College Football's LAST TIE... (The History of Ties in CFB)
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- čas přidán 2. 05. 2024
- The last time College football saw a game end in a tie, the year was 1995, four years before I was born. Ironically, it was played between my Wisconsin Badgers and Illinois at Camp Randall and has gone down as the worst game to ever be played in Camp Randall’s history. This is the story of that game and the history of ties. You won’t want to miss this one.
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Love the channel man keep it up.
I know this video was about ties, but how can you NOT MENTION when Tom Osborne went for the win (after the 1983 season), even though a tie would have guaranteed his first National Championship?!
1) The game didn’t end in a tie.
2) It wouldn’t have been honorable in the Nebraska community if he had went for the tie. That’s like having an asterisk by the national title.
@@KWCline91 You're full of shit. Do you honestly think 1983 national championship memorabilia wouldn't have sold out across Nebraska in 30 seconds? Hell no.
What shame would there have been in a tie when Nebraska trailed 17-0 and 31-17 on Miami's home field? ZERO.
@@KWCline91Also, Nebraska tied USC 21-21 when it won the 1970 national championship. Had the Cornhuskers lost to the Trojans, Notre Dame is #1 in the final AP poll.
@@DNSKansas that was earlier in the season. No one knew Nebraska was going to win after two games. But then, the top two teams lost their games while Nebraska won against LSU to claim the national title.
@@DNSKansas
Notre Dame’s only loss was also to USC, but it was the final week of the regular season. Both teams also beat ranked LSU & Missouri teams; however, Nebraska also beat ranked Kansas State. I’d say it's debatable if the loss to USC would have prevented Nebraska from winning the title.
IMO, there should _never_ be regular-season overtime. The closest I would accept is NPB's limited extra innings rules (12 in the regular season and 15 in the playoffs).
You missed the 1968 Harvard-Yale tie, which served as the basis for the 2008 documentary Harvard Beats Yale 29-29. In this game, Harvard came back from a 29-13 deficit in the final minutes to tie the heavily-favored Yale, who came in undefeated and nationally ranked. A member of the Harvard team was future Oscar winner Tommy Lee Jones.
Eh, football’s a martial game. In war sometimes you tie
Chess and association football (soccer) have plenty of draws. Nobody seems to mind.