Slideshow: Covers of printed programs of football
games in which Linfield College competed. These printed programs were for sale
on ebay on 8/25/2017
Sunday, August 27, 2017
Thursday, August 24, 2017
Monday, August 21, 2017
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
For Linfielders, Augusta, Georgia, means college football, not professional golf
Augusta,
Georgia.
See 'Linfield College Football history: Bowl and iconic games'
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2017/08/linfield-college-football-history-bowl.html
Located
on the Georgia/South Carolina boarder, Augusta is Georgia's second largest and
second oldest city, about 150 miles east of Atlanta.
For
many, Augusta means a prestigious professional golf tournament.
For
Linfielders it means a 1965 championship college football game and a racist
incident after that game.
Although
the incident was negative, Linfield’s positive response, delivered by Paul
Durham, Linfield football coach, is a never should be forgotten part of
Linfield history.
The
1965 Linfield football Wildcats won all three of its non-conference games and all
five Northwest Conference games going into the NAIA (National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics) championship playoffs featuring four teams.
In
the NAIA semi-finals, the Wildcats traveled to Midland, Texas, and upset favored
Sul Ross State of Texas, 30-27.
Hotel Richmond -- now Richmond Summit, a low-income apartment complex -- on Broad Street in February 2017. Photo credit: Google Street View.
Linfield
and St. John’s of Minnesota traveled to Augusta to practice prior to the game.
Both teams stayed in Augusta Town House hotel which was headquarters for the
teams and NAIA officials.
In
the NAIA Championship Bowl game held Saturday afternoon, Dec. 11, 1965, at ARC
(Academy of Richmond County) Stadium in Augusta, Linfield lost, 33-0.
Following
the game, the Linfield and St. John’s football teams, coaches and staffs along
with NAIA officials attended the NAIA Football Hall of Fame banquet in the
historic Hotel Richmond in downtown Augusta. During the event five were
inducted into the “Hall.”
The
banquet included a sit-down meal for everyone in attendance. While that was the
plan, everyone from Linfield sat down. No one from Linfield ate.
But
first, some background…
Linfield
1965 football team player Odis Avritt (see photo of Odis as a Linfield football
player), an African American, said, “Several days prior to the team departing
McMinnville for Augusta, following practice, I sought out Coach Durham. Many
questions were on my mind regarding going to the ‘Deep South’ and it seemed
appropriate to share my concerns with him and get some answers to my
apprehensions. My main question was, ‘Were we going to be separated as a team?’
”
During
times of overt racial discrimination, it was not uncommon for sports teams
staying overnight on the road to have separate lodging, white players and
coaches in a hotel and black players and coaches elsewhere.
“Realizing
that the furthest East my travels had taken me was to St. Louis, Missouri, and
Midland, Texas (for the Linfield vs. Sul Ross 1965 playoff football game), the
idea of Georgia was beyond comprehension. Coach Durham assured me that the
Linfield Wildcat football team would be together throughout the entire
experience. Coach always had a way with words and you could trust his guidance.
He said we would stay together as a team and we did,” Avritt said.
RACIST
INCIDENT IN AUGUSTA
After
the game as Linfield’s players, coaches and staff entered the hotel’s lobby en
route to the banquet, Coach Durham was told by the hotel restaurant manager
that any "colored people" -- for Linfield that meant African Americans and people
of color from Hawaii -- with Linfield would have to eat in the restaurant’s
kitchen.
Coach
Durham’s immediate response was, "Then we (the entire Linfield contingent)
will all eat in the kitchen."
When
told there wasn't room in the kitchen for everyone from Linfield, he promptly
stated "Then we won't eat."
And,
indeed, the Linfielders attending the banquet did not eat while all others at
the banquet not affiliated with Linfield did.
Another
1965 Linfield football player, Bob Haack (see photo of Bob as a Linfield
football player), said “There was no hesitation in Coach Durham’s response. He
was a man of principles. He always did what he knew was right. His players were
always a team and not a group of individuals. I have reflected many times over
the years as to the lesson his action gave about racial equality to both teams
as well as to the hotel employees.”
Avritt
added, “What happened at the banquet was a testimony of the man Coach Durham
was and his commitment to his players and team.”
In
December 2015, a column in the Augusta
Chronicle daily newspaper discussed Augusta’s history as 1964 and 1965 NAIA
“Championship Bowl football game site.
