LSU and Wake Forest have not played each other in football since this game. The victory gave McClendon a final record of 137-59-7. He still holds LSU records for longest tenure and most victories. He was named Executive Director of the
American Football Coaches Association in 1980 after serving as its president in 1979. Following his death in 2001, LSU's football practice fields were named in McClendon's honor. No LSU coach after McClendon lasted longer than five seasons until
Les Miles, who coached 11 full seasons (2005–15). Miles was fired after four games of the
2016 season. Bo Rein perished in a plane crash on January 10, 1980. Former LSU All-American
Jerry Stovall, the runner-up for the
Heisman Trophy in 1962, McClendon's first year as head coach, was named Rein's successor. Stovall went 22-21-3 in four seasons before he was fired in December 1983. Paul Dietzel was fired as LSU's athletic director in early 1982. The LSU Board of Supervisors cited mismanagement of athletic department finances as the reason for Dietzel's dismissal. Dietzel was succeeded by MIami Dolphins controller Bob Brodhead. LSU has returned to Orlando three times to play in the Tangerine Bowl's successor, the
Citrus Bowl. The Tigers lost 30-25 to
Iowa in
2005 and 19-17 to
Penn State in
2010 and 21-17 to
Notre Dame in
2018, while defeating
Louisville 29-9 in
December 2016. Demon Deacons coach
John Mackovic left Winston-Salem after the 1980 season to become quarterbacks coach for the
Dallas Cowboys. He was named head coach of the
Kansas City Chiefs in 1983. After he was fired by Chiefs owner
Lamar Hunt in January 1987, Mackovic returned to college as head coach at
Illinois (1988-91),
Texas (1992-97) and
Arizona (2001-03). Wake Forest did not return to a bowl game until the
1992 Independence Bowl. The Demon Deacons have played in only one bowl in Florida since this game, the
2007 Orange Bowl, which they lost 24-13 to Louisville. ==References==