Aug. 8, 1999
y: Joe Bray
TarHeelBlue.com
Year-by-Year:
1960: Coach Hickey's second team fell to a
3-7 record, getting off to a miserable start before a fast finish...
N.C. State edged UNC 3-0 in the opener for the Wolfpack's fourth victory over Carolina
in five years. After a road loss to Miami (Fla.), Joe Kuharich brought his second
Notre Dame team to Chapel Hill, and the Heels picked up the only victory they have
ever recorded over the Irish, a 12-7 win before 41,000 happy fans...The joy did not
last as the Heels promptly lost five games in a row going into the Duke game...
The 1-7 Tar Heels were huge underdogs to No. 6 Duke. The Blue Devils were 7-1 and
had a five-game winning streak that included wins over Georgia Tech and Navy.
These were definitely two teams headed in opposite directions, and the 42,000 fans
in Kenan Stadium on a beautiful day for football fully expected a Duke rout. It never
materialized. Neither team moved the ball very well in a scoreless first half, and
the score remained 0-0 after three quarters. Duke finally got on the scoreboard early
in the fourth quarter. Mark Leggett returned a punt 55 yards to UNC's 40, then the
lue Devils moved to a fourth-and-goal on the Carolina one. Dave Burch scored on
a plunge, but Tony Hennessey blocked Billy Reynolds' PAT attempt to keep the
score 6-0. The Tar Heels took the ensuing kickoff and marched inside the Duke ten,
but a fourth-down pass was broken up. Duke could not pick up a first down and
punted to its own 43 with 5:50 left to play.
UNC, keyed by a 20-yard Ray Farris
to John Schroeder completion, moved to a first down on the Duke 8. Three plays netted
just five yards, setting up a fourth and goal play that would be the ball game.
Farris scored on a keeper to tie the score at 6-6, then Bob Elliot calmly drilled the PAT
for a 7-6 Tar Heel lead with two minutes left to play. Duke fumbled on its next
possession, and Carolina had pulled off one of the biggest upsets ever in a series full
of upsets...The Heels rode the momentum of the Duke win to a 35-8 win at Virginia.
3-7 is never a good record, but this one didn't seem quite so bad after the way the
season ended...
This year's team has the
dubious record for most turnovers committed in a season with 42, including 23
fumbles and 19 interceptions.
1961: UNC started out well
before fading to a 5-5 record...Carolina literally ground out a 27-22 win in
the opener over N.C. State, running the ball a record-tying 82 times.
The Heels then split their next four games,
losing to Clemson (27-0), defeating
Maryland (14-8) and South Carolina (17-0), then losing to Miami, Fla. (10-0).
Next up was a thriller in Kenan Stadium...
The Tar Heels trailed Tennessee 21-14 with just 1:21 left in the game and had
a first down on their own 20-yard line. QB Ray Farris put together a classic
two-minute drive as the Heels moved quickly down the field. With the clock running
down, Farris hit Ward Marslender with a 28-yard touchdown pass with just
15 seconds showing on the clock. Farris then
hit Gib Carson with a short toss in the right flat for a
two-point conversion and a 22-21 Tar Heel win...
The next week LSU came to Chapel Hill for a regionally-televised game and hammered
the Heels, 30-0...
The 4-3 Heels next took on 5-3 Duke at Durham in another nationally-televised
Carolina-Duke game. UNC took a 3-0 lead on Bob Elliot's second-quarter field goal,
but Duke tied it at 3-3 on Billy Reynolds' field goal with six minutes remaining
in the fourth quarter. After the teams swapped a pair of possessions, Carolina took
over on its own 46 with just 33 seconds to play, figuring to do no worse than tie.
However, Farris went long to Marslender, but Dean Wright intercepted and worked his
way all the way back to Carolina's 37. The Heels were flagged for a facemask penalty
on the tackle, giving Duke a first down on the 22 with ten seconds to play. Bill
Murray promptly called on Reynolds, who drilled a game-winning 39-yard field goal for
a 6-3 Duke win...
