Memory Lane - 43 years ago today

Mustangs sink Navy, 32-28
Oct. 11, 1963
By ROY EDWARDS / The Dallas Morning News
Editors' note: The following appeared in the final Oct. 12, 1963 edition of The Dallas Morning News.
• • •
Roger Staubach was great!
John Roderick was incredible!
Mac White, Tommy Caughran, Bob Oyler, John Hughes, Jim Sitton, Billy Gannon, Danny Thomas and a whole thundering herd of wild Mustangs were fantastic and fanatic.
And a crowd of 37,000 was one great, trembling, nerve-maddened mass as SMU upset Navy, the nation's No. 4 college football team, 32-28 in a game that forever will be remembered as one of the most thrilling ever played at the storied Cotton Bowl.
The incredible Mustangs spotted Staubach and his belligerent and undefeated cohorts 10 points. They stormed back. They sent Staubach to the sidelines twice.
They pulled out victory, lost it on a disheartening fumble and personal foul, pulled it out again and ultimately sank Jolly Roger's flag on the SMU 8-yard line at the final gun.
It was the greatest performance the red-helmeted Mustangs have presented their eager young coach Hayden Fry.
Hayden Fry Staubach sailed into the Cotton Bowl as college football's greatest tactical weapon. He was harassed as perhaps he has never been before by the relentless rushing of Bob Oyler, Martin Cude, Bill Harlan, Harold Magers, Doug January and the fire-breathing Mustang line.
Nonetheless, Staubach delivered like a champion as he ran and passed as befits the nation's total offense leader.
But the mightiest tactical weapon on the field, and the one they talked about at the finish, was a rail-thin trackman, a 9.4 sprinter who is playing his first football since he was a high school junior in 1960.
The Middies had no antidote for the blazing strides, the slashing cuts and the toe-dancing moves of John Roderick, who reported for a trial as a split end in September and wound up as a high-rolling tailback.
Roderick ripped the previously impregnable Navy line for 146 yards, only 14 less than the combined team totals of Navy's previous three opponents. The Middies came into the game third nationally in rushing defense and fourth-ranking by the Associated Press poll
Roderick saved his greatest run for the third play of the second half, after the thundering crowd had sat in fearful quiet momentarily as Roderick lay motionless at his own 25 after fumbling, then recovering the kickoff. It was but a momentary loss of wind, and on first down he ran 15 yards around left end, fumbled and White picked it up and carried seven more for a first down at the 47.
White, the bright sophomore quarterback who had ripped 22 yards on his first carry of the night for the Mustangs' initial touchdown, now slid through the right side to the Navy 45.
Then White headed left with Roderick trailing. At the last possible instant, as he was hit, White pitched back to Roderick.
Old No. 23 zig-zagged through the clutching, grapsing Midshipmen like an enemy destroyer taking evasive action.
Roderick turned up the left sideline, swung back to his right through heavy traffic, cut all the way to the right sideline, shrugged off the last would-be tackler at the 15 and poured into the end zone with the touchdown that cut SMU's 12-point halftime deficit in half.
Then in the sixth minute of the fourth quarter, when it appeared that a great effort had been just that and the Mustangs could consle themselves that they had fought the good fight, they called on Roderick again.
The Mustangs faced fourth and 12 at the Navy 42 and a punt appeared to be in order. Instead, they lined Roderick up at tailback in the "I" formation, and Thomas pitched him the ball. Roderick swept around right end, turned down the sideline and wheeled 18 yards to the Navy 24. And on the play Navy was assessed a penalty half-the-distance to the goal line for a late-hitting personal foul.
With third and seven at the nine, Roderick missed a first down around left end by mere inches. White got the necessary yardage on a climb at right guard, and Roderick slammed two yards through right tackle for the tying touchdown. John Richey's kick put the Mustangs on top, 26-25, with 9:19 to play.
The fight, it turned out, had just commenced.
With Cude, Oyler and Fred Stier applying the big rush, Staubach could produce only one first down and the Middies had to punt with 6:30 to play.
And here adversity slapped SMU the first of two devastating blows.
Caught with only three backs in the game, they stalled for a delay penalty to stop the clock, but no further wild-card was permitted. So linebacker John Hughes, national Lineman of the Week last week, and a great one again this night, lined up in the backfield and led Don Campbell around right end.
Navy tackle Jim Freeman, a one-time SMU student, knocked Campbell loose from the ball, and guard Alex Krekich recovered for the Middies at the SMU 21 with 5:12 to go.
Ultimately, Navy had to settle for Fred Marlin's field goal from the Mustang 2, but the 28-26 edge that provided was dreadfully imposing as the scoreboard clock indicated 3:03 to play.
It was merely a taunt to the Mustangs, though. They slammed 70 yards in just 39 seconds after Ron Reel's 15-yard kickoff return.
And again the Navy contributed to its own demise by its belligerence.
Thomas fired to Gannon for 24 down the left side. Roderick swept around the right end 24 yards to the Navy 22 with 2:23 to go. The Mustangs hurriedly lined up, and Thomas threw past Hillary near the goal line at the sideline, but Orr was tagged with pass interference at the one.
Gannon then thrust his 165 pounds through right tackle into the end zone for the clinching points with 2:05 remaining.
