This was another matchup of the top teams in the country, one in which 10 future NFL first-round draft picks dotted the rosters, and 31 future pros in all participated. A television audience of 33 million and the crowd in East Lansing, Michigan, however, was left wanting more at the end.
With the score tied at 10, top-ranked Notre Dame got the ball back at its 30-yard line with 1 minute, 24 seconds remaining. Fighting Irish coach Ara Parseghian had his team run the ball on six straight plays, including a fourth-down conversion from Notre Dame’s own 39-yard line. Michigan State fans booed the conservative strategy, and famed Sports Illustrated college football writer Dan Jenkins famously wrote that Parseghian had decided to “tie one for the Gipper.”
In the South Bend (Indiana) Tribune, Michigan State defensive co-captain George Webster summed up the feelings of many when he said: “I’d like to play another half—right now.” In the final Associated Press poll of the season, Notre Dame was No. 1 and Michigan State No. 2.
December 6, 1969: Texas vs. Arkansas
The game did a 50 share on television, meaning that half the TV sets in the United States were tuned in. President Richard Nixon attended, braving the cold and rain of Fayetteville, Arkansas, with 40,000 other fans. He declared beforehand that he would give a plaque to the winner proclaiming it the nation’s top team, to the great annoyance of third-ranked, unbeaten Penn State and its fans.
Top-ranked Texas was on an 18-game winning streak, and Arkansas had won 15 in a row. The Razorbacks held a 14-0 lead heading to the fourth quarter, but Texas rallied with 15 unanswered points to win, 15-14, and receive that plaque from the president.
As for those angry Penn State fans, well, the president seemed amused by the furor his pregame comments caused, saying with a grin that he was amused "Penn State has given me a lot of flak this week.”
November 25, 1971: Nebraska vs. Oklahoma
The Cornhuskers were the defending national champions and had a 20-game winning streak, as well as the nation’s top-ranked defense. Second-ranked Oklahoma, which used a run-heavy Wishbone offense, was on its way to averaging an NCAA-record 472 rushing yards per game. A then-record 55 million viewers watched the game on ABC.
Nebraska’s Johnny Rodgers, who would win the Heisman Trophy the following year, delivered the game’s iconic play in Norman, Oklahoma, breaking several tackles on a 72-yard punt return for the opening score. The teams traded scores, with a late Nebraska touchdown providing the 35-31 final margin
In the immediate aftermath, the contest was regarded as the greatest college football game played, a distinction it still holds with many historians. Wrote Dave Kindred of the Louisville Courier-Journal: “They can quit playing now, they have played the perfect game.”
January 2, 1987: Miami vs. Penn State