Posts Tagged ‘notre dame’

The First Probation

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

“The National Collegiate Athletic association, after muddling thru 33 years of administrative activity by the side door method of educative principles, is ready to adopt the “big stick” policy of the late Teddy Roosevelt.

“Its December bulletin prepares the way for a new program which will permit infliction of penalties of drastic consequence on erring colleges and universities.

“In other words, the NCAA has ordered itself a set of boxing gloves instead of another pair of mittens.”
— Associated Press, Dec. 30, 1939

By Gaylon Krizak

A not-so-funny thing happened on the way to pick up that big stick. Some folks fought a few hundred bigger battles with much larger sticks and called it World War II. Perhaps you read about it.

It would be almost 14 more years before the NCAA actually donned the gloves and came out counterpunching suspected scofflaws. And it was not (officially) until Jan. 8, 1954, that any of its blows landed.

The phrase is commonplace these days, but before that day no NCAA football program had found itself “on probation.” Yet by the end of that day’s business, two notable programs found themselves penalized for “major infractions.”

One received a multiyear sentence. The other received a figurative slap on the wrist.

One was a regional power on the rise; its heyday would not come on a national scale for another two decades.

The other, in the minds of many, merely was synonymous with college football.

Arizona State

Sports penalized: Football (officially; in fact, all Sun Devils athletes were ruled ineligible for NCAA championship competition in the 1953-54 school year)

Infractions summary: “FINANCIAL AID. IMPERMISSIBLE RECRUITING: transportation; tryouts. OUTSIDE FUNDS”

What happened? Arizona State College was the first school to claim a double-standard between NCAA haves and have-nots. It hardly would be the last.

An August 1953 story from the Associated Press detailed the transgressions: “The school was charged with permitting pay to athletes, transporting prospective players to the campus for tryouts, and the Sun Angel foundation accused of collecting money to give financial aid to athletes.”

Jim Coles, then the Sun Angel president, said he was puzzled by the severity of the penalty. Walter Bimson, president of the board of regents, said the NCAA action was “arbitrary, unfair and too severe … taken without consideration of all the actors involved.” School president Dr. Grady Gammage blamed the mess on “disgruntled former employees.”

Nonetheless, Gammage acknowledged: “We know that there were infractions of the NCAA regulations. Therefore, the constructive thing for us to do is to accept the decision and put our house in order — which we have done.”

For the defending Border Conference champion Sun Devils, that meant making the best of a 10-game schedule that began Sept. 19 against the San Diego Naval Air Training Center. To add further insult, at least indirectly, the NCAA had voted before the season to return to one-platoon football, hampering teams such as the Sun Devils built for more specialized play.

An injury to halfback Dick Curran in the opening 19-14 loss to the Sailors set the tone for a disappointing 4-5-1 season. Arizona State’s first opening-game loss since 1938 came after it took a 14-12 halftime lead, but faded noticeably down the stretch, especially along the line.

The first four losses came by a combined 17 points, but the fifth proved the biggest blow of all: a 35-0 shellacking by in-state rival Arizona in Tempe. The Sun Devils had beaten the Wildcats 20-18 in Tucson the year before as part of a four-game winning streak in the rivalry, but before a crowd of 16,000 plus a statewide TV audience, UA got its revenge, outgaining ASC 538-112.

Gammage after the game expressed full confidence in coach Clyde Smith, with a United Press story adding: “NCAA officials recently praised efforts of Smith, former Indiana University coach, and college administrators to carry out an athletic program in line with NCAA regulations.”

But things did not improve appreciably in year two of the probation. After a 5-2 start, Smith’s Sun Devils dropped their final three games, capped by a 54-14 humiliation at Arizona. Smith left coaching to become the ASC athletic director after the season, replaced by a rising young assistant from Michigan State who beat out a list of candidates that included Ara Parseghian and Bill Yeoman.

His name? Dan Devine.

Notre Dame

Sports penalized: Football

Infractions summary: “Improper tryouts.”

