1972 UCLA Bruins football team

The 1972 UCLA Bruins football team represented University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in the 1972 NCAA University Division football season. Members of the Pacific-8 Conference, the Bruins were led by second-year head coach Pepper Rodgers and played their home games at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

1972 UCLA Bruins football
ConferencePacific-8 Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. T–17
APNo. 15
Record8–3 (5–2 Pac-8)
Head coach
  • Pepper Rodgers (2nd season)
Offensive coordinatorHomer Smith (1st season)
Offensive schemeWishbone
Home stadiumLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum
1972 Pacific-8 Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 1 USC $ 7 0 012 0 0
No. 15 UCLA 5 2 08 3 0
No. 19 Washington State 4 3 07 4 0
Washington 4 3 08 3 0
California 3 4 03 8 0
Oregon 2 5 05 6 0
Stanford 2 5 06 5 0
Oregon State 1 6 02 9 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

The new quarterback this season was Mark Harmon, a junior college transfer and son of Heisman Trophy winner Tom Harmon. In his first game for the Bruins, Harmon led the wishbone offense and gained a late night upset of top-ranked Nebraska at the Coliseum. An 18-point underdog, UCLA was never behind; Nebraska had five turnovers but fought back to tie the score before halftime at ten and again early in the fourth quarter at seventeen. In their final drive, Harmon drove UCLA into field goal range and Efrén Herrera made a 29-yarder in the final half minute for the 20–17 win. It halted the two-time defending national champion Huskers' unbeaten streak at 32 games and vaulted the previously unranked Bruins (2–7–1 in 1971) to eighth in the AP Poll, as Nebraska slid to tenth.

Two weeks later, the Bruins lost at home to Michigan, but then won six straight and improved to 8–1 overall. An upset loss to Washington at Husky Stadium in Seattle and an expected one to top-ranked rival USC in the Coliseum ended UCLA's season at 8–3. The Pac-8 runner-up at 5–2, they were ranked fifteenth in the final AP poll; the conference did not allow a second bowl team until the 1975 season.

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