A 17-14 loss to Wake and a 24-0 win over UVA ended the
.500 season... Sophomore Junior Edge, who would become UNC's primary quarterback
the next two seasons, led the Heels with seven interceptions from his defensive
backfield position.
1962: Four straight losses to start the
season paved the way to a 3-7 finish...The year began with an excruciating 7-6
loss to N.C. State at Kenan Stadium. Carolina trailed State 7-0 before scoring
a TD in front of the old field house with two minutes left in the game. Hickey
played the extra-point attempt conservatively, choosing to kick rather than try
a two-point conversion for the lead, and State blocked the PAT attempt...The
shocked Heels then had to go on the road for back-to-back games against Big-Ten
teams Ohio State and Michigan. Carolina lost both games, 41-7 to
top-ranked Ohio State and 38-6 to the Wolverines.
Maryland then topped UNC 31-13 at Kenan to put UNC at 0-4...
Carolina finally got in the win column with a 19-14 win over South Carolina, as
sophomore Ken Willard's 83-yard kickoff return for a TD was the difference.
The Heels split their next four games to fall to 3-6 going into a season-ender with
Duke...The Blue Devils were 7-2 and unbeaten in ACC play, but as usual with this
series prior records meant nothing. Junior Edge's 8-yard scoring pass to Bob Lacey
gave Carolina a 14-13 lead early in the fourth quarter, and the Kenan Stadium crowd
could sense an upset. That sense grew even stronger when Carolina stopped Duke on
a fourth and one at the UNC 21 with 5:39 left in the game. With a couple of first
downs the Heels would be in great shape. However, Dave Braine fumbled on second
down, and Mark Leggett recovered for Duke. The Blue Devils methodically moved
down to the UNC 3-yard line and Reynolds, for the second year in a row, broke Tar
Heel hearts everywhere with a game-winning field goal. Reynolds' 20-yard chip shot gave the
lue Devils a 16-14 win and the ACC championship...
Junior Bob Lacey led UNC in receiving, catching 44 passes for an average gain of
15.2 yards per play.
ob Lacey, a first-Team All-America, was a key member of the Gator Bowl Champions
|
1963: UNC had its only winning year during
Hickey's tenure, and it was quite a season. The Heels went 9-2, tied for their
first ACC title and won their first bowl game, defeating the Air Force 35-0 in
the Gator Bowl...UNC was led offensively by the passing of QBs Junior Edge and
Gary Black, the running of Ken Willard and the pass receiving of Bob Lacey.
Chris Hanburger was ferocious on defense from his linebacker spot...The
season began with a narrow 11-7 win over a mediocre Virginia team followed by a
31-0 loss to Michigan St. at East Lansing, Mich. Just when it looked as though
this would be another average season, the Heels turned it around, losing only
one game the rest of the way...UNC followed the loss to the Spartans with wins
over Wake Forest and Maryland, setting up a big home game against N.C. State.
With the ACC lead at stake, Carolina trailed early but came back for a big 31-10
win...The next week the Heels scored a late TD at Columbia, S.C. to down South
Carolina 7-0, then came home to face Georgia and their great passer, Larry
Rakestraw. Carolina's vaunted pass defense, one of the best in the nation this
season after yielding just 84.4 yards per game, shut down Rakestraw 28-7 in a
game that got everyone thinking about a bowl game. That talk almost proved
premature, as Clemson came to Chapel Hill and hung an 11-7 defeat on the Heels...
With a 6-2 record, Carolina had to win its last two games to get a Gator Bowl
bid. Miami (Fla.), with strong-armed quarterback George Mira, came to town, and UNC's
pass
defense was once again excellent as the Heels held on for a 27-16 win... Next up
was Duke in Durham, scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 23. However, the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas on Friday forced the game to be postponed
until the following Thursday, Thanksgiving Day. Interest in the game was huge,
due to both Carolina's bowl hopes and the need for a diversion from the week's
tragic events. Temporary seating was installed at field level below Wallace Wade
stadium's permanent seats. (I sat in these
seats behind the Carolina bench and could see nothing but the players' backs,
but that's OK. It was still one of the best days of my life.)