What happened? “Notre Dame’s troubles,” as explained in an August 1953 Associated Press story, “may stem largely from the notorious Charlie Sticka incident. Sticka, a standout freshman fullback from little Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., showed up on the Notre Dame campus last January and Trinity officials immediately yelled ‘robbery.’ Embarrassed, Notre Dame told Sticka he was ineligible to play for the Irish. Whereupon Sticka went back to Trinity.”

When the NCAA hammer came down, the Notre Dame reaction was immediate and predictable. Said school executive vice president Rev. Edmund P. Joyce: “It is ironic to be subjected to public opprobrium for a minor offense which was decisively handled on the university level. There are many areas of really serious abuses in the intercollegiate athletic world toward which the NCAA could have much more profitably turned its attention.”

The penalty? Merely a public reprimand. No sanctions, no bowl penalty (which wouldn’t have mattered; the Irish were in the midst of a 45-year self-imposed postseason rejection period).

The slap on the wrist didn’t faze voters in the preseason Associated Press poll: Notre Dame was a runaway choice for No. 1, well ahead of defending national champion Michigan State. And that was where the Irish remained until Nov. 21, when Notre Dame was fortunate to play thrice-beaten Iowa to a 14-14 tie in South Bend, Ind. Irish players feigned injuries to stop the clock before each ND touchdown, one just before halftime, the other with eight seconds left in the game.

On Oct. 24, the Irish ended No. 4 Georgia Tech’s 31–game unbeaten streak with a 27-14 victory at South Bend. But Notre Dame received a scare when coach Frank Leahy collapsed during halftime. He was taken to a hospital with what was described as a “muscular spasm” in the lower chest. Leahy coached his team from home via television the next week, guiding the Irish to a 38-7 rout of Navy, and was back in charge completely when Notre Dame nipped Penn 28-20.

Johnny Lattner, a standout halfback on both sides of the ball, edged Minnesota’s Paul Giel by 56 votes in Heisman Trophy voting. He became the fourth Notre Dame player to win the Heisman in Leahy’s 11 years.

The Irish finished 9-0-1 and ranked No. 2 behind 10-0 Maryland. Leahy called his squad “the greatest football team Notre Dame ever has had.” Then, after weeks of denying that he planned to retire, Leahy left on Jan. 31, 1954, citing the advice of his doctors after what later was revealed as a pancreatic attack during the Georgia Tech game.
His overall record of 107–13–9 was good for an .864 winning percentage, second all-time only to Knute Rockne’s .881; Leahy was 87-11-9 at Notre Dame.

Notre Dame went with Terry Brennan — at 25, the youngest head coach in the country — whose first team finished 8-1 and ranked No. 4. His second was 8-2, but a 42-20 season-ending loss to Southern Cal was a harbinger of things to come. Brennan and his successor, Joe Kuharich, combined to go 49-41 in nine seasons before Notre Dame hired Ara Parseghian and returned to its accustomed status as a perennial national power.

Parseghian’s successor, by the way? Dan Devine.

It would be another 17 years before Notre Dame football received another “major infractions” penalty, and another 28 years after that. Only the 1999 violations drew a tangible penalty: the loss of one scholarship each in the 2000-01 and ’01-02 academic years.

Arizona State, meanwhile, holds the dubious distinction (or rather co-holds with SMU) as the most penalized NCAA Division I program. Seven more “major infractions” probations — four of which were specific to football — would follow the first one, the most recent coming in 2005.

Proof that some things never change? The 2005 NCAA infractions summary cited “(i)mpermissible benefits; impermissible financial aid; unethical conduct and a lack of institutional control. Impermissible benefits and financial aid provided to a football student-athlete by a former member of the institution’s athletics compliance staff.”

Oct. 6, 1934: Texans clear away the tumbleweeds

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

by Gaylon Krizak-Guest Writer

Texas in motion pictures frequently is portrayed as one big monochrome haven for dust and tumbleweeds — even when the story is set in the tree-laden east, along the Gulf coast or in one of the state’s many concrete-and-steel cities. As famed radio announcer Bill Stern was said to have advised: “Never let facts stand in the way of a good story.”

