1980 Northwestern Wildcats (Elevator Privilege)
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Northwestern Wildcats, Minnesota Golden Gophers, Ohio State Buckeyes, Indiana University Hoosiers, Proof, Purdue Boilermakers, Wisconsin Badgers, Northwestern, Northwestern University |
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1980 Northwestern Wildcats (Elevator Privilege) (Proof) |
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1980 Northwestern Wildcats Elevator Privilege Season ticket sheet (Proof) (8 available)
VS: Minnesota Golden Gophers, Ohio state Buckeyes, Indiana Hoosiers, Purdue Boilermakers, Wisconsin Badgers.
Seating has not been printed on these.
Price, Gate and Stand may differ from photo.
Perfect for Framing and or Gifting to your Favorite Northwestern Wildcats fan/collector.
The 1980 Northwestern Wildcats team was an American football team that represented Northwestern University during the 1980 Big Ten Conference football season. In their third year under head coach Rick Venturi, the Wildcats finished in last place in the Big Ten Conference (Big Ten), compiled a 0–11 record (0–9 against Big Ten opponents), and were outscored by their opponents by a combined total of 444 to 151.[2] The team played its home games at Dyche Stadium in Evanston, Illinois.
Northwestern finished the season in the midst of a 34-game losing streak, the longest in NCAA Division I-A history. The streak began on September 22, 1979, and ended on September 25, 1982.[3]
The team's statistical leaders included quarterback Mike Kerrigan with 1,816 passing yards, Jeff Cohn with 503 rushing yards, Todd Sheets with 570 receiving yards, and placekicker Jay Anderson with 37 points scored.[4] Several Northwestern players also ranked among the Big Ten leaders in various statistical categories, including the following:
Mike Kerrigan led the Big Ten with 17 interceptions and ranked third with 173 pass completions and 337 pass attempts and fourth with 1,816 passing yards and 1,789 total yards.[5]
Lou Tiberi led the conference with 18 kickoff returns and ranked second with 402 kickoff return yards and fourth with 22.3 yards per kickoff return.[5]
Todd Sheets ranked fifth with 17.3 yards per reception and eighth with 570 receiving yards.