The
column said the games were financial losers with the sponsoring organization
being in debt after the 1965 (Linfield vs. St. John’s) game.
On
Sept. 7, 1966, according to the column, it was announced the bowl game was
leaving Augusta for Tulsa, Oklahoma.
The
column said the NAIA “thought a city with a bigger population and a bigger
stadium would be better than Augusta. A.J. Duer, executive secretary of the
NAIA, said he ‘had hopes that Tulsa will be the permanent home of our Champion
Bowl.’ It wasn’t. Tulsa didn’t even do as well as Augusta, and would only host
the 1966 Champion Bowl game. The following year it moved to West Virginia, then
Alabama, then Texas. In fact, since the Champion Bowl left Augusta 50 years ago,
25 cities have hosted it.”
That
being said, the championship game move from Augusta took place for more than
just than finances. Wildcatville speculates because of the racist incident and
Coach Durham’s lobbying, the NAIA football championship game would not be held
after 1965 in Augusta even if the 1964 and 1965 Champion Bowl games had been profitable
financially.
Coach
Durham did not want any team to experience the racism Linfield experienced in
Augusta.
The
racist incident happened to a Linfield team coached by Paul Durham, who, year-by-year
was moving up the NAIA leadership hierarchy and would have become president of
the NAIA Executive Board, the association’s highest ruling body covering the
schools within the organization. He rose to third VP of the NAIA Executive
Board. But, in 1968 resigned because he was leaving Linfield to become athletic
director of the University of Hawaii, not a NAIA member.
The
racist incident didn’t happen to Linfield football in a vacuum. It happened at
the NAIA football Hall of Fame banquet in Augusta with NAIA officials,
including A. J. Dauer, NAIA executive secretary, in attendance.
In Durham’s
lobbying to get the championship football game moved from Augusta, he didn’t
have to describe what happened to NAIA officials what happened. They were there.
IN
CONCLUSION
The
Coach Paul Durham statue/monument (see photo taken 5/4/2017) on the Linfield
campus is near the Linfield Health, Human Performance and Athletics (HHPA)
building, which opened in 1989.
Engraved
text which accompanies the statue/monument includes…
… “Long
before racial sensitivity became a national issue, Durham judged his athletes
by the strength of their character without regard to race or religion.
“He
made a strong unpublicized statement for human and civil rights during the
Champion Bowl in Augusta, Georgia, in December of 1965. When a hotel official
wanted to serve the Black and Hawaiian members of the team in the kitchen at
the banquet following the game, Durham advised the restaurant manager the
entire team would eat in the kitchen.
“When
the manager said there was not enough room to feed the team in the kitchen, the
team stayed in the dining room but there was no food served at the Linfield
tables.
“As
a result of this incident and his personal lobbying efforts, the 1966 NAIA
championship game was moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma.
“Such
was the profound influence of a man whose memory is still alive in the hearts,
minds, and actions of those he touched during his distinguished career and
extraordinary life. One of life’s blessings was to be a friend of Paul Durham.
He was a beacon of light in the darkest of times.”
……….
……….
WILDCATVILLE
EDITORIAL
Twice, most recently in 2014, the Linfield Board of Trustees was
asked by alumni to name HHPA for Paul Durham. Twice the board said no.
Durham was more than a football coach. He was an extraordinary person.
A talented Linfield student, including in athletics and music, his successes
after graduating from Linfield are storied. He was a respected community leader
in McMinnville. His teaching skills and leadership of Linfield teams and
athletics and impact on players he coached are storied. You have the Augusta
story to look into his soul.
In its written proposal to the board in 2014, a group of alums said,
“From the date (1989 HHPA) opened its doors to the present, (HHPA) has had a
generic name while the names of most other athletics-related facilities on
campus memorialize former Linfield coaches. There is one person alone, Paul
Durham … who deserves the honor of having his name on HHPA.”
In the aftermath of the board saying no in 2014, funds raised by
friends of Paul Durham, many of them his former Linfield players, paid to have a
statue/monument of him created and installed near HHPA. In concert with that,
his name went on the front of HHPA to repeat the fact the lobby and foyer
inside HHPA are named for him. But, the fact remains, Paul Durham’s name is on
the building and inside the building. But, the building is not, as it should
be, named for him.
