El Dorado News-Times

The Razorbacks’ unforgetta­ble 1964 season

- DR. KEN BRIDGES Local columnist

For the Arkansas Razorbacks, the 1963 season had been a disappoint­ment, with the team ending with a lackluster 5-5 record. Afterward, Coach Frank Broyles and the team began plotting a comeback for next season, and the team promised — and delivered — what would be an unforgetta­ble year.

As fall 1964 approached, an Associated Press writer’s poll offered little respect for the new Razorbacks squad. The University of Mississipp­i was ranked first, followed by Oklahoma State University. Arkansas was ranked eighth.

The Razorbacks won the first game in September against Oklahoma State, 14-10. The next week, the Razorbacks rallied from a 14-0 deficit to overtake the University of Tulsa. Arkansas would net six intercepti­ons against Texas Christian and force six turnovers from Baylor in their next two wins.

By the fourth week of the season, the team was only ranked ninth nationally in spite of a perfect record. But a hard-fought 14-13 win over the University of Texas the next week, which included a stunning 81-yard punt return touchdown by Ken Hatfield, catapulted the team to fourth in the AP poll.

The Razorbacks would shut out their opponents in the next five games, sending them into the bowl season ranked second in the nation. The defense was unstoppabl­e, allowing the fewest points of any team and keeping their opponents to only 180 yards per game. Hatfield, a future Razorbacks coach, boasted 518 yards for punt returns, the best in the country. Linebacker Ronnie Caveness would be named to the All-American team.

On January 1, 1965, Arkansas met the University of Nebraska Cornhusker­s at the Cotton Bowl. After a Razorbacks field goal in the first quarter, the Cornhusker­s took a 7-3 lead in the second quarter and hold it into the fourth quarter. With only minutes left, Quarterbac­k Frank Marshall pushed the Razorbacks 80 yards downfield. Bobby Burnett then plowed through the Cornhusker­s defense for the last three yards needed for the touchdown. Arkansas held on and won, 10-7.

AP writers, however, were unimpresse­d. Instead of the undefeated Cotton Bowl champions, the national championsh­ip was awarded by sportswrit­ers to the University of Alabama, who would lose the Orange Bowl to the Texas Longhorns.

Others, however, named Arkansas the national champions, and the Helms Athletic Foundation, known for selecting the All-American Teams, awarded Arkansas its Grantland Rice Trophy as the nation’s top squad. The Football Writers Associatio­n of America also named the Razorbacks the top team of 1964.

The 1964 season was part of an incredible 22-game winning streak by the Razorbacks. The 1965 squad nearly repeated the 1964 season with a perfect 10-0 regular season, narrowly losing to Louisiana State in the 1966 Cotton Bowl.

In the 1960s, no national championsh­ip game existed. Reporters carried a lot of weight with their choices of teams based on their votes in Associated Press and United Press Internatio­nal polls. Because of the embarrassm­ent of writers trying to name the Crimson Tide the champions in spite of their loss, future polls would not name a national winner until after the bowl games had been played. But an official national championsh­ip game would not come along until the College Football Playoff was announced for January 2015.

The legendary 1964 season would leave a lasting legacy in football. The 1964 team produced two NFL

coaches — Jimmy Johnson and Barry Switzer — who would go on to lead teams to three Super Bowl wins in the 1990s, and also included future Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones. Coach Broyles would win two more bowl games until he stepped down as head coach in 1976 and served as Arkansas athletic director until 2007.

Dr. Ken Bridges is a professor of history and geography at South Arkansas Community College in El Dorado and a resident historian for the South Arkansas Historical Preservati­on Society. Bridges can be reached by email at kbridges@southark.edu.

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