Willard gave UNC a 7-0 halftime lead on a 14-yard run in the second quarter to finish
a 92-yard drive. The Heels put together another long drive in the third quarter to take
a 13-0 lead. Eddie Kesler got the last yard of a 77-yard drive, but Max Chapman missed
the PAT. Just as Carolina fans started to feel comfortable, the Duke offense awoke.
Scotty Glacken hit James Futrell with a 70-yard bomb on Duke's ensuing possession
to cut the lead to 13-7, and it stayed that way until late in the fourth quarter.
Duke gained possession on its 26-yard line
midway through the quarter when Jay Wilkison went to work. The son
of Oklahoma's lengendary coach Bud Wilkinson turned a short pass into a 42-yard gain,
then burst up the middle for a 24-yard scoring run on a third-and-twelve play
to give Duke a 14-13 lead with just under five minutes remaining. Carolina looked dead when
Stan Crisson intercepted Edge on UNC's next possession and brought it back to the Tar Heel
34 with a little over three minutes left. The Heels defense stepped up and held, forcing
a Blue Devil punt and giving UNC one last chance. Junior Edge lined his team up on his
own 28-yard line with just 1:25 left, needing to move the Heels far enough for a field
goal attempt. He looked to one of the best receivers in the country to help him out.
Edge hit Lacey for a 17-yard gain, then Edge ran for nine more to put the ball on the
Duke 46. Edge went back to Lacey for 15 more yards, then gained twelve more on a keeper
to put the ball on the 19. Three incompletions and a penalty made it fourth and fifteen
on the Duke 24 with 21 second left to play. Chapman was called on to kick the longest
field goal of his career, a 41-yarder into the open end of the horseshoe. His kick was true
and cleared the crossbar by at most a foot. The Heels were back in a bowl game for
the first time in 14 years...
... A crowd of over 50,000 in Jacksonville, Fla. watched the Heels blow
out the Air Force behind the running and blocking of Ken Willard and the Black
and Edge passing duo.
Willard rushed for 94 yards on 18 carries and scored the game's first touchdown on
a one-yard run. Edge scored on a 6-yard run and Gary Black, his running mate at QB,
scored on a five-yard run and hit Joe Robinson with a five-yard scoring pass.
Eddie Kesler got the other score on a one-yard run.
The Heels' 35-0 win was the first bowl victory in school history. It would be seven more
years before Carolina made it back to a bowl game.
1964: Hopes were
high for this year's team with Ken Willard, Gary Black and Chris Hanburger
returning, but the 5-5 season was a big disappointment...
Chris Hanburger was a ferocious linebacker for the Tar Heels
|
After N.C. State edged
UNC 14-13 in the opener at Kenan, Carolina rebounded with a 21-15 home win over
a ranked Michigan State squad that was playing its first game of the year.
A 23-0 win over Wake Forest was followed by a 20-3 loss at LSU and a narrow
10-9 loss to Maryland at Norfolk, Va., UNC's last appearance at Norfolk.
Overall, Carolina played 17 games against eight different teams in Norfolk during
the 1900s...A 2-3 squad topped South Carolina 24-6 at home in a game that featured
several outstanding individual performances.
Ken Willard had 139 yards rushing, Gary Black had 206 yards
passing and Ronnie Jackson picked up 123 yards receiving.
Losses to Georgia and Virginia, plus a 29-0 win at Clemson, put Carolina at 4-5 going
into the Duke game...
The Tar Heels jumped out to a 14-3 lead at the half behind a one-yard Willard plunge
and a nine-yard scoring pass from Gary Black to Billy Axselle. The Blue Devils scored
on their first possession of the second half to make it 14-9, but Carolina scored
on its ensuing possession, going 72 yards in just four plays. Eddie Kesler rumbled
65 yards to the Duke six to set up Willard's second TD of the afternoon.
Duke cut the score to 21-15 with 6:50 remaining in the game, but the Tar Heel offense
got just what it needed on its next possession, a clock-eating drive to the Duke 29,
where the Heels ran out of downs. Duke was unable to reach midfield
before running out of time,
and the Heels escaped with a 21-15 win...