………..
Photos
-Odis Avritt and Bob Haack as Linfield football players. Photo credit: Linfield Sports Information.
-Coach Paul Durham Statue/Monument
on Linfield campus on May 4, 2017. Photo credit: Wildcatville.
-Hotel Richmond -- now
Richmond Summit, a low-income apartment complex -- on Broad Street in February
2017. Photo credit: Google Street View.
...............
...............
See 'Linfield College Football history: Bowl and iconic games'
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2017/08/linfield-college-football-history-bowl.html
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
Linfield Football first practice 2017 season 8/15/2017
Linfield Football first practice of 2017 season, 8/15/2017 at Maxwell Field/Catdome at Memorial Stadium.
Among those watching Linfield football practice 8/15/2017 were John Schindelar of Linfield Water Crew and grandsons Micah and Blake Schindelar.
Sunday, August 13, 2017
Linfield College Football history: Bowl and iconic games
Some of the games represented here and in the accompanying slideshow were -- officially or unofficially – called bowls. Wildcatville selected others because of their perceived importance. Most of the images are of printed game program covers. In the cases where game programs were not available or did not exist, other graphic representations of the games are provided.
1896: FOOTBALL STARTS
FOR McMINNVILLE COLLEGE
-Oct.
24, 1896. First football game ever for McMinnville College (now Linfield
College). Played in the afternoon in Newberg, the McMinnville Baptists lost to the
Quakers of Pacific College (now George Fox University), 54-0. Linfield head football
coach was A. M. (Arthur Marion)
Brumback, later to become McMinnville College president. (Don’t confuse
Pacific College in Newberg with Pacific University in Forest Grove.)
1906-1921:
McMINNVILLE COLLEGE DID NOT PLAY FOOTBALL
-From
1906 through 1921, McMinnville College did not play football. In a March 27,
1906, meeting, the McMinnville College Board of Trustees prohibited football
indefinitely because it was too violent. Sixteen years later, after football
rule changes demanded by U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt were instituted,
“the game’s image was bolstered. Its revitalized boosters included (the
college’s) male students, who regularly lobbied to reinstate football. Their
wish was granted” in a Jan. 10, 1922, announcement, said Linfield Magazine. The announcement that Linfield would resume
football was superseded that day by another announcement: Trustees renamed
McMinnville College as Linfield College. The new name honored Frances Ross Linfield’s late husband, a
Baptist pastor. Her gift of property in Spokane, Wash., subsequently sold,
assured the college's finances and its future.
1922: FOOTBALL RESUMES
AFTER 16-YEAR HIATUS FOR LINFIELD COLLEGE
-Nov.
4, 1922. After 16 years of no football, the sport resumed with a 20-0 win by
newly named Linfield College over Pacific College (now George Fox University)
in McMinnville. On Oct. 21, 1922, Linfield lost a game 26-0 in Salem versus
Willamette. Linfield called it a practice and it’s not included in its 1922
season records. Willamette records show it as one of it 1922 regular season contest.
The game (practice game) was held in the afternoon. Linfield head coach was Maurice Pettit.
-Thanksgiving
Day, Nov. 20, 1941, in Astoria. Linfield and a team of soldiers from Fort
Stevens (Hammond, Ore., Clatsop County) 249th Coast Artillery Regiment (Harbor
Defenses of the Columbia River) of the Oregon National Guard played to a 0-0
tie.
Oregonian said the game was
“mostly a punting duel between Bill
Stewart of Linfield and Al Wickers of Fort Stevens, with Stewart having a
decided edge. Linfield had more scoring opportunities but could make no headway
within the soldiers’ 20-yard line. Fort Stevens threatened only twice.”
An
afternoon game, it took place on Astoria’s Gyro Field, later called John Warren
Field. This was supposed to be the first of an annual Fish Bowl football game.
One of the reasons there were no subsequent Fish Bowl football games may have
been because the U.S. entered World War II on Dec. 8, 1941. Linfield head coach
was Henry Lever.
1955: MYRTLE BOWL IN
COOS BAY
-Sept.
24, 1955, in Coos Bay. Linfield lost 20-13 to Portland State College (now
Portland State University) in the fifth Coos-Curry Shrine Club Myrtle Bowl, a
benefit for the Shriners' Hospital for Crippled Children in Portland.
