John Ralston
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John Ralston (born April 26, 1927), a graduate of the University of California, played linebacker on two Cal Rose Bowl teams before earning his physical education Academic degree in 1951. He spent three seasons as an assistant at Cal before being named head coach at Utah State University in 1959. In four years, he compiled a 31-11-1 record and two Skyline Conference championships. He was born in Oakland, California.
Ralston moved to Stanford in 1963 and helped revive a sagging program. Over nine seasons, Ralston guided the team back to national respectability while building a mark of 55-36-3. In his last two seasons, 1970-71, Ralston's teams won two Pacific 8 titles and back-to-back Rose Bowl victories over Ohio State and Michigan. During Ralston's tenure at the school, Stanford quarterback Jim Plunkett won the 1970 Heisman Trophy.
In 1972, Ralston departed the Bay Area once again, this time for the Rocky Mountains and the Denver Broncos. The following year, he was UPI's choice as AFC Coach of the Year after Denver achieved its first-ever-winning season at 7-5-2. In five seasons with the Broncos, Ralston took the team to winning seasons three times, the franchise's only three winning seasons up to that time.
Overall, John Ralston coached the Denver Broncos from 1972 to 1976. With no playoff appearances his regular season win/loss/tie record was 34-33-3.
After being hired in 1972, the Broncos continue to struggle under Ralston finishing with a 5-9 record.
In 1973, a year which included the "Orange Monday," game played in front of a primetime national television audience, where the Broncos would come from behind and would earn a tie on Jim Turner's 35-yard field goal; Ralston coached the team into first place with a 6-3-2 record. With their first winning season in franchise history under their belt, and with the AFC West title on the line the Broncos season ended with a 21-17 loss to the Raiders in Oakland.
In 1974, Ralston coached the Broncos to a 7-6-1 record, for their second winning season in a row.
The 1975 season was a season of mediocre football for the Broncos and the team finished with a disappointing 6-8 record, but the following year the team played strong and finished with an impressive 9-5 record. However the record was not good enough to get the Broncos into the playoffs. Despite the strong showing Bronco players issued a protest vote of no confidence, and Coach John Ralston resigned following the season.
After leaving the Broncos, Ralston held several assistant coaching jobs which included, the Philadelphia Eagles, the San Francisco 49ers, the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League, and as a head coach in the USFL with the Oakland Invaders.
Coach John Ralston also coached in Europe. He was the head coach of the Dutch Lions, the National Football Team of The Netherlands. With the Lions, Ralston won the bronze medal in the European Championships in Helsinki, Finland, in 1991.
Preceded by Ron Turner |
San Jose State Head Coach 1993–1996 |
Succeeded by Dave Baldwin |
Preceded by Jerry Smith |
Denver Broncos Head Coach 1972–1976 |
Succeeded by Red Miller |
Preceded by Jack Curtice |
Stanford University Head Coach 1963–1971 |
Succeeded by Jack Christiansen |
Preceded by Ev Faunce |
Utah State University Head Coach 1959–1962 |
Succeeded by Tony Knap |
Denver Broncos Head Coaches |
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Filchock • Faulkner • Speedie • Malavasi • Saban • Smith • Ralston • Miller • Reeves • W. Phillips • Shanahan |
Camp • Bliss • Cross • Brooke • Chamberlain • Yost • Fickert • Clemans • Lanagan • Presley • Brown • Wylie • Evans • Powell • Van Gent • Kerr • Warner • Thornhill • Shaughnessy • Schwartz • Taylor • Curtice • Ralston • Christiansen • Walsh • Dowhower • Wiggin • Elway • Green • Willingham • Teevens • Harris • Harbaugh
Categories: Articles lacking sources from February 2007 | All articles lacking sources | San José State Spartans football coaches | Stanford Cardinal football coaches | Utah State Aggies football coaches | 1927 births | Living people | People from Oakland, California | Canadian Football League coaches | Denver Broncos coaches | United States Football League coaches | San Jose State Spartans football coaches | American football linebackers | Cal Bears football players | Cal Bears football coaches | College Football Hall of Fame | Stanford Athletic Hall of Fame