Penn State Coaches
Penn State Nittany Lions
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The Pennsylvania State University
University Park, PA Founded: 1855 Stadium: Beaver Stadium Capacity: 106,537 Colors: Blue & White Coach: James Franklin Conference: Big 10- |
J. Thompson Tommy Prothro |
Season Total | Bowls | Conference | |||||||||
Team | Season | W/L/T | PF | PA | Conference | Title | W/L/T | PF | PA | ||
UCLA | 1970 | NCAA | 6-5 | 274 | 240 | Pac 10 | 4-3 | 204 | 170 | ||
UCLA | 1969 | NCAA | 8-1-1 | 329 | 103 | Pac 10 | 5-1-1 | 217 | 72 | ||
UCLA | 1968 | NCAA | 3-7 | 197 | 246 | Pac 10 | 2-4 | 103 | 156 | ||
UCLA | 1967 | NCAA | 7-2-1 | 284 | 161 | Pac 10 | 4-1-1 | 193 | 90 | ||
UCLA | 1966 | NCAA | 9-1 | 281 | 127 | Pac 10 | 3-1 | 55 | 38 | ||
UCLA | 1965 | NCAA | 8-2-1 | 257 | 168 | Won 14-12 | Pac 10 | # | 4-0 | 134 | 56 |
Oregon State | 1964 | NCAA | 8-3 | 149 | 124 | Lost 7-34 | Pac 10 | # | 3-1 | 47 | 36 |
Oregon State | 1963 | NCAA | 5-5 | 198 | 192 | Independent | |||||
Oregon State | 1962 | NCAA | 9-2 | 279 | 148 | Won 6-0 | Independent | ||||
Oregon State | 1961 | NCAA | 5-5 | 165 | 137 | Independent | |||||
Oregon State | 1960 | NCAA | 6-3-1 | 197 | 145 | Independent | |||||
Oregon State | 1959 | NCAA | 3-7 | 166 | 178 | Independent | |||||
Oregon State | 1958 | NCAA | 6-4 | 98 | 118 | Pacific Coast | 4-3 | 66 | 84 | ||
Oregon State | 1957 | NCAA | 8-2 | 203 | 129 | Pacific Coast | # | 5-2 | 127 | 110 | |
Oregon State | 1956 | NCAA | 7-3-1 | 203 | 166 | Lost 19-35 | Pacific Coast | # | 5-1-1 | 138 | 94 |
Oregon State | 1955 | NCAA | 6-3 | 126 | 120 | Pacific Coast | 4-2 | 53 | 93 |
Season | Bowls | Conference | |||||||||
Record | Points | Record | Points | Record | Points | ||||||
Totals | 16 Years | 104-55-5 | 3406 | 2502 | 2-2 | 46 | 81 | 43-19-5 | 1337 | 999 |
Some records may be incomplete. |
Great Moments in College Football History
College football's largest margin of victory came in 1916, when Georgia Tech defeated Cumberland by a score of 222 to 0. The game was cut short by 15 minutes.
College football's largest margin of victory came in 1916, when Georgia Tech defeated Cumberland by a score of 222 to 0. The game was cut short by 15 minutes.