Archive for May, 2009

Thanks to Chinese Bandits and a Cannon, LSU Gets Its First National Title-1958

Friday, May 29th, 2009
Life Magazine Captured LSU's Chinese Bandits

Life Magazine Captured LSU's Chinese Bandits

By Bert Hancock

In 1958, while Elvis and the Everly Brothers were stirring the charts and westerns like Gunsmoke and Have Gun Will Travel were invading America’s living rooms, a specialist squad of “foreign” defenders and a Heisman talent named Billy Cannon burst forth to grab LSU’s first ever national crown.

LSU had struggled historically, and the Tigers appeared to be one of the least likely candidates for such monumental success in ‘58. For one thing, the school had failed to even win (or tie) the Southeastern Conference since 1936 (22 years). What’s more, head coach Paul Dietzel’s three year mark at LSU sat at 11-17-2–hardly the stuff of inspiration.

It’s hard to garner a lot of encouragement when your last season of 5-5 was your best. Further compounded is that the Tigers dropped their last four of 1957 after teasing fans’ hopes.

Largely from these shoulder slumping results and limited depth, experience, and size, LSU was projected near the bottom of the Southeastern Conference heap, at no better than ninth. Another coach visiting the practices referred to the Tigers as a frighteningly scrawny bunch.

Leadership Overcomes Deficiencies

But the baby-ish Paul Dietzel (just 29 when given the head coaching job as the youngest on his staff) possessed terrific organizational talents as well as an eye and pitch for recruiting. His landing of greats such as Billy Cannon, Johnny Robinson and Warren Rabb in 1956 built the foundation for what was to hit Baton Rouge by the fall of ‘58.

Scooter Purvis, a back on the title squad, remembered, “He (Dietzel) got just about every player in the state he wanted.” Meanwhile, a tackle on the team, Dave McCarty recalled, “We had great organized practices…we didn’t waste any time.”

One of those blue-chip standouts, of course, was Billy Cannon, who boasted sprinter speed and exceptional shot putting ability, making him known as either “the fastest shot putter” or the “strongest sprinter.” Cannon didn’t just have the talent, he also owned quite a bit of confidence in himself, as well as his team. Amidst the bad mouthing of the LSU program, he stunned pundits by predicting, “It (the SEC race) will be between us and Ole Miss.”

The Tigers first handled the Rice Owls, then a strong program led by Hall of Fame head coach Jess Neely, 26-6. By week four, which saw a 41-0 plastering of Andy Gustafson’s Miami Hurricanes in the Orange Bowl, Dietzel’s squad looked for real, and pollsters took notice. LSU now rose to No. 9 in the nation, right behind that Ole Miss squad that Cannon confidently predicted his team would challenge for the SEC crown.

The two appeared headed for a collision course battle. Though Ole Miss won its fifth game, LSU’s pounding of respected Blanton Collier’s Kentucky bunch soared the Tigers all the way to #3, while the Rebels had to settle for #6.

The biggest key to Tigers’ greatness

LSU’s defense played the biggest role in its nation-shocking success. A change in the tightly bound substitution rule in 1958 had allowed any player the option of returning to the field in the same half—something that had been only permitted for starters in prior seasons.

With that, LSU head coach Paul Dietzel created a unit solely of defensive specialists, naming them the Chinese Bandits. Dietzel took the name from an old comic book character who stated that Chinese bandits were the most vicious people alive. The salty unit helped LSU hold opponents to a futile six points per game.

After getting by Florida, the Tigers now carried the nation’s No. 1 ranking into its biggest game, versus Ole Miss, ranked a lofty No. 6 itself and feeling perhaps equally deserving of top billing.

Showdown Time With Ole Miss

A then record 68,000 filled Tiger Stadium Saturday night, creating an indescribable buzz of intensity and anticipation with every play. Standout back Scooter Purvis vividly relived the feeling: “It was as if the crowd was out there with us, as if the crowd was saying, ‘We’re all playing this sucker.’”

