1976 Pittsburgh Panthers football team


The 1976 Pittsburgh Panthers football team represented the University of Pittsburgh in the 1976 NCAA Division I football season and is recognized as a consensus national champion. Pitt was also awarded the Lambert-Meadowlands Trophy as the best Division I team in the East.
During the 1970s, the top-ranked team won its bowl game only three times: Pittsburgh joined
celebrating Pitt's 1976 national championship
and head coach Johnny Majors.

Schedule

Roster

Coaching staff

Regular season

The previous season saw Pitt win the Sun Bowl over Kansas for an record, highlighted by wins at Georgia and Notre Dame. The stage was set for 1976, with Pitt ranked ninth in the AP preseason poll, for the Panthers to make a run for the national championship.
In the first game of the 1976 season, the Panthers faced off against Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana. A year earlier, Tony Dorsett had finished with 303 yards rushing in Pitt's 34–20 victory over the Irish. "They even grew the grass high," said Carmen DeArdo, a diehard Pitt alumnus, "and everyone knew Tony would get the ball." "They didn't let that grass grow long enough," Dorsett said later. He darted 61 yards on his first run of the season and tacked on 120 more by the end of the 31–10 Pitt win.
The season continued with a 42–14 win at Georgia Tech and a 36–19 win over Miami. The Panthers traveled to Annapolis on October 23 to face Navy and Dorsett broke the NCAA career rushing record on a 32-yard touchdown run in the victory. Dorsett's achievement prompted a mid-game celebration in which even Navy saluted the feat with a cannon blast. Pitt won a tough, hard-fought battle against struggling rival Syracuse.
On November 6, the second-ranked Panthers hosted Army at Pitt Stadium and won handily, but the significant action was taking place several hundred miles west, in West Lafayette, Indiana, where the Purdue Boilermakers held off the top-ranked Michigan Wolverines 16–14 in the closing seconds. The Pitt Stadium crowd erupted in celebration when the stadium public address announcer dramatically gave the final score from Purdue. For the first time in the modern era, Panther fans could legitimately claim, "We're number one!" Pitt defended its ranking in a close Backyard Brawl against West Virginia to go 10–0 heading into the regular season finale on national television against instate rival
At a packed Three Rivers Stadium on the night after Thanksgiving, the Nittany Lions scored first and held Dorsett to 51 yards in the first half; the game was tied at seven at halftime. Majors adjusted for the second half by shifting Dorsett from tailback to fullback, enabling him to explode for an additional 173 yards as Pitt rolled to a victory to cap an undefeated regular season.
In December, Dorsett became the first Pitt Panther to win the Heisman Trophy as the nation's best college football player. Dorsett also won the Maxwell Award, the Walter Camp Player of the Year Award, and was named UPI Player of the Year. He led the nation in rushing with 1,948 yards and was selected as an All-American. Dorsett finished his college career with 6,082 total rushing yards, then an NCAA record for career rushing.

Sugar Bowl

The 11–0 Panthers accepted an invitation to the Sugar Bowl to face fifth-ranked Georgia. Pitt defeated the Bulldogs and was voted number one by both the Associated Press and Coaches polls, claiming their ninth national championship. This was Pitt's first undefeated national championship since 1937. The American Football Coaches Association named Majors the 1976 Coach of the Year. Following this historic season, Majors returned to his alma mater, the University of Tennessee, to take the head coaching job.

Game summaries

at #11 Notre Dame

Statistics
StatisticsPittsburghNotre Dame
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

at Georgia Tech

Robert Haygood tore knee ligaments in the victory.
Statistics
StatisticsPittsburghGeorgia Tech
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

Temple

Statistics
StatisticsTemplePittsburgh
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

at Duke

Statistics
StatisticsPittsburghDuke
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

Louisville

Matt Cavanaugh sustained a hairline fracture in the left ankle during the first half.
Statistics
StatisticsLouisvillePittsburgh
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

Miami (FL)

Statistics
StatisticsMiami Pittsburgh
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

at Navy

Statistics
StatisticsPittsburghNavy
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

Syracuse

Statistics
StatisticsSyracusePittsburgh
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

Army

Statistics
StatisticsArmyPittsburgh
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

West Virginia

Statistics
StatisticsWest VirginiaPittsburgh
First downs1525
Total yards169399
Rushing yards99350
Passing yards7049
Turnovers15
Time of possession

vs. #16 Penn State

Statistics
StatisticsPittsburghPenn State
First downs
Total yards
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Turnovers
Time of possession

vs. #5 Georgia (Sugar Bowl)

Statistics
StatisticsPittsburghGeorgia
First downs2414
Total yards480181
Rushing yards288135
Passing yards19246
Turnovers16
Time of possession

Team players drafted into the NFL

PlayerPositionRoundPickNFL Club
Tony DorsettRunning back12Dallas Cowboys
Larry SwiderPunter7185Denver Broncos
Jim CorbettTight end7194Cincinnati Bengals
Al RomanoDefensive lineman11289Houston Oilers
Carson LongKicker11302Los Angeles Rams
Don ParrishDefensive end12314Atlanta Falcons

Awards and honors

Radio

Further information