Linfield trailed 20-7 at
halftime, said the Oregonian. It scored on a touchdown a PAT kick in the second
quarter after recovering a Portland State fumble. Ron Parrish threw a 46-yd. completion to Frank Speyer, who later in the series scored on a 10-yd. run. Howard Glenn kicked the PAT. In the fourth quarter, Linfield got its final
TD (PAT failed) when Marty Bergen
passed 26-yards to Glenn.
The
night game was held at Marshfield High School Football Stadium. Linfield head coach
was Paul Durham.
1956: ‘THE STREAK’
STARTS
-Nov
3, 1956. Linfield beat the College of Idaho Coyotes 20-7, during a night (8:30 o’clock
kickoff) Homecoming game on Maxwell Field before a capacity Memorial Stadium
crowd. It clinched a winning 1956 season for Linfield Football and started ‘The
Streak.’ Each subsequent season has had a game in which a winning season was
clinched allowing the streak -- national all-divisions record for consecutive
winning record football seasons -- to continue. Linfield defense, led by Vic Fox and Howard Morris, held C
of I’s conference-leading rusher to 31 yards on 11 carries. It was Linfield’s
first win over C of I in six years. QB Ron
Parrish “streaked 78 yards to one touchdown” and passed for two others,”
said the Oregonian. The TDs were 75-yards
to end Howard Glenn and 32 yards to
halfback Bob Flood. PAT kicks
respectively by Gary Wells and Gene Manley. Linfield head coach was Paul Durham.
1961: CAMELLIA BOWL IN
SACRAMENTO
-Dec.
9, 1961, in Sacramento, California. Linfield lost 12-7 to Pittsburg (Kansas) State
Gorillas, in the Camellia Bowl. This was the sixth annual NAIA championship
football game. Linfield was the first team from the Northwest to compete for a
NAIA football title. Played in the afternoon in Hughes Stadium on the
Sacramento City College campus. The Wildcats were the first athletic team from
Linfield to play for a national championship in any sport. About 10,000 (most
of them Linfield fans) watched the game.
On
its first play, a Gorilla player ran 64 yards for a TD. PAT kick failed.
Linfield’s lone TD was on a six-yd. pass in the fourth quarter (4:08 to go)
from Bill Parrish to Bernie Grant, followed by a Gary Olson PAT kick.
Linfield
outgained Pittsburg State, 252 to 229 yards.
The
game was telecast live on Portland’s KGW-TV and broadcast on McMinnville’s KMCM
and Portland’s KGON radio.
1964: ‘CONCORDIA ICE
BOWL’ IN NORTH DAKOTA
-Nov.
21, 1964, in Fargo, North Dakota. Linfield lost 28-6 to Concordia College
(Moorhead, Minn.) Cobbers in an NAIA semi-final championship football playoff
game known colloquially to Wildcat fans as the 'Concordia Ice Bowl.' Temperatures
ranged from 10-15 degrees in the afternoon game played in Fargo (adjacent to
Moorhead) on North Dakota State University’s Dacotah Field. Linfield scoring in
the game came on a second quarter TD pass from QB Bill Mickle to Jerry
Dressel. The PAT kick failed. Although he did not suit up for the game,
future Linfield assistant and head football coach Ed Langsdorf, a sophomore, was a member of the 1964 Cobbers
football team. Linfield head coach was Paul
Durham.
-1965: WIN OVER SUL ROSS
IN TEXAS
-1965: CHAMPION BOWL IN
GEORGIA
In
the NAIA 1965 football playoffs, Linfield, led by head coach Paul Durham, won in
Texas and lost in Georgia:
-Nov.
27, 1965. Linfield beat Sul Ross State (Alpine, Texas) 30-27. Linfield’s most
impressive win of the 1965 season was this night game played at Midland, Texas,
Memorial Stadium. In an NAIA semifinal contest, Linfield’s Tim Kubli kicked a 36-yd. field goal – the longest field goal in
NAIA playoff history to that point -- with 49 seconds left to break a tie at 27.
-Dec.