And so it was on Oct. 6, 1934, as two college football teams from the Lone Star State made their way to the state of Indiana to, in the view of the experts, receive another lesson in how the sport was really played.

Texas before that day was a place from which many nationally notable players came, not a place where they stayed to play. Players who genuinely deserved national recognition — Louis Jordan of Texas, Joel Hunt of Texas A&M and Raymond “Rags” Matthews of TCU — might be thrown a third-team All-America bone, but never were mentioned among the true elite. Baylor guard Barton “Botchey” Koch in 1930 became the state’s first consensus first-team All-American.

Teams from the state rarely faced the powers of the day — generally acknowledged as teams from the Ivy League, the Big Ten (then known as the Western) Conference and the two service academies (Army and Navy; there was no Air Force), as well as a smattering of schools in the Northeast, South, Midwest and California … and, of course, Notre Dame. When they did, the results usually were disastrous: Notre Dame, for example, walloped Texas 36-7 and Rice 55-2 during a three-day swing through Texas in 1915.

How fitting, then, that the Longhorns and Owls were the Texans who, not quite 19 years later, traveled north in an attempt to clear some of the dust off the nation’s conventional wisdom.

A Notre Damer beats Notre Dame

The University of Texas fielded the state’s first intercollegiate football team and, for the most part, its most successful in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Longhorns were unbeaten in their first season, winning two games each over town teams from Dallas and San Antonio in games that spanned late 1893 and early 1894. Their first losing season did not come until Clyde Littlefield — a star on Texas’ 1912-15 teams — coached UT to a 4-5-2 record in 1933 — not surprisingly, his last year at the Longhorns’ helm.

Brought in to restore some luster and perhaps even transform Texas into a national name was Jack Chevigny, a renowned back at Notre Dame who reportedly scored “one for the Gipper” in the Irish’s famed 1928 victory over Army. Five years later, Chevigny wound up in Austin, where he coached St. Edward’s University to the Texas Conference title in his only season before being hired by UT.

Chevigny’s alma mater happened to be the second team on the ’34 Texas schedule, and he was asked if he wanted the school to back out of the game. No, Chevigny replied, and immediately began zeroing in on the Irish. In his Longhorns debut, a 12-6 victory over Texas Tech, Chevigny reportedly told star back Bohn Hilliard to fake a limp after scoring on a 94-yard run, so as to fool Notre Dame scouts.

Once in South Bend — and with Hilliard miraculously at full speed — Chevigny stoked his team to a fever pitch with an emotional pregame speech. He then used his knowledge of the Notre Dame personnel to full advantage, having Charley Coates aim his opening kickoff at Irish halfback George Melinkovich, who was said to have a penchant for early game fumbles. Melinkovich dutifully bobbled the ball at the Notre Dame 5-yard line and fumbled for good at the 18, where Texas’ Jack Gray recovered.

On first-and-goal from the 8, Hilliard rode guard Joe Smartt through a hole at right tackle, then followed his touchdown run by kicking the extra point. It turned out to be one  of the biggest PAT’s in Texas history — Notre Dame needed a drive of just 9 yards for a second-quarter TD after a Longhorns fumble, but Wayne Millner missed the extra-point try after Melinkovich’s fourth-down blast from inside the Texas 1.

The 7-6 score held the rest of the afternoon as each team threatened but failed to add points as the game wound down. The game ended with the Longhorns at the Irish 4, with Hilliard fumbling four plays after returning an interception to the 12.

Notre Dame’s loss, which spoiled the home debut of former “Four Horsemen” member Elmer Layden as head coach, was its first ever in a season-opening game.

Rice plays spoiler against the Boilers

Rice Institute (it would not be designated a university until 1960) didn’t win a football championship during the first 20 years of the Southwest Conference. It also entered the 1934 season with a new coach: Jimmy Kitts, an offensive innovator. Kitts’ fortunes were boosted by the return of star backs Bill Wallace and John McCauley, who had missed the 1933 season after an exam-cheating scandal in ’32.

