There haven't been better back-to-back teams in the history of the University of South Dakota football program in terms of national prominence, number of victories and school records that the players established during the 1985 and 1986 seasons.
During that two-year period the Coyotes won 21 of 27 games, resetting the school single season victory mark each year from 10 wins in 1985 to 11 in 1986 capped off by a trip to the NCAA Division II National Championship.
Fifty-four school records were set during that stretch, including 29 in 1986.
And if that's not enough, eight players from the 1985 and 1986 Coyote teams signed with NFL teams.
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This weekend those 1985 and 1986 Coyote football teams will be recognized during South Dakota's pivotal game against Western Illinois Saturday. Members of those teams will meet with the current Coyote football squad before Friday's practice in the DakotaDome followed by a reception that night.
"We appreciate the effort by the University, the athletic department, the football program and the USD Foundation to recognize us this weekend," said Dave Triplett, who served as the head football coach of the Coyotes, constructing a 70-45 mark from 1979-88.
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Bob Nielson and his staff are doing a great job. Our former players are thrilled at the opportunity to return and see the campus."
Chemistry might be the best word in describing how the Coyotes were able to make back-to-back appearances in the NCAA Division II playoffs.
"When you talk about a chemistry, you talk about ability, personality, leadership and getting some breaks," said Triplett. "Our players had been in the former stages of a very solid program, playing a strategic role. Both teams had great potential. We were able to take it one step further in 1986.
"It will be great to see some of the players, to see how they have matured and are doing well. They were all too quality people and I'm sure they are successful in their endeavors."
Triplett speaks with quarterback Scott Jones.
Here's a look back at how the foundation was set for those memorable seasons which included establishing an all-time NCAA single game rushing record that still stands today, while analyzing one of the all-time biggest fourth-down plays in school history.
No. 1 ranking to semifinal round of 1985 NCAA Division II playoffs
There was reason to believe that South Dakota would field a good team in 1986 with 15 starters and 18 other letterwinners returning from the 1985 team which posted a 10-3 record while advancing to the semifinal round of the NCAA Division II playoffs.
The 1985 senior class included second-team Associated Press Little All-Americans in offensive tackle Eric Maxson and running back Chul Schwanke. Outside linebacker JP Buzynski, safety Mike Slaton and receiver Rod Tweet earned honorable mention accolades.
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The Coyotes started the 1985 campaign with a 6-0 record and ranked No. 1 during the first five weeks of the 1985 NCAA Division II poll - the best getaway at the school since 1902. That quick start out of the gates, which included impressive victories at North Dakota (45-3) and over North Dakota State (38-14) allowed USD to tie a school record for consecutive victories at 11, after winning the final five games of 1984.
But USD had to rely on some last-second heroics along its path to the NCAA Division II playoffs.
The 1985 Dakota Days homecoming game against Morningside will rank among the best when the Coyotes escaped with a 40-38 victory. A pass interference call against Morningside in the end zone as time expired, gave the Coyotes one last chance to rally from a 38-33 deficit. Quarterback Scott Jones took advantage of the penalty by scoring on a two-yard run off a bootleg to cap a hectic 82-yard drive that began with only 1:13 on the clock and no time outs remaining.
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In its final regular season home game, South Dakota held Northern Colorado to a mere 36 yards rushing while collecting five quarterback sacks en route to a 49-6 victory. USD picked off five interceptions, with Buzynski tying a school mark with three pass thefts.
A 36-yard field goal by sophomore Mark McLaughlin with six seconds left gave South Dakota a 20-17 victory at Omaha, sealing the Coyotes' ticket to the NCAA playoffs.
The Coyote faithful certainly got their money's worth when USD hosted the first-ever NCAA Division II playoff game played indoors, which also would turn out to be the longest in Division II history. The Coyotes prevailed 13-10 against Central State (Ohio) in two overtimes, using a bruising defense and then relying on the foot of McLaughlin. Jones' one-yard touchdown gave USD a 10-3 lead in the first overtime before Central State answered back on a one-yard plunge on fourth down.
But McLaughlin, who had scored USD's only points in regulation on a 44-yard kick, answered with the game winning 41-yarder to send the Coyotes into the semifinal round of the NCAA Division II playoffs.
There were certainly enough "ifs" in USD's journey to the national championship but mistakes proved costly in a 17-7 semifinal round home loss to North Dakota State. "What if" USD had added another touchdown to its 7-0 second quarter lead instead of fumbling on the Bison four? … And "what if" Schwanke, both the school and North Central Conference career rushing leader, had played in the game instead of observing from the sidelines with an injured right knee?
"You hate to have it end like that, but you can't dwell on anything but the positive," said Triplett on looking back at the 1985 campaign. "To me, it wasn't the end; it was the beginning. We had a nucleus of a good young team and a good mix of veterans."
