Santa Clara Broncos football

Santa Clara Broncos
First season 1896
Last season 1992
Stadium Buck Shaw Stadium
Seating capacity 6,800
Field surface Grass
Location Santa Clara, CA
NCAA division NCAA Division II
Conference Division II Independent
All-time record 35224428 (.587)
Bowl record 30 (1.000)
Claimed nat'l titles 0
Conference titles 2 (1983, 1985)
Division titles 0
Heisman winners 0
Colors

Red and White

          
Rivals California Golden Bears
Stanford Cardinal
Website SantaClaraBroncos.com
For information on all Santa Clara University sports, see Santa Clara Broncos

The Santa Clara Broncos football program were the intercollegiate American football team for Santa Clara University located in Santa Clara, California. The team competed in the NCAA Division II as a Division II Independent football program. The school's first football team was fielded in 1896. Santa Clara participated in football from 1896 to 1992, compiling an all-time record of 352–244–28.[1] At the conclusion of the 1992 season, the Santa Clara football program was discontinued due to new NCAA regulations which mandated all sports be played at the same level at each university. Santa Clara had fielded all Division I teams with the exception of the Division II football team, and elected not to field a team at the Division I-AA level.[2]

Notable former players

Notable alumni include:

Championships

Conference championships

Year Conference Coach Overall Record Conference Record
1983 Western Football Conference (Co-Championship) Pat Malley 6-4-0 ?
1985 Western Football Conference Terry Malley 8-2-1 ?
Total conference championships 2

Conference affiliations:

Bowl game appearances

Season Date Bowl W/L Opponent PF PA Coach Notes
1936 January 1, 1937 Sugar Bowl W LSU 21 14 Buck Shaw notes
1937 January 1, 1938 Sugar Bowl W LSU 6 0 Buck Shaw notes
1949 January 2, 1950 Orange Bowl W Kentucky 21 13 Len Casanova notes
Total 3 bowl games 3–0 48 27

References

  1. "Santa Clara Historical Data". College Football Data Warehouse. Retrieved 2012-06-20.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.