This was the final Rose Bowl contested under the Big Ten's "no-repeat" policy, which prohibited conference teams from appearing in the game in back-to-back seasons. rule was repealed Bunce finished 24 of 44 for 290 yards and was named the game's MVP. He played one year of professional football in the
Canadian Football League before leaving football to become a successful
orthopedic surgeon, eventually serving as team doctor for Stanford's football team from
1982 to
1992. Stanford would not return to the Rose Bowl until
2000 and did not win another Rose Bowl until
2013. Two Indians were top 10 selections in the
1972 NFL draft. Offensive tackle
Greg Sampson went sixth overall to the
Houston Oilers, and linebacker Jeff Siemon went 10th to the
Minnesota Vikings. Siemon was the Vikings' starting middle linebacker in three Super Bowl losses (
VIII,
IX and
XI, the last of which was the first Super Bowl played at the Rose Bowl stadium) and played 11 seasons for the club. Siemon cracked the starting lineup as a rookie and remained in the lineup through 1981. Sampson played eight seasons in Houston, first playing defensive tackle under coach
Bill Peterson for two seasons, then switching to offense in 1974 under
Sid Gillman and holding down the starting left tackle slot for five seasons under Gillman and
Bum Phillips. Ralston departed Palo Alto shortly after the Rose Bowl to accept the head coaching position of the
National Football League's
Denver Broncos, continuing a trend of college coaches moving to the NFL which began the previous year with
Dan Devine (
Missouri to the
Green Bay Packers) and
Tommy Prothro (
UCLA Bruins to the
Los Angeles Rams), and continued with
Chuck Fairbanks (
Oklahoma to the
New England Patriots),
Don Coryell (
San Diego State to the
St. Louis Cardinals),
Rick Forzano (
Navy to the
Detroit Lions),
Lou Holtz (
North Carolina State to the
New York Jets),
John McKay (
USC to the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers) and
Dick Vermeil (
UCLA to the
Philadelphia Eagles). The Broncos did not make the playoffs during any of Ralston's five seasons (
1972–
1976), but he acquired many of the players who formed the nucleus of Denver's legendary "Orange Crush" defense which led the franchise to
Super Bowl XII under rookie coach
Red Miller in
1977. Under Ralston, the Broncos experienced their first winning season, a campaign Michigan fell to sixth in the AP poll, trailing three schools from the
Big Eight Conference (
Nebraska,
Oklahoma,
Colorado),
Alabama, and
Penn State. The Wolverines did not play in a bowl game in
1972,
1973, or
1974, despite a regular season record of in that period. Michigan was done in an 0–2–1 record vs.
Ohio State, with the losses, both in Columbus, by a combined five points, and the Big Ten's "Rose Bowl or No Bowl" policy, also observed by the Pac-8, which was rescinded before the
1975 season. This allowed an Michigan team (which again lost to
Ohio State) the opportunity to play in the
Orange Bowl. The Wolverines and Buckeyes tied in 1973 to leave, but Ohio State received the Rose Bowl berth on a 6–4 vote of Big Ten athletic directors (rumors circulated that two ADs, rumored to be from Illinois and Michigan State, possibly switched their votes from the 10-0-1 Wolverines to the 9-0-1 Buckeyes due to a serious injury to Michigan quarterback Dennis Franklin). Schembechler's Wolverines returned to three consecutive Rose Bowls from 1977 to 1979, but lost all three (by 8, 7, and 7 points). In
1981, the Wolverines finally won their first bowl game under the legendary coach, breaking a six-game losing streak in the Rose Bowl by the Big Ten. Fittingly, Schembechler's 21-year career at Michigan ended with a loss in the
1990 Rose Bowl, leaving him 2–8 in the "Grandaddy Of Them All" (his other Rose Bowl win was in
1989). Referee
Jerry Markbreit later became the first to serve as referee in four
Super Bowls (
XVII,
XXI,
XXVI,
XXIX; the first two in Pasadena) during his 23-year
NFL officiating career (1976–98), but this was his only bowl game as a college official (the Rose Bowl used a split crew of Big Ten and West Coast officials from 1947-1991; the Big Ten assigned the referee for the game following odd-numbered seasons). Bill Quimby, the back judge who made the controversial safety call against Stanford, officiated in the NFL as a side judge from 1978-94, working
Super Bowl XIX following the
1984 season. ==Video==