UCLA's offensive leaders in 1966 were quarterback
Gary Beban with 1,245 passing yards, running back
Mel Farr with 809 rushing yards, and Harold Busby with 474 receiving yards.[2]
Heading into the final game of the regular season against
rivalUSC, UCLA was 2–1 in conference, 8–1 overall, and ranked fifth in the country. Featuring a "dream backfield" of
All-Americans Beban and Farr, the Bruins lost only one game, at
Washington in rainy
Seattle,[3] where Huskies' head coach
Jim Owens had devoted his entire season to beating Prothro. UCLA had beaten UW the
season before, 28–24, with Prothro's trick play, the Z-streak in which a receiver trots towards the sideline like he's going out of the game and then runs a streak pattern unguarded by the inattentive defender. USC was 4–0 in conference and 7–1 overall, upset on the road by the unranked
Miami Hurricanes in late October. The Bruins and Trojans played a different number of conference games due to uneven scheduling caused by the newer AAWU members and schedules made years in advance (neither played
Oregon or
Washington State; USC shut out
Oregon State). It was widely assumed that only losses would be considered and the winner of the
UCLA-USC game would earn the
Rose Bowl berth.
Beban broke his ankle the week before in the 10–0 home win over
Stanford,[4][5] but backup Norman Dow, making his only start at quarterback, led UCLA to a 14–7 win over the Trojans.[6][7][8] That left USC with a 4–1 conference record (7–2 overall) and #5 UCLA with a 3–1 conference record (9–1) overall. Due to their win over USC, it was widely assumed UCLA would get the Rose Bowl berth. However, a vote the next Monday among the AAWU conference athletic directors awarded USC the Rose Bowl berth.[9][10][11] It was speculated that the directors believed Beban could not play for UCLA in the Rose Bowl due to the broken ankle, thereby giving the
Big Ten Conference representative,
Purdue, a better chance to win. As it turned out, Beban could have played, but a bigger reason was that this was to make up for 1964 when
Oregon State was voted in ahead of USC; the head coach of Oregon State that year was Prothro. Another speculation was the vote was against UCLA out of pure jealousy by the rest of the conference, which voted 7–1 for the clearly inferior team.
This vote deprived Prothro of being the first head coach to earn three consecutive Rose Bowl berths and UCLA athletic director
J. D. Morgan called it a "gross injustice" and the "a dark day in UCLA and AAWU athletic history." Inflamed UCLA students who had gathered for the Rose Bowl celebration rally, took to the streets of
Westwood in protest and actually blocked the
405 Freeway for a short time.[12] Ironically, Morgan was the force behind establishing a tie-breaking method adopted by the conference one year later in which only loss column counted; the first tiebreaker was head-to-head results, followed by overall record. If there was still a tie, the Rose Bowl berth would go to the team that had not played in the Rose Bowl the longest. But it was too late for UCLA. In their final regular season game the next week, USC made the AAWU decision look bad by getting routed 51–0 at home in the L.A. Coliseum by #1
Notre Dame;[13] they lost 14–13 to #7 Purdue in the Rose Bowl on January 2 and finished at 7–4.[14][15][16]