1968 Rose Bowl

1968 Rose Bowl
54th Rose Bowl Game
1 2 3 4 Total
USC 7 0 7 0 14
Indiana 0 3 0 0 3
Date January 1, 1968
Season 1967
Stadium Rose Bowl
Location Pasadena, California
MVP O.J. Simpson (USC TB)
Halftime show Spirit of Troy, Indiana University Marching Hundred
Attendance 102,996
United States TV coverage
Network NBC
Announcers: Curt Gowdy and Paul Christman
Rose Bowl
 < 1967  1969 > 

The 1968 Rose Bowl was a college football bowl game played on January 1, 1968. It was the 54th Rose Bowl Game. The USC Trojans defeated the Indiana Hoosiers, 143. O. J. Simpson, the USC tailback, was named the Rose Bowl Player Of The Game.

Teams

This was the first and to date, only Rose Bowl appearance for Indiana. Being an even-numbered year for the bowl game, Indiana wore their crimson jerseys as the home team and USC wore their white shirts as the designated visiting team.

USC Trojans

The top-ranked and Pac-8 champion Trojans came into the game with a 91 record, losing only to Oregon State in a close 30 game. They earned the #1 ranking after claiming a close 2120 win over rival and then-#1 UCLA in the last week of their season, guaranteeing their spot in the Big Ten/Pac-8 classic. They were led by their powerful tailback O. J. Simpson. Unlike the Big Ten and the old Pacific Coast Conference, the Pac-8 had no rule against a team going to the Rose Bowl in consecutive years, thus allowing the Trojans to go to the Rose Bowl for the second straight year.

Indiana Hoosiers

The #4-ranked and co-Big Ten champion Hoosiers also came into the game with a 91 record, losing to Minnesota a week before defeating Purdue. A three-way league title championship was created when Indiana, Minnesota, and Purdue all finished with 61 league records, each defeating and losing to one of the other. Purdue was ineligible because they had played in the 1967 Rose Bowl, beating Southern Cal, 14-13. The conference's athletic directors voted to award the Rose Bowl bid to Indiana over Minnesota, albeit not unanimously. Indiana was considered the logical choice because they were the only Big Ten school that had never played in the game.[1] Minnesota coach Murray Walmath argued in vain that the Gophers deserved the bid because their prior two Rose Bowl teams, after the 1960 and 1961 seasons, received at-large bids because there was no agreement between the Big Ten and the Rose Bowl at the time; thus, technically, the Gophers never had received a Rose Bowl bid pursuant to that arrangement. Ironically, if Purdue had beaten Indiana in the season finale, the Boilermakers would have had sole possession of the conference championship, but Minnesota presumably would have received the Rose Bowl bid as the second place team in lieu of the ineligible Boilers. Instead, Indiana scored a 19-14 upset over Purdue, giving Minnesota a share of the conference championship but costing them a trip to Pasadena. Quarterback Harry Gonso led the Hoosiers into their first ever bowl game.

Scoring

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

References