The 1966 University Division football season was marked by some controversy as the year of "The Tie", a famous 10âÂÂ10 game between the two top-ranked teams, Michigan State and Notre Dame on November 19. Both teams were crowned national champions by various organizations after the regular season concluded, and neither participated in a bowl game. Alabama finished the regular season undefeated and was third in the AP poll, while Georgia was fourth. Alabama went on to win the Sugar Bowl in dominant fashion. During the 20th century, the NCAA had no playoff for the major college football teams in the University Division, later known as Division I-A.
The NCAA Football Guide, however, did note an "unofficial national champion" based on the top ranked teams in the "wire service" (AP and UPI) polls. The "writers' poll" by Associated Press (AP) was the most popular, followed by the "coaches' poll" by United Press International) (UPI). In 1966, both services issued their final polls at the close of the regular season, but before teams competed in bowl games. The Associated Press presented the "AP Trophy" to the winner.
The AP poll in 1966 consisted of the votes of as many as 63 sportswriters, though not all of them voted in every poll. Those who cast votes would give their opinion of the ten best teams. Under a point system of 10 points for first place, 9 for second, etc., the "overall" ranking was determined. In the preseason poll for 1966, Alabama was slightly ahead of Michigan State in first place votes (15 vs. 12) and points.
Prior to the start of the 1966 season, East Carolina was elevated to the University Division.
ABC began showing college football in color this season. By the NCAA rules, only eight national and five regional telecasts were allowed during the season.
In the preseason poll released on September 12, the top six teams were from different conferences. First place was the defending AP champion Alabama Crimson Tide (SEC), followed by defending UPI champ Michigan State (Big Ten), Nebraska (Big Eight), UCLA (AAWU/Pacific-8), Arkansas (SWC) and Notre Dame (independent).
September 17 No. 2 Michigan State beat North Carolina State 28âÂÂ10 at home, No. 3 Nebraska beat Texas Christian (TCU) 14âÂÂ10, and No. 4 UCLA crushed Pittsburgh 57âÂÂ14 in Los Angeles. At a game in Little Rock, No. 5 Arkansas beat visiting Oklahoma State 14âÂÂ10, but fell to 6th place in the next poll, while No. 9 USC won at Texas, 10âÂÂ6. No. 1 Alabama had not yet begun its season. The next poll was No. 1 Michigan State, No. 2 UCLA, No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 Nebraska, and No. 5 USC.
September 24 No. 1 Michigan State beat Penn State 42âÂÂ8 at home in East Lansing. No. 2 UCLA won 31âÂÂ12 at Syracuse, No. 3 Alabama easily handled Louisiana Tech 34âÂÂ0, and No. 4 Nebraska won over Utah State 28âÂÂ7 but would drop to sixth. The Cornhuskers were replaced by No. 8 Notre Dame, which had beaten No. 7 Purdue at home, 26âÂÂ14. No. 5 USC beat Wisconsin in Los Angeles 38âÂÂ3. The next poll was No. 1 Michigan State, No. 2 UCLA, No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 Notre Dame, and No. 5 USC.
October 1 No. 1 Michigan State won at Illinois, 26âÂÂ10. No. 2 UCLA hosted Missouri and won, 24âÂÂ15. No. 3 Alabama beat Mississippi 17âÂÂ7, while No. 4 Notre Dame won 35âÂÂ7 at Northwestern. No. 5 USC played Oregon State in a game at Portland, winning 21âÂÂ0, but the Trojans still dropped to sixth in the next poll. Their place was taken by No. 7 Arkansas, which shut out Texas Christian by the same 21âÂÂ0 score. The next poll was No. 1 Michigan State, No. 2 UCLA, No. 3 Notre Dame, No. 4 Alabama, and No. 5 Arkansas.
October 8 No. 1 Michigan State beat Michigan at home, 20âÂÂ7. No. 2 UCLA won in Houston against Rice, 27âÂÂ24. No. 3 Notre Dame and No. 4 Alabama registered shutouts, beating Army (35âÂÂ0) and Clemson (26âÂÂ0), respectively. No. 5 Arkansas was itself shut out, 7âÂÂ0, by Baylor. They were replaced at fifth place by No. 6 USC which won 17âÂÂ14 at home against Washington. The other undefeated team to lose this week was No. 8 Tennessee, which lost 6âÂÂ3 to No. 9 Georgia Tech. With two unbeatens gone, the eight remaining in the next poll were No. 1 Michigan State, No. 2 Notre Dame, No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 UCLA, No. 5 USC, No. 6 Nebraska, No. 7 Georgia Tech, and No. 8 Florida.
