1960 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team

The 1960 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team represented the University of Minnesota in the 1960 Big Ten Conference football season. In their seventh year under head coach Murray Warmath, the Golden Gophers compiled an 8–2 record and outscored their opponents by a combined total of 228 to 88.[1]

1960 Minnesota Golden Gophers football
Consensus national champion
Big Ten co-champion
Rose Bowl, L 7–17 vs. Washington
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 1
APNo. 1
1960 record8–2 (6–1 Big Ten)
Head coachMurray Warmath (7th season)
MVPTom Brown
CaptainGreg Larson
Home stadiumMemorial Stadium
1960 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
No. 1 Minnesota + 6 1 0  8 2 0
No. 3 Iowa + 5 1 0  8 1 0
No. 8 Ohio State 5 2 0  7 2 0
No. 15 Michigan State 4 2 0  6 2 1
Illinois 3 4 0  5 4 0
Michigan 3 4 0  5 4 0
Northwestern 3 4 0  5 4 0
No. 19 Purdue 3 4 0  4 4 1
Wisconsin 2 5 0  4 5 0
Indiana 0 7 0  1 8 0
  • + Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

The team was selected national champion by four NCAA-designated major selectors in Associated Press, Football News, National Football Foundation, and UPI/coaches[2]:113 with some selections made prior to the Gophers' loss to Washington in the 1961 Rose Bowl. The University of Missouri beat 3 nationally ranked teams and finished 11-0 under Dan Devine. They were selected as National Champion by https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poling_System. Both Minnesota and Ole Miss were consensus national champions.[2]:120

Guard Tom Brown received the team's Most Valuable Player award. Brown was also a consensus first-team All-American, won the Outland Trophy, finished second in the Heisman Trophy voting, and received the Chicago Tribune Silver Football, given to the Big Ten most valuable player. Brown, end Tom Hall and center Greg Larson were named All-Big Ten first team. Tackle Frank Brixius was named an Academic All-American and Academic All-Big Ten.[3]

Total attendance at five home games was 334,954, an average of 55,825 per game. The largest crowd was against Illinois.[4]

Schedule

DateOpponentRankSiteResultAttendance
September 24at No. 12 Nebraska*W 26–1438,000
October 1IndianaNo. 18W 42–053,725
October 8NorthwesternNo. 14
  • Memorial Stadium
  • Minneapolis, MN
W 7–057,096
October 15IllinoisNo. 10
  • Memorial Stadium
  • Minneapolis, MN
W 21–1063,641
October 22at MichiganNo. 6W 10–069,352
October 29Kansas State*No. 6
  • Memorial Stadium
  • Minneapolis, MN
W 48–743,568
November 5No. 1 IowaNo. 3
  • Memorial Stadium
  • Minneapolis, MN (rivalry)
W 27–1065,610
November 12PurdueNo. 1
  • Memorial Stadium
  • Minneapolis, MN
L 14–2361,348
November 19at WisconsinNo. 4W 26–755,576
January 2vs. No. 6 Washington*No. 1
L 7–1797,314
  • *Non-conference game
  • Homecoming
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game

Rankings

Game summaries

Iowa

#1 Iowa at #3 Minnesota
1 234Total
Hawkeyes 3 070 10
Golden Gophers 7 0614 27
Overall record Last meeting Result
34–18–1 1959 L 0–33

[5]

References

  1. "1960 Minnesota Golden Gophers Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved November 1, 2017.
  2. 2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association. August 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  3. kumar, sandeep (2020), Football Games, pp. 179–182Template:Date=january 2020
  4. kumar, sandeep (2020), Football Games, p. 160Template:Date=january 2020
  5. "Minnesota Trims Top-Ranked Iowa". Kingsport Times-News via newspaperarchive.com. November 6, 1960. p. 1C. Retrieved August 12, 2018.
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