Blue White Illustrated

January 2019

Penn State Sports Magazine

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V S . K E N T U C K Y the East to play one of the historically less-successful teams from the SEC. Kentucky's o?cial all-time football record is 491-551-36. The Wildcats have never gone undefeated but they have suf- fered through one winless year, going 0- 10-1 in 1984. Kentucky's heyday was in the post-World War II era with a young coach named Paul Bryant. The future leg- endary Bear coached the Wildcats from 1946-53 without a losing season, winning at least seven games six times and guiding the team to its pulled a fast one on Paterno," recalled Terry Nau, the Collegian sports editor in 1971 who covered the '72 game for the now-defunct Pennsylvania Mir- ror. Nau steered me to 2012 story by a Tennessee blogger. Apparently, the Ten- nessee hierarchy and fans abhorred night games. "Paterno sent word that the only way he would follow through with the game was if it was played at night," the blogger wrote. "Otherwise, he'd was se- cretly working on the installation of lights for that 1972 season. Checkmate. The results of both games were disas- trous for Penn State. In 1971, the unde- feated, <@h-ranked Nittany Lions had already locked up a Cotton Bowl berth against the winner of the Texas-Arkansas game, but they bumbled their way into an ignominious 31-11 loss in Knoxville. Al- though they redeemed themselves in the Cotton Bowl with a stunning 30-6 win over Texas, the 1972 opener was another step backward. They trailed 21-0 at half- time, and while they earned some respect by rallying in the second half, they still lost, 28-21, with the ball at the Tennessee 26-yard line when time ran out. Penn State did not lose again until falling to No. 2 Oklahoma, 14-0, in the Sugar Bowl. When the Kentucky series began in 1975, the Wildcats did not appear capable of shocking Penn State the way Tennessee had. Fran Curci, a former All-America quarterback at Miami, had become head coach two years earlier following seven losing seasons under Bradshaw and his successor, John Ray. The Wildcats never won more than three games in any of those seven seasons, but Curci's a major upset, losing 10-3, with Paterno admitting the Lions "were =at" and "lost their poise." Kentucky wound up with a woeful 2-8-1 record, but the close loss to Penn State was a harbinger. The 1976 season did not start or end well for Penn State. A 22-6 loss to Kentucky in Lexington on Oct. 2 contributed to a mediocre 7-5 record that year, the team's worst

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