Little Ronnie Jackson led
the ACC in receiving by catching 34 passes for an average gain of 15.1 yards per
play and five touchdowns...Rugged Fullback Eddie Kesler, who broke his nose
numerous times, won the Jacobs Trophy as the best blocker in the ACC.
1965: Quarterback Danny Talbott was the bright
spot for this year's squad. Talbott,a high school legend in the state of North
Carolina, was named ACC Player of the Year after leading the league in total
offense and scoring. However, the Heels could do no better than 4-6...
UNC opened up with a pair of Big-Ten opponents, Michigan and Ohio St.
The Wolverines topped Carolina 31-24 at Kenan Stadium
in their only appearance in Chapel Hill, but the Heels rebounded
with a big 14-3 win over a ranked Ohio St. team at Columbus, Ohio. This was
one of only two games that Woody Hayes' squad lost all season. A loss to
Virginia and narrow wins over N. C. State and Maryland put UNC at 3-2 at midseason,
but Carolina would win only one game the second half of the year, a 17-13 win over
Clemson on a 67-yard punt return for a touchdown by David Riggs...
The 4-5 Heels met the 5-4 Blue Devils at Durham in Bill Murray's final game at
Duke. The Tar Heels were embarassed, 34-7, in a nationally-televised game.
The game was over early, as Duke led 28-7 at the half...
Talbott was also an excellent baseball player. Talbott made All-ACC as a first baseman
in 1966 while leading Carolina to the College World Series.
1966: Hickey's final team was 2-8, sealing his
fate, as the former Tatum assistant resigned following the season...
UNC lost its opener at Kentucky, then topped N.C. State 10-7 at home. The
next week the Heels surprised the college football world with a big 21-7 win
over No. 8 Michigan at Ann Arbor, Mich., but that would be Hickey's last win
at Carolina...
The bottom fell
out of the Heels' season as they lost their last seven games. Included in these
losses were a 32-0 loss at Notre Dame and an ugly 3-0 loss to Wake Forest at
home. Consecutive home losses to Air Force (20-14), Duke (41-25) and Virginia
(21-14) were the last games of the Jim Hickey era...Charlie Carr's 16 pass
receptions in the Air Force game are still the UNC single-game record. Carr
followed up that game with 10 receptions the next week against Duke...This was
the least penalized team in UNC history, as Carolina was flagged for penalties
just 32 times... Hickey finished his eight-year career with a 36-45-0 record.
1967: Carolina looked to Bill Dooley to revive its football
fortunes, and he did not disappoint. Dooley's teams were 69-53-2, winning ACC
Championships in 1971, 1972 and 1977 while going to six bowl games. Each Dooley
team from 1968 through 1972 improved on its previous season's record. Dooley's
first team struggled to a 2-8 record as he worked to rebuild the program...
The Heels lost their first five games to stretch the team's losing streak to twelve,
the longest losing steak in school history.
Finally, Carolina got some relief, as a winless Maryland Terrapin squad came to
Kenan Stadium. The Tar Heels took advantage of a weak opponent and ground out a
14-0 win. Losses to Wake Forest, Clemson and Virginia gave UNC a 1-8 record going
into the season finale at Duke...
The Blue Devils were just 4-5 but were still big favorites over the struggling Heels.
42,00 fans settled into their seats at Duke Stadium, expecting an easy Blue Devil win
on a beautiful November afternoon. What they got was the Gayle Bomar show. Carolina's
left-handed quarterback gained 73 yards rushing and completed 9 of 11 passes to lead
the Heels to a stunning 20-9 win. UNC bolted out to a surprising 14-0 lead at the
half on a 12-yard Bomar run and a 5-yard Bomar to Charlie Carr pass. Duke got
its first score on a field goal early in the third quarter, but Carolina came right
back and scored on its next possession. Dick Wesolowski's one-yard plunge capped off
a 66-yard drive and gave the Heels a 20-3 lead. Duke scored a TD midway through the
fourth quarter, missed the two-point conversion, and never threatened again. Dooley
had his first big win as a Tar Heel.