USD finished fourth in the final 1985 NCAA Division II poll. The Coyotes had led the nation in rushing offense for 10 straight weeks before finishing second in the final NCAA Division II statistics, averaging 296.3 yards, while ranking fifth in scoring offense with an average of 32.5 points.
Slow start in 1986, but strong finish
South Dakota would ride the momentum of advancing to the semifinals of the 1985 NCAA Division II Playoffs by establishing loftier goals of winning the national title in 1986.
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The tone was set early during offseason conditioning as well as spring drills.
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"The playoff experience in 1985 proved that we could win some tough games," said Triplett. "We had some great leaders. After playing those two games in the playoffs we really believed we could win the national championship the following year."
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USD stumbled out of the starting gates with a 2-2 record to open the 1986 campaign. With their backs to the wall the Coyotes shifted into high gear by winning nine straight games. The Coyotes won their final seven games of the NCC by an average victory margin of 25.7 points.
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On their march to the NCAA Division II championship game in Florence, Ala., the Coyotes relied on the most prolific rushing offense in school history with a young and ever improving defense.
The Coyotes finished fourth in NCAA Division II in rushing offense with a school record 3,465 yards, an average of 315 yards per game. USD set a NCC regular season record with 562 rushing attempts, bettering the previous mark of 519 it set in 1985.
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South Dakota posted a 10-0 record in 1986 whenever a player rushed for over 100 yards in a game. From 1983-86 the Coyotes won 27 of 29 games in which a player rushed for over 100 yards. For the second-straight year, USD had five games in which at least two players rushed for over 100 yards in the same contest.
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The leadership provided by 11 seniors was outstanding. The offense was bolstered by a veteran line which featured four seniors including three-year regulars Jerry Gilinsky at center and Tim McFarland at right guard, both All-America performers.
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No other team in the NCC was blessed with the depth USD enjoyed in the backfield featuring senior quarterbacks Scott Jones and Joe Longueville, the best one-two punch in the league; the emergence of sophomore running back James Hambrick, who led the league in rushing; the steady effort of tailback Tony Higgins; and the bruising play of fullback Darryl Colvin.Â
The defense was headed by defensive tackle Robb White, linebacker Tim Hood and free safety Todd Salat, a third-team All-American. Hood led the Coyotes with 122 tackles, including six fumble recoveries. White was a force on the line with 47 solo tackles, while tackle Mike Schwab led the team with 12 quarterback sacks. Salat had a team-high seven interceptions.
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South Dakota's special teams were led by the duo of juniors in kicker Mark McLoughlin and punter Jim Sulentic, who both earned second-team all-NCC honors. USD also blocked four punts during the season, with two resulting in touchdowns.
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The seven-game winning streak that propelled the Coyotes to the NCAA Division II playoffs for the second-straight year began with a 48-8 Dakota Days victory against Augustana (S.D.). Hambrick gained 144 yards rushing, including a then-school record 92-yard scoring jaunt, but it was the work of the Coyote special teams. Augustana enjoyed an 8-0 lead before James Vann blocked a 29-yard field goal and Tim Byrd blocked a punt, resulting in a 17-yard punt return for a touchdown to give USD a 21-8 halftime lead.
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Jones runs the ball.
Behind Jones' record-setting five touchdowns, South Dakota beat South Dakota State 51-39, marking the first time ever that the Coyotes beat their arch-rival twice in the same season. Earlier, USD earned a 26-14 win over the Jackrabbits in Brookings.
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Jones had staked USD to a 17-3 second quarter lead on an eight-yard touchdown run. He then scored four consecutive touchdowns (two, 33, three, four yards) against the Jackrabbits during a seven-minute stretch midway through the third quarter. Jones finished with 117 yards rushing in the game, while Hambrick added 109 yards.
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Hood, Vann and receiver Kurt Southwick were instrumental in allowing the Coyotes to close out the NCC season with a 41-8 romp past Omaha. Vann accounted for 129 yards in both kickoff and punt returns to set up three touchdowns, while Southwick caught his first two collegiate touchdowns.
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A day to remember: Setting all-time NCAA single-game rushing record
A veteran offensive line led an assault on two all-time NCAA records as the Coyotes ambushed St. Cloud State, 52-0, in the DakotaDome.
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USD set an all-time all-NCAA division record (which still stands today) of having the most players - five - gain over 100 yards rushing in the same game: James Hambrick 125, Darryl Colvin 123, Tony Higgins 118, Dave Elle 109 and Joe Longueville 106.
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Longueville, starting in place of Jones who was nursing a bruised shoulder, had a 25-yard touchdown run in the first quarter. Hambrick added a 26-yard scoring burst, while Colvin scored on touchdowns of three, one and 12 yards. Higgins had a 71-yard scoring sprint in the second half. Elle, a freshman redshirt, hit the century mark late in the game. USD rolled up 648 yards total offense, including a single-game team record 581 yards rushing, against the Huskies.
