Sunday, July 31, 2022

Columbia Lions (1968)

Whether you're a fan of sports history or American history, 1968 was an interesting year.

Columbia University was in the news quite a bit that year, and 99% of the time, it wasn't for football

A hotshot Ivy League quarterback was the talk of college football, and 99% of the time, it was this guy.

Although student protests and Brian Dowling dominated the headlines in Ivy-ville, a Columbia quarterback was making a name for himself. Marty Domres, an Ithaca, NY, native who opted for Columbia over his hometown Cornell Big Red, set at least 10 school records during his three years under center, and a Columbia Daily Spectator article from '68 said he set 31 school, league, regional and national records overall. 

Marty Domres. What's interesting is that he's wearing the 1970-73 uniform in this picture,
although he played at Columbia from 1966-68. Looking through Spectator archives, it appears
the Lions may have worn these for preseason headshots only.

His numbers appear quite modest in retrospect: His 4,492 career passing yards would have been third in FCS football for just the 2021 season. In a 46-20 season-ending win over Brown, Domres set Ivy records for attempts (54), completions (30) and yards (396), numbers regularly surpassed on any given Saturday. But as I've droned on more times than I care to remember on this little ol' blog, the QB's best pass was a handoff to the running back in those olden times. But Columbia, being bereft of talent, attached itself to Domres' rocket arm and let it fly. And when Domres wasn't throwing the ball, he usually scooped the ball under his arm and ran with it (198 rushing yards, 6 TDs) whenever his offensive line melted, which was often. 

Domres, right, lets 'er rip in the season finale against Brown.

A 44-16 loss to Princeton in Week 2 might sum up Domres' career best. Domres, "throwing from a roll-out, from a drop back pattern and lying on his back," in the words of the Daily Princetonian,  was 28-for-53 for 372 yards and a TD pass (not to mention five of his 15 interceptions that season). Quoth the Columbia Daily Spectator: "On almost every pass, the senior quarterback was demolished immediately after releasing the ball, and there were several occasions when you simply knew he wasn't going to get up. But he did. ... Domres' scrambling, passing and apparent sense of masochism with regard to defensive linemen scored high marks ..." No wonder he drew an ovation from the Princeton fans at Palmer Stadium when he walked off the field for the final time. 

Domres runs for his life — again — vs. Princeton.

While Domres was one of two QBs named to the all-Ivy team (Dowling was the other), he lacked Dowling's supporting cast, and the Lions went 2-7 for the third straight year. (In 1969, without Domres, Columbia slipped to 1-8.) Domres was a first-round draft pick of the San Diego Chargers in the 1969 NFL/AFL draft and was a backup for three years until 1972, when he was dealt to the Baltimore Colts and became the answer to a trivia question: Who replaced John Unitas as the Colts' QB when Johnny U was benched?

Under first-year coach Frank Navarro, Columbia's uniforms ditched 1965-67's rather busy look. Light blue pants and the faux-New York Jets jerseys were out, replaced with a simpler design used until 1970, when shoulder stripes were added ... although if you look at the above photo of Domres, you'll see the 70s shirts were hanging around, at least in the preseason.

I found this on Reddit while doing a Google search 
for anything Domres-related. Umm ...


Saturday, July 23, 2022

Colgate Raiders (1964)

 

All right, we're overdue for a reach into the bag 'o random, and we pull out the 1964 Colgate (Red) Raiders. 

The Team: The 'Gate went 7-2, good enough for third place among "major" independents, although six of the Raiders' nine foes are FCS teams and a seventh (Merchant Marine) currently plays in Division III. And speaking of the Mariners, the sons of King's Point fell to Colgate 21-0 in the first college football game played at Shea Stadium. According to this list, only five other college games were ever played at the old home of the J-E-T-S. 

Not your typical team photo, as the Raiders line up 
in a "V" formaton.

Colgate gets defensive against Merchant Marine at Shea Stadium.

The Players: Quarterback Gerald Barudin threw for 605 yards and ran for 200 more, while Lee Woltman ran for 402 yards and caught for 192 more. Peter Beaulieu had a team-high 347 receiving yards in that run-first, pass-later era.

The Coach: Hal Lahar was in his second stint at Colgate following a .500 run at Houston; he apparently was the first coach in "major" college history to serve two separate stints at the same school, not counting guys like Frank Leahy who served in World War II. He was 53-40-8 at Colgate from 1952-56 and 1962-67 before he stepped down to become athletic director.

The Uniforms: Were it not for the white shoulder stripes on the home jerseys, Colgate's unis would almost be dead ringers for Alabama's. It's definitely one of the simpler styles of that era, even by 1960s standards. The Raiders wore sleeve numbers on the road, but not at home. 

Colgate (in white) chases down Holy Cross in '64.

The Fallout: The 'Gate went 6-3-1 in 1965 and 8-1-1 in '66 (future Oakland Raider running back Marv Hubbard was the Colgate Raiders' big star) before collapsing to 2-8 in '67, when Lahar stepped down.