11, 1965: Linfield lost 33-0 to St. John’s (Minn.) University in the NAIA Champion
Bowl. It was an afternoon game at ARC (Academy of Richmond County) Stadium in
Augusta, Georgia, played before 4,873 fans. Linfield was held to 28 yards
rushing and had four passes intercepted. St. John’s led 20-0 at halftime. It
added 13 more points in the final quarter.
Linfield
1965 football team player Odis Avritt,
an African American, said, “Several days prior to the team departing
McMinnville for Augusta, following practice, I sought out coach Durham. Many
questions were on my mind regarding going to the ‘Deep South’ and it seemed
appropriate to share my concerns with him and get some answers to my
apprehensions. My main question was, ‘Were we going to be separated as a team?’
”
During
times of overt racial discrimination, it was not uncommon for sports teams
staying overnight on the road to have separate lodging, white players and
coaches in a hotel and black players and coaches elsewhere.
“Realizing
that the furthest East my travels had taken me was to St. Louis, Missouri, and
Midland, Texas (for the Linfield vs. Sul Ross 1965 playoff football game), the
idea of Georgia was beyond comprehension. Coach Durham assured me that the
Linfield Wildcat football team would be together throughout the entire
experience. Coach always had a way with words and you could trust his guidance.
He said we would stay together as a team and we did,” Avritt said.
After
the game, there was a racist incident prior to the NAIA postgame banquet (the
NAIA Hall of Fame Banquet) which both teams attended in an Augusta convention
center restaurant, part of the hotel in which both teams stayed.
As Linfield’s players, coaches and staff entered the hotel’s lobby en
route to the banquet, Coach Durham was told by the restaurant manager that any
colored people --for Linfield that meant African Americans and people of color
from Hawaii -- with Linfield would have to eat in the restaurant’s kitchen. Coach
Durham’s immediate response was, "Then we (the entire Linfield contingent)
will all eat in the kitchen." When told there wasn't room in the kitchen
for everyone from Linfield, he promptly stated "Then we won't eat."
And, indeed, the Linfielders attending the banquet did not eat while all others
at the banquet not affiliated with Linfield did.
Another 1965 Linfield football player, Bob Haack, said “There was no
hesitation in Coach Durham’s response. He was a man of principles. He always
did what he knew was right. His players were always a team and not a group of
individuals. I have reflected many times over the years as to the lesson his
action gave about racial equality to both teams as well as to the hotel
employees.”
Avritt added, “What happened at the banquet was a
testimony of the man Coach Durham was and his commitment to his players and
team.”
..............
For Linfielders, Augusta, Georgia, means college football, not professional golf
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2017/08/for-linfielders-augusta-georgia-means.html
..............
..............
For Linfielders, Augusta, Georgia, means college football, not professional golf
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2017/08/for-linfielders-augusta-georgia-means.html
..............
1967: IN HONOLULU, UPSET
OF UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII
-Sept.
23, 1967, in Honolulu, before 20,000, the largest crowd to ever see a Wildcat
sporting event, Linfield upset favored University of Hawaii 15-13. The hot and
rainy night game was played at old wooden Honolulu Stadium. A story about the
game in a Honolulu daily newspaper said, “Hawaii gave it a good try, but the
Rainbows were outgunned by the visitors from Oregon …”
Tim Kubli's three field goals; the
passing of starting quarterback Mike
Barrow, which included one TD pass; the running of Ed Griffin and the pass receptions of Rogers Ishizu were the big factors in the Linfield win said the
Associated Press. Hawaii led 7-3 at halftime, but Linfield outscored the
opponent 12-6 in the second half.
Before
the game, Durham told a Honolulu daily newspaper sports editor, “I think Hawaii
should be favored by 50 points.” Durham and his assistant coaches (Roy Helser and Ted Wilson) claimed to be “scared to death” about the Hawaii
football team, “a rough, tough aggregation” which included eight transfers from
Air Force Academy alone as well as other transfers from Nebraska, Southern Cal
and Washington. But, Durham added, “We have a highly competitive team and I am
sure we will make it a good game.”
Both
Linfield and Hawaii “went into the (contest) with 11 players from Hawaii on
each of their rosters. “Linfield started six players from Hawaii, more than
Hawaii got into the game,” according to the Oregonian.
After
the 1967 season, Durham retired as Linfield football coach and he picked Ad
Rutschman, one of his former players, as his successor. Durham planned to stay
at Linfield as athletic director and continue teaching. But, he was offered the
University of Hawaii athletic director job and took it. There were several
reasons Durham got the university job, one being the Wildcat football team win
over Hawaii in Honolulu.