The Owls were 1-0-1 when they traveled to West Lafayette, Ind., having beaten Loyola (New Orleans) 12-0 and tied LSU 9-9. The Boilermakers, like the Fighting Irish against Texas, were playing their season opener, which drew only 12,000 as Purdue fans expected a light test a week before their trip to South Bend.

The game entered the fourth period scoreless; both teams ran the ball well during the first three quarters, but each also threw three interceptions. Rice finally broke through early in the fourth when McCauley took a short pass from Wallace and broke tackle after tackle en route to a 45-yard touchdown.

From there, the Owls’ defense took command, recording a fumble recovery, a blocked punt and an interception before Frank Steen forced and recovered a fumble in the Purdue end zone for the clinching TD in a 14-0 Rice victory.

The Associated Press, in its roundup of college football games for Sunday newspapers, said of the day’s events:

“The football experts had better retire to their bomb-proof shelters.

“In as great a succession of early-season upsets as the game ever has known, Notre Dame’s Ramblers, Purdue, Michigan, Cornell and Pennsylvania all went down to stunning and unexpected defeats yesterday.

“Two of these form reversals were credited to invading outfits from the Southwest Conference, the Texas Longhorns and Rice Owls.”

Epilogue

The Longhorns again were the invading outfit Oct. 20 as Texas (3-1) met Rice (4-0-1) in a game so widely anticipated that Humble Oil set up for it a network of clear-channel radio stations in Dallas, Houston and San Antonio.

Rice carried a 7-6 lead into the fourth quarter before Texas broke through, a 74-yard pass from Buster Jurecka to Jimmy Hadlock setting up Hilliard’s short field goal with three minutes left. But in those final 180 seconds, the Owls struck twice — a 67-yard TD pass from Wallace to Ray Smith, followed by a 35-yard interception return by Harry Fouke — for a 20-9 win that was their springboard to their first SWC title.

Rice wound up 9-1-1 and was fifth in the final Dickinson Ratings, the main college football rankings system until the Associated Press poll debuted in 1936. Kitts also led the Owls to the 1937 SWC title, but had losing records the following two seasons before leaving to coach his alma mater, Virginia Tech, for three years. He was inducted into the Texas Sports Hall of Fame in 1956.

Chevigny’s first Texas team finished 8-2-1, far and away his best record in his three years with the Longhorns. He’s the only UT coach to finish with an overall losing record (13-14-2).

(Speaking of Bill Stern … he told the story after Chevigny’s death on Iwo Jima during World War II that a gold pen given to Chevigny after the 1934 upset — supposedly carrying this inscription: “To Jack Chevigny, an old Notre Damer who beat Notre Dame” — was used by a Japanese admiral during the signing of the peace treaty. No authentication was ever found.)

Notre Dame beat Purdue 18-7, but both teams went on to record subpar seasons. The Irish finished 6-3, while the Boilermakers stumbled to a 5-3 mark.

SMU and TCU also recorded noteworthy intersectional wins in 1934. The Mustangs downed Fordham 26-14 on Oct. 27, and the Horned Frogs beat Santa Clara 9-7 on Dec. 8. That set the stage for the SWC’s true leap into the limelight the following season, when SMU visited TCU with both teams unbeaten and vying for the conference’s first-ever Rose Bowl berth. SMU won 20-14, then dropped a 7-0 decision to Stanford in Pasadena, Calif., while TCU was downing LSU 3-2 in the Sugar Bowl that same day.

The Mustangs’ No. 1 finish in the final Dickinson Ratings marked the first of three SWC national championships in the 1930s. TCU, led by Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Davey O’Brien, won the title — only the third awarded by the Associated Press — in 1938, and Texas A&M won it the following season.

By 1940, the state’s previous college football reputation was driftin’ along with the tumblin’ tumbleweeds, to quote a popular Sons of the Pioneers song of the era.

Authored — like the upsets that began to turn the perception of the SWC around — in 1934.