1963 Penn State Nittany Lions football team
| 1963 Penn State Nittany Lions football | |
|---|---|
| Conference | Independent |
| Ranking | |
| Coaches | No. 16 |
| 1963 record | 7–3 |
| Head coach | Rip Engle (14th year) |
| Home stadium |
Beaver Stadium (Capacity: 46,284) |
The regular season finale with Pittsburgh was postponed from Nov. 23 to Dec. 7 following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on Nov. 22 in Dallas, Texas.[1]
Schedule
| Date | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | Result | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| September 21 | at Oregon | Hayward Field • Eugene, OR | W 17–7 | ||||||
| September 28 | UCLA | Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA | W 17–14 | ||||||
| October 5 | Rice |
Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA | W 28–7 | ||||||
| October 12 | Army | No. 9 | Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA | L 7–10 | |||||
| October 19 | at Syracuse | Archbold Stadium • Syracuse, NY (Rivalry) | L 0–9 | ||||||
| October 26 | West Virginia | Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA (Rivalry) | W 20–9 | ||||||
| November 2 | at Maryland | Byrd Stadium • College Park, MD (Rivalry) | W 17–15 | ||||||
| November 9 | at No. 10 Ohio State | Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH (Rivalry) | W 10–7 | ||||||
| November 16 | Holy Cross | Beaver Stadium • University Park, PA | W 28–14 | ||||||
| December 7 | at No. 4 Pittsburgh | Pitt Stadium • Pittsburgh, PA (Rivalry) | L 21–22 | ||||||
| *Non-conference game. | |||||||||
References
- ↑ "Penn State Yearly Results (1960-1964)". College Football Data Warehouse. David DeLassus. Retrieved July 26, 2015.
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