1968: Dooley's second team improved its record slightly to 3-7, but all
three wins were noteworthy...
After N.C. State crushed Carolina 38-6 in the opener, it looked as though the Heels
would even their record the next week. Carolina led South Carolina 27-3 after three
quarters at home, but the Gamecocks
rallied with 29 fourth-quarter points to take a 32-27 win. This was the most
points a Carolina opponent has ever scored in a single quarter.
UNC traveled to Nashville, Tenn. and picked up an 8-7 win over Vanderbilt with the
aid of a two-point conversion, then lost to Maryland to fall to 1-3...
Carolina played host to the eighth-ranked Florida Gators the next week.
Chapel Hill was in the midst of a terrible drought, so bad that
P.E. classes were cancelled to save water from showers and the entire community
was under sever water restrictions. The drought ended that Saturday, and ended
in a big way. The Heels shocked the Gators 22-7 in a driving rain as Don Hartig
kicked three field goals of more than 40 yards. The Gators fumbled the wet ball
eleven times, with Carolina recovering eight...
The most entertaining game of the season was a 48-31 loss the next week
at Wake Forest. QB Gayle Bomar set the ACC record for total offense in a game
with 416 yards, but Wake Forest QB Freddie Summers had 342 yards of offense in
Wake's wild win. Bomar hit Tony Blanchard, the son of Army's legenday "Doc"
lanchard, with a 76-yard scoring stike as Blanchard had 149 yards receiving. In
an oddity for this type of game, the Heels were not called for a single
penalty.
The Heels lost their next three games,
none of them close, to fall to 2-7...
Duke was 4-5 and again favored over the Heels in the season-ender at Kenan Stadium,
but once again Bomar had a big game for Carolina. A 34-yard completion from
omar to Saulis Zemaitis keyed a 71-yard UNC scoring drive on the Heels' first
possession. Bomar hit Tony Blanchard, son of Army's Doc Blanchard, with a seven-yard
toss to make it 7-0. Just seconds later it was 13-0, Carolina. John Harris picked
off a Leo Hart pass on Duke's ensuing possession and ran 32 yards for a touchdown.
The Blue Devils got their first score late in the first quarter. Wes Chesson took
a short pass and raced 70 yards, all the way to the Tar Heel one. Phil Asack ran it
in on the next play to cut the UNC lead to 13-7. Carolina scored later in the quarter
on a Bomar sneak for a 19-7 halftime lead. Duke cut the lead to 19-14 late in
the third quarter, then threatened to take the lead but lost a fumble at the
Carolina 13-yard line. UNC responded with an 87-yard scoring drive that saw Bomar
convert on four third-down plays. The TD came on a pass to Peter Davis on
third-and-goal from the Duke seven. The Blue Devils couldn not score again, and the
25-14 win made Dooley 2-0 against Duke.
1969: Dooley's third team broke even, going 5-5 despite a slow start...
Carolina lost four of its first five games, with the only win a 38-22 victory
over Vanderbilt at home. The Heels were 1-4 and reeling, but quickly turned their
season around...
Junior tailback Don McCauley jump-started the second half of the season with a
97-yard kickoff return for a touchdown that sparked a 23-3 win over Wake Forest,
then the Heels went on the road and won a 12-0 defensive struggle at Virginia.
The next week the always-exciting Ricky Lanier had 174 yards rushing from his quarterback
position in a 61-11 win over VMI. A 32-15 victory over Clemson put the Heels at
5-4, and a winning season seemed within reach...
Tom Harp's Duke team was 2-6-1, so this year the
Heels were favored over Duke at Wallace Wade Stadium. Carolina scored first on a 19-yard pass
from Lanier to Bob Schult, but Duke countered with a score that made it 7-7 at
the half. The score was still 7-7 late in the third quarter with Duke facing
a third-and-nine from its own 47-yard line. QB Leo Hart, well away from the
ball, bent over to "tie his shoestring." The Duke team was all lined up on the
left side of the ball, "waiting for Hart", when a Duke player picked up the ball and
lateraled it to Wes Chesson, who had a convoy to lead him untouched for a TD that
gave Duke 14-7 lead. Duke's David Pugh then kicked a 46-yard field goal with
4:40 left to play to put Duke up 17-7. Carolina scored with 40 seconds left but it
was too little, too late, as the Blue Devils took a 17-13 upset win. The Heels would
have to wait one more year for a winning season...
