It’s been so long since Boston University dropped football (1997), it almost seems strange to think the Terriers even had a team. Whereas the University of Vermont’s lack of football remains a curiosity today (after all, how many D-I state flagship schools outside of Alaska don’t have football?), BU’s program seemed forgotten almost from the day it vanished (see also Northeastern). Maybe it’s because in New England we tend to judge the success of an athletic program by the quality of the hockey team (that’s an observation and certainly not a complaint), and football at many places is an appetizer for the icy main course.
But anyway, BU churned out some quality teams and players for many years: Names like Bill Brooks, Pat Hughes, Reggie Rucker and Bruce Taylor easily roll off the tongue of any long-time Terrier supporter. Oh yeah, and some guy named Agganis, who has a sports arena named for him AND a statue on campus.
While BU won five Yankee Conference titles between 1980-93, it’s a team from before the YC era that raises an eyebrow: The 1969 bunch, which went 9-2 and played the first, last and only bowl game in its history.
Although the Terriers didn’t join the Yankee Conference until 1972, they played a de facto YC slate in ’69, facing every conference team except New Hampshire and going 4-1 (perennial power UMass was the only setback). While the wins were rarely blowouts, they kept piling up. One of the few routs was a 30-14 win on Nov. 15 over perpetual powerhouse Delaware, which itself went 9-2 and played in a bowl game. One week later, BU defeated Temple 21-3 (although an FBS team now, Temple was closer to a Yankee Conference-level team then) and earned an invite to play San Diego State in the Pasadena Bowl, held at the Rose Bowl stadium. The Terriers lost, 28-7. (Alas, I can’t seem to find many game details about this one, but according to this outstanding article, not everyone was crazy about playing one more game, even if it was in sunny California in front of 45,000 fans — a huge number for a second-tier bowl game.)
BU faces San Diego State in the 1969 Pasadena Bowl. These photos are from the San Diego State digital archive, where you can fine even more photos from this game and literally thousands from the Aztecs' long illustrious history. |
BU’s stars that year included Hughes, a captain and linebacker who played 10 years in the NFL; defensive back Taylor, who spent eight years with the San Francisco 49ers; and fellow DB Fred Barry, who spent a season with the Pittsburgh Steelers. First-year coach Larry Naviaux guided the Terriers three more season before moving to UConn, where he won the Yankee Conference title in his first season. His career record was 37-45-1.
Apparently the folks at Topps loved its 1973 Bruce Taylor card so much, they recycled the photo for the 1976 version. |
Pat Hughes' 1974 Topps card. |
One small digression: San Diego State had some interesting names, too: Coach Don Coryell, who went on to a successful NFL career with the St. Louis Cardinals and San Diego Chargers; quarterbacks Dennis Shaw and Brian Sipe, who went on to NFL careers (Shaw was a bust; Sipe was a star for years with the Cleveland Browns and was the NFL’s MVP in 1980); and linebacker Carl Weathers, whose brief pro career didn’t pan out and went to star in some indy boxing flick. 😊
I’ve discussed BU’s unis in a much earlier post, but I’ll reiterate what I said then: I love ‘em. The interlocking “BU” reusables Baylor’s (which, according to Helmet Project, launched its “BU” helmet in ’69), and the jerseys, with “BOSTON UNIVERSITY” across the front in tiny letters, recall Michigan State’s from that era.
(One other thing: This is the first post with a new uniform template, which is why I haven’t been posting much as of late. Converting hundreds of uniform graphics takes time!)
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