It mattered not that Richey's extra point was blocked.
Oct. 11, 1963
By ROY EDWARDS / The Dallas Morning News
Editors' note: The following appeared in the final Oct. 12, 1963 edition of The Dallas Morning News.
• • •
Roger Staubach was great!
John Roderick was incredible!
Mac White, Tommy Caughran, Bob Oyler, John Hughes, Jim Sitton, Billy Gannon, Danny Thomas and a whole thundering herd of wild Mustangs were fantastic and fanatic.
And a crowd of 37,000 was one great, trembling, nerve-maddened mass as SMU upset Navy, the nation's No. 4 college football team, 32-28 in a game that forever will be remembered as one of the most thrilling ever played at the storied Cotton Bowl.
The incredible Mustangs spotted Staubach and his belligerent and undefeated cohorts 10 points. They stormed back. They sent Staubach to the sidelines twice.
They pulled out victory, lost it on a disheartening fumble and personal foul, pulled it out again and ultimately sank Jolly Roger's flag on the SMU 8-yard line at the final gun.
It was the greatest performance the red-helmeted Mustangs have presented their eager young coach Hayden Fry.
Hayden Fry Staubach sailed into the Cotton Bowl as college football's greatest tactical weapon. He was harassed as perhaps he has never been before by the relentless rushing of Bob Oyler, Martin Cude, Bill Harlan, Harold Magers, Doug January and the fire-breathing Mustang line.
Nonetheless, Staubach delivered like a champion as he ran and passed as befits the nation's total offense leader.
But the mightiest tactical weapon on the field, and the one they talked about at the finish, was a rail-thin trackman, a 9.4 sprinter who is playing his first football since he was a high school junior in 1960.
The Middies had no antidote for the blazing strides, the slashing cuts and the toe-dancing moves of John Roderick, who reported for a trial as a split end in September and wound up as a high-rolling tailback.
Roderick ripped the previously impregnable Navy line for 146 yards, only 14 less than the combined team totals of Navy's previous three opponents. The Middies came into the game third nationally in rushing defense and fourth-ranking by the Associated Press poll
Roderick saved his greatest run for the third play of the second half, after the thundering crowd had sat in fearful quiet momentarily as Roderick lay motionless at his own 25 after fumbling, then recovering the kickoff. It was but a momentary loss of wind, and on first down he ran 15 yards around left end, fumbled and White picked it up and carried seven more for a first down at the 47.
White, the bright sophomore quarterback who had ripped 22 yards on his first carry of the night for the Mustangs' initial touchdown, now slid through the right side to the Navy 45.
Then White headed left with Roderick trailing. At the last possible instant, as he was hit, White pitched back to Roderick.
Old No. 23 zig-zagged through the clutching, grapsing Midshipmen like an enemy destroyer taking evasive action.
Roderick turned up the left sideline, swung back to his right through heavy traffic, cut all the way to the right sideline, shrugged off the last would-be tackler at the 15 and poured into the end zone with the touchdown that cut SMU's 12-point halftime deficit in half.
Then in the sixth minute of the fourth quarter, when it appeared that a great effort had been just that and the Mustangs could consle themselves that they had fought the good fight, they called on Roderick again.
The Mustangs faced fourth and 12 at the Navy 42 and a punt appeared to be in order. Instead, they lined Roderick up at tailback in the "I" formation, and Thomas pitched him the ball. Roderick swept around right end, turned down the sideline and wheeled 18 yards to the Navy 24. And on the play Navy was assessed a penalty half-the-distance to the goal line for a late-hitting personal foul.
With third and seven at the nine, Roderick missed a first down around left end by mere inches. White got the necessary yardage on a climb at right guard, and Roderick slammed two yards through right tackle for the tying touchdown. John Richey's kick put the Mustangs on top, 26-25, with 9:19 to play.
The fight, it turned out, had just commenced.
With Cude, Oyler and Fred Stier applying the big rush, Staubach could produce only one first down and the Middies had to punt with 6:30 to play.
And here adversity slapped SMU the first of two devastating blows.
Caught with only three backs in the game, they stalled for a delay penalty to stop the clock, but no further wild-card was permitted. So linebacker John Hughes, national Lineman of the Week last week, and a great one again this night, lined up in the backfield and led Don Campbell around right end.
Navy tackle Jim Freeman, a one-time SMU student, knocked Campbell loose from the ball, and guard Alex Krekich recovered for the Middies at the SMU 21 with 5:12 to go.
Ultimately, Navy had to settle for Fred Marlin's field goal from the Mustang 2, but the 28-26 edge that provided was dreadfully imposing as the scoreboard clock indicated 3:03 to play.
It was merely a taunt to the Mustangs, though. They slammed 70 yards in just 39 seconds after Ron Reel's 15-yard kickoff return.
And again the Navy contributed to its own demise by its belligerence.
Thomas fired to Gannon for 24 down the left side. Roderick swept around the right end 24 yards to the Navy 22 with 2:23 to go. The Mustangs hurriedly lined up, and Thomas threw past Hillary near the goal line at the sideline, but Orr was tagged with pass interference at the one.
Gannon then thrust his 165 pounds through right tackle into the end zone for the clinching points with 2:05 remaining.
It mattered not that Richey's extra point was blocked.