1968: UPSET OF BOISE STATE IN BOISE
-Sept.
21, 1968, in Boise. Linfield’s Wildcats upset the Boise State College (now
Boise State University) Broncos, 17-7. It was Ad Rutschman’s first game as
Linfield head football coach and Boise State’s first game as a four-year school.
The contest was played in 40-degree temperatures in the original (built in
1950) Bronco Stadium with wood grandstands on the east end of Boise State’s
campus.
In
the game, Linfield QB Len Gann threw a TD pass to Bob Murphy, and Jim
Consbruck intercepted a Boise State pass and ran it 42 yards for a TD. Tim Kubli kicked two PATs and a field
goal. Linfield led 14-0 at halftime.
1976, 1979, 1981: OREGON
BOWL FOOTBALL GAMES OF NAIA DISTRICT 2
The
Oregon Bowl featured the top Northwest Conference and Evergreen Conference finishers
from NAIA District 2. Ad Rutschman was Linfield head coach in all three games.
OREGON BOWL I
-Nov.
20, 1976, in Monmouth at Oregon College of Education (OCE) Memorial Stadium.
Linfield lost to OCE (now Western Oregon University), 49-28. Linfield scored the game's first 14 points, but
OCE added 42 consecutive points before Linfield scored again. The game was tied
at halftime, 14-14. Linfield TDs were on Jeff
Owens’s two-yd. run in the (1st qtr) and Doug Nereu’s 15-yd. pass reception from Larry Doty (2nd
qtr). Linfield concluded its scoring in the fourth quarter: Drake Conti 14-yd, pass from Dave Strain and Duffy Schneider 35-yd. pass from Pat Silva. Linfield’s Tom
Sybouts kicked four PATs.
OREGON BOWL II
-Nov. 17, 1979, in
McMinnville. Linfield lost to OCE (now WOU), 43-27. It was played before 1,000
fans rainy/muddy/sloppy conditions, OCE led 23-15 at halftime. With OCE leading
7-0, Linfield rebounded to take its only lead (9-7 10:24 1st qtr) after a
safety and a 72-yd. run by Bruce Dinsmore. After that, Tom Sybouts kicked a
PAT. With eight seconds left until halftime, Linfield scored on a 2-yd. pass
from Alan Schmidlin to Leo Sloan (PAT kick failed). Linfield’s
other scoring came on TDs in the third (Schmidlin 55-yd. run) and fourth (Pete Weymiller 40-yd. pass from
Schmidlin) quarters. (PAT kicks failed.) Schmidlin set “several opponent
postseason passing records, including 272 yards, 20 completions and 39
attempts. He totaled 351 yards of offense in the game,” said WOU Sports Info. In
the regular season, the teams tied 35-35 on Oct. 6 in Monmouth.
OREGON BOWL III
-Thanksgiving,
Nov. 26, 1981, in Klamath Falls. Linfield beat Oregon Tech (Oregon Institute of
Technology), 10-7. Two inches of snow fell on the field the night before the afternoon
game at Tech’s John F. Moehl Stadium. Oregon Tech scored with a TD and PAT in
the first quarter with Linfield responding with a TD run by QB Jon Eagle and a
PAT kick by Kyle Tarpening. In the
third quarter, Tarpening kicked a 34-yd. field goal, said the Oregonian. Linfield
has NAIA District 2’s top defense. It slowed down Tech’s high powered offense. It
was Rutschman’s “100th collegiate triumph for Linfield … in 132 games over 14
seasons…,” reported the Nov. 27, 1981, Eugene
Register-Guard.
1982, 1984, 1986: WINS
IN THREE NAIA DIVISION II NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP GAMES
In
1982, 1984 and 1986, Linfield won three national football titles with Ad
Rutschman as head coach. Because of muddy conditions at Linfield Maxwell Field,
all the championship games were played at McMinnville High School’s Wortman
Stadium. These titles joined the NAIA World Series championship won by the
Rutschman-coached Linfield baseball team in 1971 and the 1966 NAIA World Series
title by Linfield baseball coached by Roy Helser.
-Dec. 11, 1982, Linfield
beat William Jewell (Mo.), 33-15.
