1970 Holy Cross Crusaders football team

The 1970 Holy Cross Crusaders football team was an American football team that represented the College of the Holy Cross as an independent during the 1970 NCAA University Division football season. Bill Whitton returned for a second year as head coach. The team compiled a record of 0–10–1.[1]

1970 Holy Cross Crusaders football
ConferenceIndependent
Record0–10–1
Head coach
Captains
  • Thomas F. Lamb
  • Michael Jordan
Home stadiumFitton Field
Seasons
← 1969
1971 →
1970 NCAA University Division independents football records
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 2 Notre Dame  1010
Villanova  920
No. 16 Air Force  930
No. 13 Georgia Tech  930
Boston College  820
No. 19 Houston  830
West Virginia  830
No. 17 Tulane  840
No. 18 Penn State  730
West Texas State  730
Cincinnati  740
Florida State  740
Virginia Tech  560
Syracuse  640
Dayton  541
Pittsburgh  550
Rutgers  550
Utah State  550
Colgate  560
Southern Miss  560
New Mexico State  460
Miami (FL)  380
Northern Illinois  370
Marshall  360
Buffalo  290
Navy  290
Army  191
Xavier  190
Holy Cross  0101
Rankings from AP Poll

Reeling financially from the cancellation of all 1969 home games, Holy Cross opted to schedule an 11-game season for the first time in its history, adding a visit to West Point.[2] The no-win, 10-loss season was the worst result in Holy Cross history to that point.[3]

All home games were played at Fitton Field on the Holy Cross campus in Worcester, Massachusetts.

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 12 at ArmyL 0–26 31,666 [4]
September 19 Temple
  • Fitton Field
  • Worcester, MA
L 13–23 12,500 [5]
October 3 Dartmouth
  • Fitton Field
  • Worcester, MA
L 14–50 13,222 [6]
October 10 Colgate
  • Fitton Field
  • Worcester, MA
L 13–21 10,111 [7]
October 17 at Boston University L 23–33 6,247 [8]
October 24 at Villanova L 14–34 13,174 [9]
October 31 at Buffalo L 0–16 8,290 [10]
November 7 UMass^
  • Fitton Field
  • Worcester, MA
L 13–29 12,881 [11]
November 14 at RutgersL 7–37 10,500 [12]
November 21 Connecticut
  • Fitton Field
  • Worcester, MA
T 20–20 6,818–7,000 [13][14]
November 28 at Boston College L 0–54 23,500 [3]
  • Homecoming
  • ^ Family Weekend

Statistical leaders

Statistical leaders for the 1970 Crusaders included:[15]

  • Rushing: Joe Wilson, 492 yards and 6 touchdowns on 102 attempts
  • Passing: Jerry Lamb, 855 yards, 78 completions and 3 touchdowns on 204 attempts
  • Receiving: Jack VonOhlen, 358 yards and 3 touchdowns on 30 receptions
  • Scoring: Joe Wilson, 44 points from 7 touchdowns and 1 two-point conversion
  • Total offense: Colin Clapton, 599 yards (604 passing, minus-5 rushing)
  • All-purpose yards: Joe Wilson, 590 yards (492 rushing, 98 receiving)
  • Interceptions: Mike Jordan, 4 interceptions for no yards

References