Ole Miss, taking advantage of a fumbled punt attempt and the hard running of its star back Charlie Flowers, hammered to within a whisker of a score. But Max Fugler, the stout center (played both ways), almost single-handedly stuffed the vaunted Rebels from scoring, teaming with Billy Cannon on fourth down to ensure the critical goal line stand.

Mississippi would never have such a golden chance the remainder, as LSU’s defense, aided by the  “Chinese Bandits,” skunked the Rebels’ offense. Meanwhile, the Tigers’ offense generated just enough spark to score twice, making the final, relished result 14-0.

The stunning Tigers now had a clear path to the mythical national championship, and next proceeded to plaster Duke, 50-18. Dietzel’s program did face one more intense test, against the other Mississippi program, State. Though facing the Bulldogs on the road, a downpour, and plenty of mud, the Tigers survived, 7-6.

After waltzing by Tulane, 62-0, LSU was crowned the champion by the pollsters. The title was given at the time before the bowl games, but LSU proved its worth there, too, beating Clemson, 7-0, in the Sugar Bowl.

Fittingly, the Chinese Bandits had again helped the Tigers register a shutout. Incredibly, ten of the 11 opponents were held to seven points or less!

The national title would be LSU’s first and only for nearly half a century.

UCLA Picks Its Rose-Bruins 1942

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

By Bert Hancock

Entertainment giant Bing Crosby predicted this regarding the upcoming 1942 showdown between USC and UCLA for the Rose Bowl: “Southern Cal has the power. UCLA has a brilliant passing game. The attack that clicks pockets the Rose Bowl key.” Other legendary performers were split. Red Skelton put his faith in UCLA, while Jimmy Cagney offered, “The Trojans should turn in their best game of the year. I have to ride with them.” Joan Crawford simply projected, “The Bruins, 18 to 12.” As the oddsmakers called it a virtual tie, it’s no wonder there was confusion on the favorite.

Though UCLA was considered to have the more potent program this season, the Bruins had never defeated the Trojans, at best getting a few ties in the battles. The series started so one sided in 1929 (USC grinding up UCLA 76-0) that both sides agreed to better judgment to suspend things after two years until UCLA could field a competitive team. As a former Bruin suffering through those massacres confessed, “The USC-UCLA game was like a practice for USC.”

UCLA proved itself by tying the mighty Trojans upon resumption in 1936. Even so, after several more fights, the Bruins still had failed to vanquish their rivals, with a particularly costly 0-0 tie in 1939 keeping them out of the Rose Bowl and putting USC in–again.

The 1942 season paths developed into UCLA’s favor, with USC going through a rebuilding process after losing its great coach, Howard Jones. Even so, the Bruins’ own guy, “Babe” Horrell, had confused the school alumni thus far with erratic season-to-season results, even free falling to 1-9 in 1940, his second year, after a strong first year.

UCLA's Great Passer, Bob Waterfield

UCLA's Great Passer, Bob Waterfield

The only thing truly consistent with UCLA is it thus far had never made it to the Rose Bowl. And standing before it was a team it had never beaten but always despised.  Future Bruins coach “Red” Sanders (who led UCLA to its only national title in 1954), would later emphasize, “The game (USC battle) is not life or death. It’s more important than that!” It seemed fitting, in a twisted way, that the two schools had bludgeoned one another toward a 7-7 tie the year before–one day before the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor.

As Bing Crosby had accurately gauged, the contest would pit USC’s running game against the prowess of Bob Waterfield (later an NFL great with the Rams) and UCLA’s passing. Waterfield was more than a fantastic passer, though, and his running, defense (critical interception that led to a score), and punting gave UCLA a 14-7 lead, which it owned late into the contest.

USC, though obviously not as talented this time as its opponent, battled back to threaten twice, each time firing passes into the end zone that nearly were completed.