It
was Linfield’s first NAIA football title after championship title game losses
in 1961 and 1965. The Wildcat defense was magnificent, recovering five William
Jewell (Liberty, Missouri) fumbles and intercepting five of its passes. QB
Randy Mueller (the game’s MVP) led the Linfield offense, completing 18 of 33
passes with no interceptions. Prior to the game -- played before almost 4,600
and a about 100,000 TV viewers -- Oregon Gov. Victor Atiyeh proclaimed Dec. 11
“Linfield College Football Day in Oregon.”
Linfield running back Tim Nacrelli “shrugged aside the pain from a compression fracture in his back and turned in one of the key plays of the game … a tackle-busting 30-yard run through heavy traffic” in the second quarter, said the Oregonian.
William
Jewell scored seven points in the first quarter and eight in the last for its
15 points. Linfield scored TDs in the first on a 12 yd. pass from Mueller to
Kent Bostick and a 12 yr. run by Dan Crowell. Kyle Tarpening had PAT kicks
after each. In the third, Nacrelli scored a TD on a 32-yd. on pass from Mueller
and Mike Freeman had a 1 yd. TD run. (Respective PAT run and pass failed.) In
the last quarter was a 16 yd. pass from Mueller to Lance Lopes. (Tarpening PAT
kick.)
-Dec. 8, 1984, Linfield
beat Northwestern (Iowa), 33-22.
The
win “probably was the greatest comeback in Linfield Football history,” said one
game story. The Wildcats trailed defending NAIA-II champion Northwestern
(Orange City, Iowa) 22-0 before a Linfield John
Gray field goal at 3:02 in the third quarter. With 7:08 to go in the game,
Linfield took the lead for the first time (26-22). Linfield QB David Lindley threw two TD passes and
two passes for 2-point conversions. Two TD with two PAT kicks followed. In
total 33 points in 15 and one-half minutes brought Linfield “back from the
dead,” said the Oregonian.
The
game’s most significant play, said the Oregonian, was when a pass from
Northwestern’s quarterback was tipped by Linfield end Rich Moberg and
intercepted by back Randy Heath at the Northwestern 32-yd. line. Linfield
responded with a TD and a two point conversion to cut Northwestern’s lead to
22-11. That got the crowd of more than 3,600 back to life.
Linfield
scoring in the game -- Third quarter: 27-yd. John Gray field goal. Keith
Machida TD on one yard pass and a two-point PAT, both from Lindley. Fourth
quarter: Greg Hodgkinson 37-yd. TD pass from Lindley and a Lindley to Randy
Reason pass for a two-point PAT. Then, TD runs of eight and one yards
respectively by Nacrelli and Mike Sigman, each followed by Gray PAT kicks.
-Dec. 13, 1986, Linfield
beat Baker University (Baldwin City, Kansas), 17-0.
QB
David Lindley directed Linfield to 355 net yards. Defense led by safety Damon
Liles held Baker to 155 net yards. Both players from Albany, Ore. It was the first shutout in a NAIA title game
since 1978 and Linfield’s third NAIA football title in five years.
Almost
4,200 saw the game in which Baker was frustrated with its inability to run its
option during the game, played in a cold, steady drizzle on a muddy field, said
a UPI story. Added Rutschman, “We knew our defense had to play real well for us
to win.” It did.
Baker
lost four balls on fumbles. Linfield lost none.
In
the game, Linfield had 21 first downs to Baker’s 10 and had a time of
possession edge of more than 36 minutes to more than 23 minutes. Baker had 155
total yards and Linfield 200 more than that. Lindley was 21 of 37 in passing
(no interceptions) for 207 yards.
Linfield
scoring came in the first quarter from a 31-yd. field goal by Greg Gulliford
and a two-yard TD run by Todd MacClanahan(PAT kick failed). In the fourth
quarter, Andy Westernberg scored a TD on a one-yard run which was followed by a
two-point PAT pass from Lindley to David Erickson.
Interesting
to note: Baker’s starting tight end was Mike McCarthy, now head coach of the
Green Bay Packers.
