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The 1978 Iowa State Cyclones football team represented the Iowa State University during the 1978 NCAA Division I-A football season as a member of the Big Eight Conference (Big 8). The team was led by head coach Earle Bruce , in his sixth year, and they played their home games at Cylcone Stadium in Ames, Iowa .
This is a list of seasons completed by the Iowa State Cyclones football program since the team's conception in 1892. The list documents season-by-season records, and conference records from 1908 to the present.
The Cyclones had finished 8-3 for the third straight year, going from being tied for 4th to 2nd to 3rd, respectively. This was their fourth bowl game of the decade. Emory Bellard had resigned as Aggie head coach after a 4-0 start led to two straight losses in Southwest Conference play.
Iowa State 1966 Iowa State 1967 Iowa State 1968 Colorado 1969 Iowa State 1970 Iowa State 1971 Iowa State: 1972 Iowa State 1973 Iowa State: 1974 Iowa State: 1975 Iowa State 1976 Nebraska 1977 Oklahoma: 1978 Oklahoma: 1979 Oklahoma 1980 Nebraska: 1981 Oklahoma 1982 Nebraska: 1983 Nebraska: 1984 Oklahoma 1985 Nebraska 1986 Nebraska 1987 Oklahoma ...
The Iowa State Cyclones football program is a college football team that represents Iowa State University in the Big 12 Conference in the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The team has had 33 head coaches since organized football at the school began in 1892, and was officially sanctioned in 1894.
1978 Iowa State Cyclones football team; N. 1978 Northern Iowa Panthers football team This page was last edited on 19 November 2018, at 07:17 (UTC). Text is available ...
Since then, Iowa State teams have been known as the Cyclones. Overall, the team had three wins and three losses and, like Georgia, Iowa State retained Warner for the next season. In 1896 the team had eight wins and two losses. [6] Despite leaving Cornell in 1898, Warner remained as the head coach of Iowa State for another year.
The 1978 Michigan Wolverines football team, under head coach Bo Schembechler, compiled a 10–2 record, tied with Michigan State for the Big Ten championship, led the conference in scoring defense (8.8 points allowed per game), lost to national champion USC in the Rose Bowl, and was ranked No. 5 in the final AP and UPI polls.