In the end, though, UCLA had survived the Trojans’ efforts while claiming the school’s first Rose Bowl berth against southern power Georgia. UCLA also won back its Victory Bell, a large bell that USC had stolen previously as a prank and only agreed to return if it could be held by the winning team.

The Bruins would fall to the Bulldogs, 9-0, and then–in typical “Babe” Horrell fashion–slide to 1-8 the following year, including two losses to USC.

While the status quo had returned with a vengeance and UCLA would not defeat USC with regularity until the 1950s, the school had broken through an immovable barrier.

Ohio State Finally Beats Michigan!

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

By Bert Hancock

After 15 years of paralytic ineptitude, Ohio State broke through with its first triumph ever over Michigan, 13-3, on October 25, 1919. Though the relished outcome couldn’t erase seemingly endless seasons of frustration, including an 86-0 drubbing, the victory ushered in a new era between the two squads.

To fully appreciate an OSU victory that now certainly comes far more frequently, it helps to know that, to this point, the Wolverines had outscored the Buckeyes by a mammoth margin of 369-21 in those first 15 games.

The 86-0 blitzkrieg in 1902 not only was the largest loss Ohio State has ever suffered, but it could have been much worse. The game was called midway through the second half, partly because it was feared that Michigan would opt not to play such a pitiful opponent anymore. To make matters more insane, touchdowns only counted five points then. With extra points often being eventful, you see how the score could easily have ballooned to over 100, even shortening the game! Ohio State’s school newspaper, The Lantern, soberly stated this in the aftermath: “Ohio had expected to be beaten, but 86 to 0 was so far beyond the thought of the most pessimistic, that the 1800 loyal rooters  were fairly shocked into dumbness. ”

It wasn’t as if the Buckeyes’ program was simply sorry at the time either, as that 1902 squad otherwise lost just once. Two years later, OSU rolled into the Michigan contest unbeaten and unscored upon, outclassing their four opponents by an average of 46-0. The host Bucks were promptly smacked by the visiting Wolverines, 31-6. Up to 1919, “victories” over the Wolverines came in the form of two ties among the many thrashings suffered.

So it was no big deal for Ohio State to enter this breakthrough event unbeaten, as was Michigan again. Further, this game was played in Ann Arbor, where OSU had scored all of six points in eight separate efforts.

The Game

Buckeye great Chic Harley, courtesy of Bentley Historical Library,  University of Michigan

Chic Harley on critical score, courtesy of Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan

Though the maize and blue suffered a blow early with the injury to a standout end on the opening kickoff, Ohio State gave generously as well, with its standout back Pete Stinchcomb coughing up the ball on the return. Michigan, already tasting another victory, fired a pass near the end zone, though it hit the ground harmlessly. After three plays, Ohio State had survived its early blunder.

The Buckeyes got even in the kicking game, breaking through to block a Michigan punt into the end zone for a touchdown late in the first quarter, along with the game’s lead, 7-0.

With quarterback Stinchcomb’s big runs, along with a 42-yard scamper by Chic Harley (who became OSU’s first ever college football Hall of Famer), Ohio State increased its lead to 13-3 in the second half. The Wolverines abandoned their normally reliable running game for the pass, but with even worse results.

Incredibly, Harley picked off four errant Michigan tosses, and the Buckeyes kept the Wolves’ out of the end zone all day. Ohio State clung ferociously to its 13-3 lead the remainder of the game, while a record Michigan crowd of over 25,000 looked on in dismay and disbelief.

Michigan’s losing but legendary coach, Fielding Yost, rarely spoke to the opponent after any game, but he made a special and classy point to visit the Buckeyes’ dressing room afterward. Yost lavished all praise on the opponent for its inspired play and brilliant strategy.

A last-game loss to Illinois prevented Ohio State from claiming the Big Ten title, but the bigger news had been its first triumph over Michigan, a breakthrough that propelled the Buckeyes to three straight over the hated rival and bolstered the energy to create Ohio Stadium in 1922.

Truly, a new era had entered the scarlet and gray’s football spirit.