-Dec. 19, 1992, University
of Findlay (Findlay, Ohio) beat Linfield, 26-13
In
his first year as Linfield head football coach, Ed Langsdorf, guided the 1992
Wildcats to the NAIA DII national championship game. Prior to his four seasons
(1992-1995) as Linfield head coach, Langsdorf was a Wildcats assistant football
coach for 12 seasons. After he stepped down as head coach, he was an assistant
four more seasons.
The
afternoon game was played at Portland Civic Stadium before more than 9,000
fans.
Findlay’s
defense overwhelmed Linfield, said the Oregonian. Findlay led 14-7 at halftime
and outscored Linfield 12-6 in the second half.
Linfield,
which averaged 476.5 yards of offense in its previous 12 games, was held to 268
yards by the Findlay defense, and managed only 204 yards after its opening
march.
After
the opening kickoff, Linfield used six plays to go 64 yards. QB Shannon Sells ran the final five yards
after throwing a 25 yard pass to John
Santiago and Gary McGarvie
gained 19. Kunle Thomas kicked the
PAT.
Linfield
got a second touchdown on a 42-yard Sells-to-McGarvie pass play with 4:20 left
in the game. A two post conversion after TD pass failed.
2004: STAGG BOWL. WIN IN NCAA DIVISION III NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
Jay Locey served 10 seasons
(1996-2005) as Linfield head football coach after 13 seasons (1983–1995) as a
Linfield assistant football coach. In 2004, his next to the last season as head
coach, he led Linfield to its fourth national football championship and its first
national team title as a member of the NCAA.
-Dec.
18, 2004, in Salem, Virginia. Linfield beat University of Mary Hardin Baylor (Belton,
Texas), 28-21. It was the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl at Salem Stadium in Salem, Va.
Attendance was 3,240. Temperature at the 11 o’clock in the morning Eastern time
kickoff was 33 degrees.
Linfield
QB Brett Elliott threw for two
touchdowns and ran for another. Teammate Riley
Jenkins ran for a team-high 81 yards on 18 carries and had four catches for
64 yards. Garrett Wales kicked four
Linfield PATs.
Initial
scoring was on a 39-yd. first quarter pass from Elliott to Brandon Hazenberg. In the same quarter, UHMB responded to tie the
game at 7. Jenkins ran 14 yards for a TD in the second quarter in which UMHB
responded with a TD of its own, but Linfield’s Ryan Caffall blocked the PAT attempt giving Linfield a 14-13
halftime lead. Elliott ran one yard for a TD at the end of the third quarter.
UMHB scored on a TD run and a two point conversion at 9:01 in the fourth
quarter to tie the game at 21. With 5:51 to go in the game, Elliott’s 10-yd.
pass to Jenkins was the game’s final TD. Adding Wales’ PAT kick after it, gave
Linfield a 28-21 lead it never relinquished. However, in the game’s closing
seconds, UMHB had the ball on a fourth down with four yards to go on the
Linfield 19. But, the UMHB quarterback was sacked by Linfield’s Kelle Bertrand and Brandon Tom on the 22 yard line. Linfield took over and ran out the
clock.
POSTSCRIPT
PINE BOWL –Linfield first
played Whitworth in football in 1952. The first time the teams played on
Whitworth’s Pine Bowl football field in Spokane was Saturday afternoon, Sept.
19, 1953. Linfield lost, 20-0. While the Pine Bowl is not a bowl game, it is
a bowl venue in which Linfield has played and plays Whitworth.
..................
Slideshow music: "The Thunderer" march by John Philip Sousa, performed by United States Marine Band.
For
assistance with images and information thanks to:
- Astoria Public Library
- Bob and Nancy Steinbach Haack
- Boise State University Special Collections & Archives
- Concordia College Digital Collections
- George Fox University Archives
- George Murdock
- Linfield College Handbook for Administrators
- Linfield histories “Bricks Without Straw” by Jonas Jonasson (1938); “Linfield’s Hundred Years,” edited by Kenneth Holmes (1956); and “Inspired Pragmatism: An Illustrated History of Linfield College” by Marvin Henberg and Barbara Seidman (2007).
- Linfield Magazine
- Linfield Review
- Linfield Sports Information
- Linfield website
- McMinnville Telephone-Register and News-Register
- Odis Avritt
- Portland Oregonian
- Western Oregon University Sports Information
Note: Every effort has been
made to assure accuracy of this posting. However, if you note errors, including
omissions, please contact wildcatville@gmail.com