Tailback Don McCauley
became UNC's first 1,000 yard rusher, picking up 1,092 yards on 204 carries,
including an 80-yard TD run against VMI.
This was just a taste of what would follow the next year.
Notable: The Sixties were the only decade in which the Heels did
not play a tie game...Carolina was an even .500 in games at Kenan Stadium,
going 25-25. Their road record was a poor 15-34...Carolina's 12-game losing
streak in 1966-67 is the longest in school history...Bob Lacey made first team
All-America in 1963 after leading the ACC in receptions with 48 after grabbing
44 in 1962. Lacey is the first Tar Heel to have at least 40 catches in two
seasons.
The Decade By the
Numbers:
Overall Record: 41-60-0
Home: 25-25-0
Away: 15-34
Neutral: 1-1
Longest Winning Streak: 5 (Oct. 5, 1963 - Nov. 2,
1963)
Longest Losing Streak: 12 (Oct. 15, 1966- Oct. 14, 1967)
Most Points Scored (Game): 61 in 1969. UNC 61 - VMI 11
Least Points Scored (Game): None 11 times
Most Points Scored (Season): 200 in 1969
Least Points Scored (Season): 90 in 1966
Most Points Allowed (Game): 52 in 1969. Florida 52 - UNC 2
Least Points Allowed (Game): None 8 times
Most Points Allowed (Season): 272 in 1968
Least Points Allowed (Season): 103 in 1963
1960 (3-7)
Coach: Jim Hickey
Captains: Rip Hawkins & Frank Riggs
|
Sep 24 N.C. State L, 0-3
Sep 30 @ Miami (Fla.) L, 12-29
Oct 8 Notre Dame W, 12-7
Oct 15 Wake Forest L, 12-13
Oct 22 @ South Carolina L, 6-22
Oct 29 @ Tennessee L, 14-27
Nov 5 @ Clemson L, 0-24
Nov 12 Maryland L, 19-22
Nov 19 Duke W, 7-6
Nov 26 @ Virginia W, 35-8
-------
117-161
|
1961 (5-5)
Coach: Jim Hickey
Captains: Bob Elliot & Jim LeCompte
|
Sep 30 N.C. State W, 27-22
Oct 7 Clemson L, 0-27
Oct 14 @ Maryland W, 14-8
Oct 21 @ South Carolina W, 17-0
Oct 27 @ Miami (Fla.) L, 0-10
Nov 4 Tennessee W, 22-21
Nov 11 LSU L, 0-30
Nov 18 @ Duke L, 3-6
Nov 25 @ Wake Forest L, 14-17
Dec 2 Virginia W, 24-0
------
121-141
|
1962 (3-7)
Coach: Jim Hickey
Captains: Joe Craver & Ward Marslender
|
Sep 22 N.C. State L, 6-7
Sep 29 @ Ohio State L, 7-41
Oct 6 @ Michigan State L, 6-38
Oct 13 Maryland L, 13-31
Oct 20 South Carolina W, 19-14
Oct 27 Wake Forest W, 23-14
Nov 3 @ Clemson L, 6-17
Nov 10 @ Virginia W, 11-7
Nov 17 @ Notre Dame L, 7-21
Nov 24 Duke L, 14-16
------
112-206
|
1963 (9-2)
Coach: Jim Hickey
Captains: Gene Sigmon & Roger Smith
|
Sep 21 Virginia W, 11-7
Sep 28 @ Michigan State L, 0-31
Oct 5 @ Wake Forest W, 21-0
Oct 12 @ Maryland W, 14-7
Oct 19 N.C. State W, 31-10