October 15 No. 1 Michigan State narrowly beat Ohio State in Columbus, 11âÂÂ8, while No. 2 Notre Dame held North Carolina scoreless at home, 32âÂÂ0, which was enough for them to trade places in the next poll. Likewise, No. 3 Alabama edged Tennessee 11âÂÂ10 while No. 4 UCLA overwhelmed Penn State 49âÂÂ11. UCLA's Los Angeles rival, No. 5 USC, beat Stanford 21âÂÂ7. No. 6 Nebraska won 21âÂÂ10 over Kansas State. No. 7 Georgia Tech met Auburn in Birmingham, winning 17âÂÂ3 to stay unbeaten, and No. 8 Florida won at North Carolina State, 17âÂÂ10. Oklahoma, which was scheduled to face Notre Dame next, beat Kansas 35âÂÂ0, while No. 9 Purdue (set to face Michigan State) beat Michigan 22âÂÂ21 in Ann Arbor. Purdue was the only team with a loss in the next poll: No. 1 Notre Dame, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 UCLA, No. 4 Alabama, No. 5 USC, No. 6 Georgia Tech, No. 7 Nebraska, No. 8 Florida, No. 9 Purdue, and No. 10 Oklahoma.
On October 22, No. 1 Notre Dame met No. 10 Oklahoma at Norman and beat them, 38âÂÂ0. No. 2 Michigan State hosted No. 9 Purdue and won 41âÂÂ20, which would eventually give State the Big Ten crown. No. 3 UCLA won 28âÂÂ15 at California in Berkeley, while in Birmingham, No. 4 Alabama handled Vanderbilt 42âÂÂ6 and No. 5 USC beat visiting Clemson 30âÂÂ0. It was No. 6 Georgia Tech over Tulane, 35âÂÂ17, and No. 7 Nebraska won 21âÂÂ19 at Colorado, a victory which would later deliver the Big 8 championship to the Cornhuskers. No. 8 Florida defeated N.C. State 17âÂÂ10. Arkansas returned to the Top Ten with a 41âÂÂ0 triumph over Wichita State at Little Rock and Wyoming (which had gone 6âÂÂ0 with a 35âÂÂ10 win over Utah State) also entered the poll. The next poll had nine unbeaten teams (all but Arkansas): No. 1 Notre Dame, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 UCLA, No. 4 Alabama, No. 5 USC, No. 6 Georgia Tech, No. 7 Florida, No. 8 Nebraska, No. 9 Arkansas, and No. 10 Wyoming.
October 29 Week Eight featured games in large cities. In a Friday night game in Miami, No. 5 USC lost 10âÂÂ7 to the Hurricanes. No. 1 Notre Dame met Navy in Philadelphia and won 31âÂÂ7. No. 2 Michigan State traveled to metropolitan Chicago (Evanston) to beat Northwestern 22âÂÂ0. In Los Angeles, No. 3 UCLA beat the Air Force Academy 38âÂÂ13. No. 4 Alabama beat Mississippi State 27âÂÂ14 in Tuscaloosa. Three other teams won again to go 7âÂÂ0: No. 6 Georgia Tech over Duke 48âÂÂ7, No. 7 Florida over Auburn 30âÂÂ27, and No. 8 Nebraska 35âÂÂ0 over Missouri. No. 9 Arkansas won 34âÂÂ0 over Texas A&M, and No. 10 Wyoming's Top Ten ranking ended with its first loss, 12âÂÂ10 at Colorado State. The remaining unbeatens in the next poll were No. 1 Notre Dame, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 UCLA, No. 4 Alabama, No. 5 Georgia Tech, No. 6 Nebraska, and No. 7 Florida.
November 5 No. 1 Notre Dame beat Pittsburgh at home, 40âÂÂ0. No. 2 Michigan State beat Iowa at home, 56âÂÂ7. In Seattle, No. 3 UCLA suffered their first loss, falling 16âÂÂ3 to Washington. No. 4 Alabama defeated LSU 21âÂÂ0 at Birmingham. No. 5 Georgia Tech got by Virginia in Atlanta, 14âÂÂ13. No. 6 Nebraska won 24âÂÂ13 at Kansas, but No. 7 Florida took its first loss, 27âÂÂ10 against Georgia. The next poll led off with the nation's five unbeaten major teams: No. 1 Notre Dame, No. 2 Michigan State, No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 Nebraska, and No. 5 Georgia Tech.
