1975 UCLA Bruins football team


The 1975 UCLA Bruins football team represented the University of California, Los Angeles in the 1975 NCAA Division I football season. Led by second-year head coach Dick Vermeil, the Bruins won their first Pacific-8 championship in a decade and were 8–2–1 in the regular season. On New Year's Day, UCLA upset previously undefeated and top-ranked Ohio State in the Rose Bowl and climbed to fifth in the final rankings.

Regular season

Coming off an injury-plagued 1974 season at 6–3–2, UCLA began the season ranked #16. A season-opening 37–21 win over Iowa State in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum saw them move up to twelfth; this was followed by a 34–28 win over #10 Tennessee. But they stumbled in a turnover-plagued 20–20 tie at Air Force; second-ranked Ohio State traveled west and handed UCLA its first loss of the season, on October 4. After the game, head coach Woody Hayes prophetically told his team that they would be facing UCLA again in the Rose Bowl. UCLA was the only opponent to score more than 14 points in a game all season against Ohio State, and they did it twice.
The Ohio State loss dropped the Bruins out of the top 20, but they returned to #13 after wins over Stanford, Washington State, and a key win over California. But another loss, this time to Washington 17–13, dropped them back out of the top 20 and resulted in a five-way tie at the top of the Pac-8 between UCLA, California, Stanford, USC, and Washington.
After a pair of wins over the Oregon schools, the Bruins went into their season-ending game against rival USC needing a win to go to the Rose Bowl; a loss or tie would send California to Pasadena. Despite fumbling 11 times and losing 8, UCLA beat the Trojans 25–22. UCLA ended up tied with California for the Pac-8 championship, but advanced to the Rose Bowl on the strength of their 28–14 win over the Golden Bears. The Bruins went into the Rose Bowl ranked #11. Ironically, the 1975 USC-UCLA game was legendary coach John McKay and Vermeil's final game at the Coliseum.
It was the only bowl appearance for Vermeil in his two seasons at UCLA; a month later he left for the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League.

Schedule

Game summaries

Ohio State

1st quarter scoring: UCLA – James Sarpy 13-yard pass from John Sciarra ; OSU – Greene 2-yard run
2nd quarter scoring: OSU – Johnson 3-yard run ; OSU – Johnson 2-yard run ; OSU – Greene 17-yard run
3rd quarter scoring: OSU – A. Griffin 17-yard run ; OSU – Klaban 34-yard field goal; UCLA – Eddie Ayers 2-yard run
4th quarter scoring: UCLA – Ayers 1-yard run ; OSU – Klaban 42-yard field goal

Ohio State (Rose Bowl)

1st quarter scoring: Ohio State – Tom Klaban 42-yard field goal
2nd quarter scoring: No score
3rd quarter scoring: UCLA – Brett White 33-yard field goal; UCLA – Wally Henry 16-yard pass from John Sciarra ; UCLA – Henry 67-yard pass from Sciarra
4th quarter scoring: Ohio State – Pete Johnson 3-yard run ; UCLA – Wendell Tyler 54-yard run

Players and coaches

Roster

34 returning lettermen from Coach Dick Vermeil's first team that was 6–3–2 in 1974.

Offense

The following players were claimed in the 1975 NFL Draft.
PlayerPositionRoundPickNFL club
Fulton KuykendallLinebacker6132Atlanta Falcons
Eugene ClarkOffensive Guard9222Pittsburgh Steelers
Art KuehnCenter15384Washington Redskins
Myke HortonOffensive Tackle17428New England Patriots

The following players were claimed in the 1976 NFL Draft.
PlayerPositionRoundPickNFL club
Cliff FrazierDefensive Tackle241Kansas City Chiefs
Randy CrossCenter242San Francisco 49ers
John SciarraDefensive Back4103Chicago Bears
Phil McKinnelyTackle9246Atlanta Falcons
Norman AndersenWide Receiver11299Chicago Bears
Terry TautoloLinebacker13353Philadelphia Eagles
Brett WhitePunter15412Philadelphia Eagles
Dale CurryLinebacker15430Dallas Cowboys

The following player was claimed in the 1977 NFL Draft.
PlayerPositionRoundPickNFL club
Wendell TylerRunning Back379Los Angeles Rams
Rick WalkerTight End485Cincinnati Bengals
Ray BurksLinebacker12318Kansas City Chiefs