Oct 26 @ South Carolina W, 7-0
Nov 2 Georgia W, 28-7
Nov 9 Clemson L, 7-11
Nov 16 Miami (Fla.) W, 27-16
Nov 28 @ Duke W, 16-14
------
162-103
|
Gator Bowl in Jacksonville, Fla. |
Dec 28 v Air Force W, 35-0
|
1964 (5-5)
Coach: Jim Hickey
Captains: Chris Hanburger & Ron Tuthill
|
Sep 19 N.C. State L, 13-14
Sep 26 Michigan State W, 21-15
Oct 3 Wake Forest W, 23-0
Oct 10 @ LSU L, 3-20
Oct 17 v Maryland L, 9-10
Oct 24 South Carolina W, 24-6
Oct 31 @ Georgia L, 8-24
Nov 7 @ Clemson W, 29-0
Nov 14 @ Virginia L, 27-31
Nov 21 Duke W, 21-15
------
178-135
|
1965 (4-6)
Coach: Jim Hickey
Captains: Hank Barden & Ed Stringer
|
Sep 18 Michigan L, 24-31
Sep 25 @ Ohio State W, 14-3
Oct 2 Virginia L, 17-21
Oct 9 @ N.C. State W, 10-7
Oct 16 Maryland W, 12-10
Oct 23 @ Wake Forest L, 10-12
Oct 30 Georgia L, 35-47
Nov 6 Clemson W, 17-13
Nov 13 @ Notre Dame L, 0-17
Nov 20 @ Duke L, 7-34
------
146-195
|
1966 (2-8)
Coach: Jim Hickey
Captains: Bob Hume, Hank Sadler, Danny Talbott
|
Sep 17 @ Kentucky L, 0-10
Sep 24 N.C. State W, 10-7
Oct 1 @ Michigan W, 21-7
Oct 15 @ Notre Dame L, 0-32
Oct 22 Wake Forest L, 0-3
Oct 29 @ Georgia L, 3-28
Nov 5 @ Clemson L, 3-27
Nov 12 Air Force L, 14-20
Nov 19 Duke L, 25-41
Nov 26 Virginia L, 14-21
------
90-196
|
1967 (2-8)
Coach: Bill Dooley
Captains: Jack Davenport & David Riggs
|
Sep 16 @ N.C. State L, 7-13
Sep 23 @ South Carolina L, 10-16
Sep 30 Tulane L, 11-36
Oct 7 Vanderbilt L, 7-21
Oct 14 @ Air Force L, 8-10
Oct 21 Maryland W, 14-0
Oct 28 Wake Forest L, 10-20
Nov 4 Clemson L, 0-17
Nov 11 @ Virginia L, 17-40
Nov 18 @ Duke W, 20-9
------
104-182
|
1968 (3-7)
Coach: Bill Dooley
Captains: Gayle Bomar & Mike Smith
|
Sep 21 N.C. State L, 6-38
Sep 28 South Carolina L, 27-32
Oct 5 @ Vanderbilt W, 8-7
Oct 12 @ Maryland L, 24-33
Oct 19 Florida W, 22-7
Oct 26 @ Wake Forest L, 31-48
Nov 2 @ Air Force L, 15-28
Nov 9 Virginia L, 6-41
Nov 16 @ Clemson L, 14-24
Nov 23 Duke W, 25-14
------
178-272
|
1969 (5-5)
Coach: Bill Dooley
Captains: Sam Bounds, Ed Chalupka,
Bob Hanna, Don Hartig,
David Jackson, Ken Price,
Saulis Zemaitas
|
Sep 20 @ N.C. State L, 3-10
Sep 27 @ South Carolina L, 6-14
Oct 4 Vanderbilt W, 38-22
Oct 11 Air Force L, 10-20
Oct 18 @ Florida L, 2-52
Oct 25 Wake Forest W, 23-3
Nov 1 @ Virginia W, 12-0
Nov 8 VMI W, 61-11
Nov 15 Clemson W, 32-15
Nov 22 @ Duke L, 13-17
------
200-164
|
Decade-by-Decade
1888-1899 |
1900-1909 |
1910-1919 |
1920-1929
1930-1939 |
1940-1949 |
1950-1959 |
1960-1969
1970-1979 |
1980-1989 |
1990-1998