On November 12, No. 1 Notre Dame crushed Duke 64âÂÂ0 at home. No. 2 Michigan State won at Indiana 37âÂÂ19 and wrapped up the Big Ten title. No. 3 Alabama beat South Carolina 24âÂÂ0 at Tuscaloosa for its third straight shutout win. No. 4 Nebraska won 21âÂÂ6 over Oklahoma State, and No. 5 Georgia Tech beat Penn State 21âÂÂ0. The Top Five remained the same, as No. 1 Notre Dame and No. 2 Michigan State prepared to meet on State's turf in East Lansing.
November 19, In "the game of the century," No. 1 Notre Dame played No. 2 Michigan State to a 10âÂÂ10 tie in East Lansing. Notre Dame coach Ara Parseghian came under criticism for his cautious tactics, running out the clock at the end of the game rather than risking a turnover with an aggressive bid for a touchdown. After the game, the AP and UPI split, with the AP keeping Notre Dame at No. 1 and the UPI choosing Michigan State. The Spartans closed their season with a 9âÂÂ0âÂÂ1 record and no postseason game, since they had played in the previous year's Rose Bowl and were barred from a repeat. Without injured star QB Gary Beban, No. 8 UCLA still managed to beat No. 7 USC 14âÂÂ7. Although UCLA finished with a better overall record and ranking than USC, it was the Trojans who were voted by the conference to go on to the Rose Bowl, due to having played one more "conference game." UCLA students took to the streets protesting the decision in anger, at one point blocking the nearby 405 Freeway. The Rose Bowl would pit USC vs. Big Ten runner-up Purdue (which had been blown out by Michigan State in October) when the ideal matchup was largely considered UCLA vs. Michigan State. No. 3 Alabama, No. 4 Nebraska and No. 5 Georgia Tech were all idle. The AP's top five remained unchanged.
On Thanksgiving Day, No. 4 Nebraska and Oklahoma met at Norman, with the Sooners winning 10âÂÂ9 to leave the Cornhuskers (who had already clinched the Big 8 title) with a 9âÂÂ1 finish. On Saturday, November 26, No. 1 Notre Dame went to Los Angeles to hand No. 10 USC a 51âÂÂ0 shutout lossâÂÂthe most points scored against USC up to that time, and USC's largest margin of defeat to this day. No. 3 Alabama won over Southern Mississippi in Mobile. No. 5 Georgia Tech lost to No. 7 Georgia 23âÂÂ14 at Athens. The Bulldogs closed with a 9âÂÂ1 finish, an unbeaten SEC record (tied with Alabama), and an invitation to the Cotton Bowl to face SWC champion SMU, while Georgia Tech would play Florida in the Orange Bowl. In the final AP Poll, Notre Dame, Michigan State and Alabama were first, second and third, with Georgia at No. 4 and UCLA No. 5. The Coaches Poll also moved the Irish back up to first place after the USC victory. On December 3, No. 3 Alabama closed its season with a 31âÂÂ0 win over Auburn in Birmingham, for its fourth straight shutout and a 10âÂÂ0 record; the Crimson Tide prepared to meet No. 6 Nebraska in the Sugar Bowl.
In the final AP poll, taken before the bowl games, 9âÂÂ0âÂÂ1 Notre Dame (which did not end its 40+ year no-bowls policy until the 1969 season) was the overwhelming choice of the writers for the AP Trophy, with 41 of the 56 first place votes, and Michigan State was second; neither played in a bowl game, as Notre Dame at the time refused all bowl bids and Michigan State was barred from the Rose Bowl due to a Big Ten rule that prevented teams from going to the Rose Bowl in two consecutive seasons. Alabama, which was unbeaten and later won the Sugar Bowl over Nebraska, finished third. Georgia, whose only blemish had been a one-point loss to the Miami Hurricanes, was fourth and UCLA was fifth.
Saturday, December 31, 1966 (Cotton)<br> Monday, January 2, 1967
The Heisman Trophy is given to the year's most outstanding player
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