behind Texas. After Texas lost in the Cotton Bowl to #6 Notre Dame earlier on New Year's Day, Ohio State went into the Rose Bowl with the inside track to claim the national championship.

Stanford

Stanford started the season ranked tenth, and in the season opener they upset #4 Arkansas 34–28 at Little Rock. After an easy win over San Jose State, they traveled north to Eugene for a game that featured a quarterback battle between Plunkett and Oregon sophomore Dan Fouts. Stanford won 33–10, but then were caught looking ahead to their showdown with USC and lost 24–16 at home to Purdue. They then beat four-time defending Pac-8 champion USC at Stanford, 24–14 (avenging a last second loss to the Trojans the year before). An easy 63–16 win over conference doormat Washington State boosted the Indians to #8.

Next up was a showdown with #16 UCLA in Los Angeles for the conference lead. In what was expected to be another quarterback showdown between Plunkett and the Bruins' Dennis Dummit, the defenses dominated in Stanford's key 9–7 win. After an easy win over Oregon State, they rose to sixth before clinching the conference title in the Rose Bowl decider over sophomore QB Sonny Sixkiller and Washington, 29–22. Stanford then suffered a pair of letdowns, losing to #13 Air Force 31–14 and to arch rival California, 22–14. The Pac-8 standings were so tightly bunched, that a win by either Oregon, UCLA, or Washington over Stanford would have sent that team to the Rose Bowl.

Scoring

First quarter

  • Stanford – Jackie Brown 4-yard run (Steve Horowitz kick), 10:20
  • Stanford – Horowitz 37-yard field goal, 6:50
  • Ohio State – John Brockington 1-yard run (Fred Schram kick), 3:45

Second quarter

  • Ohio State – Brockington 1-yard run (Schram kick), 14:24

Third quarter

  • Stanford – Horowitz 48-yard field goal, 12:29
  • Ohio State – Schram 32-yard field goal, 8:33

Fourth quarter

  • Stanford – Brown 1-yard run (Horowitz kick), 10:03
  • Stanford – Randy Vataha 10-yard pass from Jim Plunkett (Horowitz kick), 8:18

Statistics

:{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center" ! Statistics !! Stanford !! Ohio State

-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
}
:Source:

Aftermath

Ohio State was crowned National Champions prior to the bowl game by National Football Foundation along with Texas. Stanford repeated as Rose Bowl champions the following year, led by fifth-year senior quarterback Don Bunce, who redshirted this season.

Notes

  • Plunkett is Stanford’s only Heisman Trophy winner, and is the only player to be named MVP of the Rose Bowl and Super Bowl (XV); he was the first overall pick of the 1971 NFL draft.

References

References

  1. (January 1, 1971). "Anything can happen on New Year's Day". Eugene Register-Guard.
  2. Turran, Kenneth. (January 2, 1971). "Stanford jars Buckeyes, 27-17". Milwaukee Sentinel.
  3. Sons, Ray. (January 2, 1971). "Stanford upsets Ohio State in Rose Bowl, 27-17". Youngstown Vindicator.
  4. (January 2, 1971). "Stanford shakes up Buckeyes". Pittsburgh Press.
  5. (January 2, 1971). "Stanford upsets Buckeyes, 27-17". Eugene Register-Guard.
  6. Jenkins, Dan. (January 11, 1971). "The one-day season".
  7. (October 27, 1970). "Texas moves to front spot in grid vote". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  8. (November 3, 1970). "AP college football poll". Eugene Register-Guard.
  9. (November 17, 1970). "Texas on top, but Arkansas test worries". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  10. (November 24, 1970). "Bucks claim second". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  11. Historical Media Guide, ''Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association'', 2009
Info: Wikipedia Source

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.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1971 Rose Bowl — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This 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