RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Evashevski's 1958 Team Was Iowa's Best

By RON MALY

In the event you were wondering, Iowa's 1958 football team that was coached by Forest Evashevski is still the best the university has ever had.

I realize a couple of misguided folks might have been thinking the 2015 Hawkeyes, who won their first 12 games, perhaps deserved to be No. 1.

No way.

In my book, when you fall behind Stanford at halftime, 35-0, in the Rose Bowl, then lose the game, 45-16, you don't get any kind of No. 1 ranking.

The way I look at it, this season's team--after losing to Michigan State, 16-13, in the Big Ten Conference championship game and then being blitzed by Stanford in the Rose Bowl--ranks No. 6 on Iowa's all-time power list.

Here's my ranking:

1. The 1958 Big Ten championship team that had an 8-1-1 record, including a  38-12 shelling of California in the Rose Bowl.  Evashevski's team was ranked No. 1 nationally by the Football Writers Association of America. The Hawkeyes led the nation in total offense. Quarterback Randy Duncan was a consensus all-American, was named the Helms Foundation Player of the Year and received the Walter Camp Trophy. Iowa's Bob Jeter ran for 194 yards and was voted the MVP of the Rose Bowl.  The Hawkeyes set Rose Bowl records for total offense [516 yards] and rushing yardage [429]. 

2. The 1956 Big Ten title team, also coached by Forest Evashevski, that went 9-1 and whipped Oregon State, 35-19, in the Rose Bowl. The Rose Bowl was Iowa's first-ever bowl game, and the Hawkeyes made the most of it. Quarterback Kenny Ploen ran for a 49-yard touchdown and was named the game's MVP. Iowa's Collins "Mike" Hagler scored two touchdowns and totaled 85 yards on the ground.

3. The 1939 team led by Heisman Trophy winner Nile Kinnick that had a 6-1-1 record that included successive home victories over Notre Dame and Minnesota. The team was coached by Dr. Eddie Anderson, a physician who occasionally examined patients at University Hospitals in Iowa City on the same day he conducted football practices. Kinnick, a  classic Heisman Trophy winner, took the nation by storm. Many thought the highly-intelligent, smooth-talking Kinnick would someday be the governor of Iowa [perhaps even president of the United States], but a tragic plane crash ended his life during World War II.

4. The 2009 team that went 11-2 and defeated Georgia Tech, 24-14, in the Orange Bowl.  Kirk Ferentz's team won road games at Iowa State, Penn State, Wisconsin and Michigan State. Iowa's Brian Bulaga was named the offensive lineman of the year, and Ferentz was voted coach of the year in the Big Ten for the third time.

5. The 1985 team coached by Hayden Fry that went 10-2 and could have been ranked much higher had it not been for a head-scratching 45-28 pummeling it took from UCLA in the Rose Bowl. The Hawkeyes spent five weeks as the nation's No. 1 team. Quarterback Chuck Long was named the winner of the Maxwell Trophy and the Davey O'Brien Quarterback Award. Long and Larry Station were consensus all-Americans. 

6. The 2015 team that was pretty good until it got to the Granddaddy Of 'Em All in Pasadena. Again, a mystifying collapse.