Southern California Coaches
Southern California Trojans
|
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA Founded: 1880 Stadium: Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Capacity: 92,000 Colors: Cardinal & Gold Coach: Lincoln Riley Conference: Big 10- |
John Ralston |
Season Total | Bowls | Conference | |||||||||
Team | Season | W/L/T | PF | PA | Conference | Title | W/L/T | PF | PA | ||
San Jose State | 1996 | NCAA 1-A | 3-9 | 221 | 448 | Western Athletic | 3-5 | 168 | 273 | ||
San Jose State | 1995 | NCAA 1-A | 3-8 | 271 | 378 | Big West | |||||
San Jose State | 1994 | NCAA 1-A | 3-8 | 200 | 377 | Big West | |||||
San Jose State | 1993 | NCAA 1-A | 2-9 | 282 | 337 | Big West | |||||
Stanford | 1971 | NCAA | 9-3 | 261 | 135 | Won 13-12 | Pac 10 | # | 6-1 | 176 | 98 |
Stanford | 1970 | NCAA | 9-3 | 343 | 206 | Won 27-17 | Pac 10 | # | 6-1 | 220 | 101 |
Stanford | 1969 | NCAA | 7-2-1 | 349 | 172 | Pac 10 | 5-1-1 | 204 | 81 | ||
Stanford | 1968 | NCAA | 6-3-1 | 268 | 162 | Pac 10 | 3-3-1 | 152 | 129 | ||
Stanford | 1967 | NCAA | 5-5 | 157 | 179 | Pac 10 | 3-4 | 88 | 121 | ||
Stanford | 1966 | NCAA | 5-5 | 149 | 146 | Pac 10 | 1-4 | 43 | 67 | ||
Stanford | 1965 | NCAA | 6-3-1 | 144 | 149 | Pac 10 | 2-3 | 47 | 106 | ||
Stanford | 1964 | NCAA | 5-5 | 150 | 138 | Pac 10 | 3-4 | 100 | 95 | ||
Stanford | 1963 | NCAA | 3-7 | 154 | 199 | Pac 10 | 1-4 | 74 | 103 | ||
Utah State | 1962 | NCAA | 8-2 | 273 | 139 | Independent | |||||
Utah State | 1961 | NCAA | 9-1-1 | 396 | 102 | Lost 9-24 | Mountain States Athletic | # | |||
Utah State | 1960 | NCAA | 9-2 | 274 | 85 | Lost 13-20 | Mountain States Athletic | # | |||
Utah State | 1959 | NCAA | 5-6 | 181 | 185 | Mountain States Athletic |
Season | Bowls | Conference | |||||||||
Record | Points | Record | Points | Record | Points | ||||||
Totals | 17 Years | 97-81-4 | 4073 | 3537 | 2-2 | 62 | 73 | 33-30-4 | 1272 | 1174 |
Some records may be incomplete. |
Great Moments in College Football History
Field goals in college football were originally worth five points. This was decreased to four points in 1904 and three points in 1909.
Field goals in college football were originally worth five points. This was decreased to four points in 1904 and three points in 1909.