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"It's amazing to be part of a record that still stands today and has stood the test of time," said Triplett. "It is sure nice to ask people a trivia question about that football record.
"As much credit goes to assistant coach John Fritsch and the offensive line to get us in the position to run those yards. All you had to do was give our running backs a chance and they took advantage. We only threw four passes in the game."
USD also set another all-time NCAA record by having four active players pass 1,000 career yards rushing in Jones, Higgins, Colvin and Hambrick during the 1986 season.
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McFarland, Gilinsky, Weidner, Gerdes
The CALL, the PLAY
The road to the NCAA Division II Championship was not easy as South Dakota had to travel to then-No. 2 ranked and undefeated UC Davis (10-0) in the opening round.
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Todd Gaines and Pete Sorenson celebrate.
Head coach Chris Petersen, who has guided Washington to a No. 4 ranking in this week's college poll, was quarterback for UC Davis back then. He set an all-time NCAA division record for completion percentage (.700) that season.
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South Dakota trailed UC Davis, 14-3, at halftime before quarterback Scott Jones rallied the Coyotes with a pair of second-half touchdown runs as well as a dramatic touchdown pass. Jones scored on a 10-yard run with 5:34 left in the third quarter to close the gap to 17-12.
That set the stage for the biggest fourth-down play in Coyote football history.
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Early in the fourth quarter, facing a fourth down and three yard situation at the UC Davis 23 yard line, Triplett faced a dilemma: attempt a 40-yard field goal, try a coffin corner punt to pin the Aggies deep in their own territory or gamble by trying to convert a first down.
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The Coyotes exhausted a time out to explore all options.
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"I still recall we were in the huddle, Fritsch was in the press box and we were talking back and forth," Triplett said. "We had been running the ball well in the second half, but he was convinced we could catch UC Davis off-guard with a pass play."
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South Dakota surprised the UC Davis defense when Jones dropped back throwing a perfect 23-yard touchdown strike to Southwick, running down the middle with 13:48 left in the game to give USD a 19-17 lead.
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"I will never forget when I called the play out loud, Southwick's jaw dropped," Triplett said. "UC Davis ended up using a different coverage. We thought it would be a zone but they played man to man coverage. Southwick typified the type of players we had. He knew he had to come up with the catch and then made a big sprint into the end zone."
After UC Davis regained the lead at 23-17, Jones sealed the victory for the Coyotes by fending off six tackles en route to a six-yard game winning touchdown with 5:49 left in the contest.
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White played a big hand in preserving the victory for USD. White deflected a Petersen pass which Hood intercepted, returning it 10 yards to stop a drive late in the game. Then, on the Aggies' last possession of the contest, White forced Petersen to fumble with junior teammate Murl Dodds, a safety, recovering the football at the 19 yard line.
On to the Championship
In the semifinal round home game against Troy State, Jones tied a career-high with 155 yards rushing, including two touchdowns, but he suffered a concussion in the third quarter.
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Troy State, ranked No. 3 in the nation, rallied to tie the game at 28-28 before Longueville, playing at reserve quarterback, scored the eventual go-ahead touchdown for USD on a five-yard run to cap a 71-yard drive. Sulentic kept Troy State at bay with a 46.7 yard punting average in the game.
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"We were fortunate to have two great quarterbacks in Jones and Longueville," said Triplett. "They were quality young men and great leaders. Longueville had a knee injury that sidelined him for the entire 1983 season but he bounced back being very instrumental for us."
After the Coyotes recovered a Troy State fumble, Hambrick rounded out the scoring with a five yard run with 6:04 left to give USD a 42-28 victory, punching a ticket to the NCAA Championship game against nemesis North Dakota State.
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If the NCAA Division II championship game would have been played in the MetroDome in Minneapolis, Minn., fans from South Dakota and North Dakota State would have sold out the 65,000-seat facility.
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Al Neuharth and Tom Brokaw take in a Coyote game.
Instead, loyal fans from both teams made the long journey to Florence, Ala.
NBC News anchorman Tom Brokaw, Gannett Chairman Al Neuharth and Miami Dolphins owner Joe Robbie cheered on their alma mater, the University of South Dakota. Outgoing South Dakota Governor Bill Janklow also attended the game, along with Governor-elect George Mickelson.
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USD, which averaged 404 yards rushing in its two playoff victories, was held to 163 yards by North Dakota State.
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The Bison enjoyed a 14-0 halftime lead and then used an 84-yard punt return for a touchdown to hold off South Dakota, 27-7.
"It was a tough day for us," said Triplett. "We just made too many mistakes to win."
Regardless, Coyote fans may have something from those 1985 and 1986 teams to remember - maybe a pass, a tackle, a run, one play, one game.
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Readers may have their own words for the players and coaches of the 1985 and 1986 Coyote football teams. A majority would include "Thanks for the Memories."