During the 1969 and '70 seasons, Majors had his Cyclones wear their "usual"
helmets, those that he introduced upon taking over the program in '68, for all
of State's home games. However, when on the road, he perhaps wanted to create
some excitement among his players and fans and utilized a different helmet
design. For these two seasons, the Cyclones wore a Cardinal helmet with a
one-inch center stripe that was Sunflower gold in color. On each side of the
helmet he used the same diagonally arranged ISU lettering that was on the home
helmet but in a contrasting Sunflower gold color. 1969's recruiting, as
expected, improved but on the field, none of the QB hopefuls received much
protection so that the pass-catching potential of wideout Otto Stowe was
limited to thirty-nine receptions for 508 yards. TB Jock Johnson paced the
rushers with 427 yards and the defensive highlights could be summed up with
the efforts of All Big Eight DB Tony Washington who made seventy-five tackles
and intercepted five. The record again was 3-7. Improvement to 5-6 and playing
Oklahoma tough in a 29-28 loss could be attributed to 1970's better talent and
good defense. DB Washington was again All Conference and he had help from LB
Keith Schroder and a strong pass rush. Soph RB sensation George Amundson who
had set a new ISU discus record with a throw of 177 feet as a freshman, was
moved to QB where he played well and Stowe caught fifty-nine passes for 822
yards to give him All Conference status. Stowe was a round-two pick of the
Dolphins, lasting two seasons with them and playing one each with Dallas and
Denver. Kicker Reggie Shoemake was a weapon.
Entering 1971 the team used the same helmet for all games and eschewed the
idea of having an alternate road appearance. An 8-4 record, big wins over
Missouri and San Diego State and a Sun Bowl berth where losing to LSU hardly
dampened Cyclone fever made Majors look like a genuine treasure in Ames. QB
was manned by Dean Carlson as George Amundson went back to TB and posted 1316
rush yards while TE Keith Krepfle hauled in thirty-four tosses for 492 yards.
The defense was paced by All Conference LB's Keith Schroeder and Ken Caratelli,
and NE Oklahoma JC transfer Matt Blair at the monster. The fine kicking of
Reggie Shoemake earned him All League honors also. As a sign of solidarity and
dedication, many members of the '72 squad began fall camp with shaved heads
and ISU's 5-5-1 record got them another bowl bid, in part due to the 23-23 tie
with mighty Nebraska. In one of Iowa State's most exciting games in its
history, it battled the number-three ranked Cornhuskers down to the final
sixty-three seconds when the Nebraska squad, led by Heisman Trophy winner
Johnny Rodgers, scored the go-ahead TD to make it 23-17. With Amundson back at
quarterback, he used forty seconds to move the Cy's to a TD, completing
four-of-six passes and hitting WR Willie Jones for the tying score. The ISU
crowd stormed the field in anticipation of a huge upset victory but when the
playing surface was cleared, the extra point was missed resulting in the
frustrating tie. A berth to the Liberty Bowl resulted in a 31-30 loss to
Georgia Tech but Majors now had a real team that could tussle with anyone.
From the QB position, George Amundson was a dual All Big Eight threat, running
for 508 and throwing for 2110, setting a conference total yardage record,
earning All Conference and All American honors and the number-one draft status
of the Oilers where he lasted for two seasons and then played another with the
Eagles. Amundson, a member of the ISU Athletic Hall Of Fame, won the Big Eight
MVP of the year over Heisman winner Johnny Rogers of Nebraska, and in
total earned seven letters, three in football, and four in track while setting
the school discus record. TE Keith Krepfle had another big All Conference
season but top WR was Willie Jones with fifty-eight for 1099 yards and Ike
Harris added another sixty-two catches for 975. Surprise RB was soph Mike
Strachan who led the conference in rushing with 1261. Monster Matt Blair went
out for the season with a knee injury leaving All Big Eight DE Merv Krakau
to lead the defense. Krakau played for six seasons with Buffalo. The Cyclones
played so well week to week that Majors was deluged with offers and took the
Pitt rebuilding job, one as daunting as ISU had been. He took them to the
National Championship in 1976 and then returned to his alma mater at
Tennessee for a number of successful campaigns. Majors completed his coaching
career by returning to Pitt in the mid-nineties and retired as a member of the
College Football Hall Of Fame. Majors also contributed to the ISU program by
grooming a number of assistant coaches who went on to successful careers
including Jackie Sherrill, Joe Avezzano, and Jimmy Johnson.
When you strike gold with a new coach, it can be considered luck but Iowa
State did it again in 1973, taking Earle Bruce who had guided Tampa to a 10-2
mark and Tangerine Bowl win. Bruce was injured as a player under Woody Hayes
at Ohio State and became a student assistant. After being an Ohio High School
Coach Of The Year three times, serving as Woody Hayes' assistant at OSU, and
doing a sterling job at Tampa, he was ready for the Cyclones. A combined
thirteen points led to losses against Colorado, Arkansas, Kansas State, and
Kansas but they always played tough in a 4-7 season. RB Mike Strachan had a
1000-plus yard season and was All Big Eight. TE Keith Krepfle who had paced
the attack finished his career with a total of ninety-four receptions for 1368
yards and fifteen TD's, and after a season in the WFL became a solid fit for
the Eagles for seven seasons and had another with the Falcons. Ike Harris too
stopped in the WFL and then had a good career as a wideout with the Cardinals
and Saints. All Big Eight CB Barry Hill led the conference with eight INT's
while LB's Lawrence Hunt and Matt Blair led the front seven. Blair was named
to All American teams with his seventy-seven tackles and had a standout career
from 1974 through 1985 with the Vikings, being named to six Pro Bowls and
having the NFL record for blocked kicks. The record repeated at 4-7 in
1974 but the defense was tighter with DB Barry Hill moved to safety where he
led the Big Eight and was second in the nation with nine INT's. Hill put in
two seasons with the Dolphins after finishing his Cyclone career with
twenty-one interceptions. Brothers Maynard and Mike Stensrud held down the DT
spots with power. WR Luther Blue's twenty-six receptions was augmented by the
rushing of TB Mike Williams who filled in for the oft-injured Strachan who
still completed his Cyclone career as the first to rush for more than 3000
yards. He had a productive seven-year stint with the Saints. Kicker Tom
Goedjen was the All Conference kicker.