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American college football season
The 1953 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team represented the University of Notre Dame during the 1953 college football season. John Lattner won the Heisman Trophy although he did not even lead the Irish in passing, rushing, receiving or scoring.[1] Lattner held the Notre Dame record for all-purpose yards until Vagas Ferguson broke it in 1979.
Schedule
Date | Opponent | Rank | Site | Result | Attendance |
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September 26 | at No. 6 Oklahoma | No. 1 | | W 28–21 | 59,500 |
October 3 | at Purdue | No. 1 | | W 37–7 | 49,135 |
October 17 | No. 15 Pittsburgh | No. 1 | | W 23–14 | 57,998 |
October 24 | No. 4 Georgia Tech | No. 1 | - Notre Dame Stadium
- South Bend, Indiana
| W 27–14 | 58,254 |
October 31 | No. 20 Navy | No. 1 | - Notre Dame Stadium
- South Bend, Indiana (rivalry)
| W 38–7 | 58,154 |
November 7 | at Penn | No. 1 | | W 28–20 | 74,711 |
November 14 | at North Carolina | No. 1 | | W 34–14 | 43,000 |
November 21 | No. 20 Iowa | No. 1 | - Notre Dame Stadium
- South Bend, Indiana
| T 14–14 | 56,478 |
November 28 | at No. 20 USC | No. 2 | | W 48–14 | 97,952 |
December 5 | SMU | No. 2 | - Notre Dame Stadium
- South Bend, Indiana
| W 40–14 | 55,522 |
- Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
|
Roster
- QB Ralph Gugliemi
- HB Johnny Lattner
- OE, DE Don Penza
Game summaries
Oklahoma
|
1 |
2 | 3 | 4 | Total |
• Notre Dame |
7 |
7 | 14 | 0 |
28 |
Oklahoma |
7 |
7 | 0 | 7 |
21 |
|
Don Penza blocked and recovered a kick to set up one touchdown and recovered a fumble that led to another Notre Dame score.[2]
Team players drafted into the NFL
| This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2020) |
The following players were drafted into professional football following the season.
Player |
Position |
Round |
Pick |
Franchise
|
[3]
Awards and honors
References
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Venues | |
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Bowls and rivalries | |
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Culture and lore | |
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People | |
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Seasons | |
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National championship seasons in bold |
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1936–1949 | |
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1950s | |
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1960s |
- 1960: Minnesota (AP, Coaches, NFF) / Ole Miss (FWAA)
- 1961: Alabama (AP, Coaches, NFF) / Ohio State (FWAA)
- 1962: USC
- 1963: Texas
- 1964: Alabama (AP, Coaches) / Arkansas (FWAA) / Notre Dame (NFF)
- 1965: Alabama (AP, FWAA) / Michigan State (Coaches, FWAA, NFF)
- 1966: Notre Dame (AP, Coaches, FWAA, NFF) / Michigan State (NFF)
- 1967: USC
- 1968: Ohio State
- 1969: Texas
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1970s | |
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1980–1991 | |
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