Year Game Played: | 1977 |
Game Name: | Rose Bowl |
Subheader: | 63rd Rose Bowl Game |
Football Season: | 1976 |
Visitor Name Short: | Michigan |
Visitor Nickname: | Wolverines |
Visitor School: | University of Michigan |
Home Name Short: | USC |
Home Nickname: | Trojans |
Home School: | USC |
Visitor Record: | 10 - 1 |
Visitor Conference: | Big Ten |
Home Record: | 10 - 1 |
Home Conference: | Pac-8 |
Visitor Coach: | Bo Schembechler |
Home Coach: | John Robinson |
Visitor Rank Ap: | 2 |
Visitor Rank Coaches: | 2 |
Home Rank Ap: | 3 |
Home Rank Coaches: | 3 |
Visitor 1Q: | 0 |
Visitor 2Q: | 6 |
Visitor 3Q: | 0 |
Visitor 4Q: | 0 |
Home 1Q: | 0 |
Home 2Q: | 7 |
Home 3Q: | 0 |
Home 4Q: | 7 |
Date Game Played: | January 1 |
Stadium: | Rose Bowl |
City: | Pasadena, California |
Mvp: | Vince Evans (USC QB) |
Odds: | Michigan by 4 to 6 points[1] [2] |
Referee: | James Mercer (Pac-8); (split crew: Pac-8, Big Ten) |
Attendance: | 106,182 |
Us Network: | NBC |
Us Announcers Link: | List of announcers of major college bowl games |
Us Announcers: | Curt Gowdy, Don Meredith |
The 1977 Rose Bowl was a college football bowl game played on January 1, 1977. It was the 63rd Rose Bowl Game. The USC Trojans, champions of the Pacific-8 Conference,[3] defeated the Michigan Wolverines, champions of the Big Ten Conference,
USC quarterback Vince Evans was named the Rose Bowl Player of the Game, and Trojan freshman tailback Charles White, subbing for Heisman Trophy runner-up Ricky Bell, who was injured in the first quarter, rushed for 114 yards and It was the third consecutive win for the Pac-8 in the Rose Bowl, and the seventh of the
Michigan won their first eight games and spent most of the season ranked first in the polls, until a upset loss to Purdue on November 6. They capped off their Big Ten championship with a shutout of arch rival Ohio State; they were ranked second in both major polls at the end of the regular season.
Under first-year head coach John Robinson, USC was upset in the season opener at home by Missouri, [4] It was the Trojans' fifth-straight regular season loss, dating back to the prior season when John McKay had announced his end-of-season resignation (leaving for the expansion Tampa Bay Buccaneers of the NFL). USC won the rest of their games in 1976, climaxed by a win over #2 UCLA to clinch the conference and a subsequent 17–13 victory over
Undefeated Pittsburgh, led by Heisman Trophy winner Tony Dorsett, was the consensus #1 team entering the bowls and played #4 Georgia in the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans. USC and Michigan hoped Georgia would upset Pitt to set up the Rose Bowl as a national championship showdown,[5] but Pitt had a dominant win earlier in the day to keep its top ranking in the USC finished second and Michigan dropped only