The 1964 Little All-America college football team is composed of college football players from small colleges and universities who were selected by the Associated Press (AP) as the best players at each position.
Separate defensive teams
For 1964, the AP resumed selecting separate offensive and defensive teams. They had done so previously in 1951 and 1952, but in 1953 returned to the older tradition of selecting eleven players on a team, without regard to offensive or defensive specialization. Another change adopted in 1964 was the specialization of the selection of backs. Previously, the AP had simply selected four "backs" without regard to their roles as quarterback, halfback, or fullback. The 1964 offensive units chose players in those specific roles, and the defensive units chose included both defensive halfbacks and safeties.[1]
Backfield
Senior quarterback Charlie Green led the 1964 Wittenberg Tigers football team to their third consecutive undefeated season and the No. 1 ranking in the AP small college rankings. He passed for 5,739 yards in four years at Wittenberg.[1] He was later inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.[2]
Junior halfback Randy Schultz of the State College of Iowa Panthers received first-team honors after tallying more rushing yards than all the Panthers' opponents.[1]
Halfback Gerald Allen of Omaha received first-team honors despite having missed part of the season with a leg injury. He rushed for 213 yards against Bradley.[3]
William Cline, a triple-threat tailback for the Tangerine Bowl champion 1964 East Carolina Pirates football team, was also named to the first team.[4]
Others
Otis Taylor helped lead the undefeated 1964 Prairie View A&M Panthers football team to the black college national championship. He was selected to the first team as an end and later spent 11 years with the Kansas City Chiefs, leading the AFL in receiving touchdowns in 1967, and the NFL in receiving yards in 1971.
Alphonse Dotson, a 268-pound offensive tackle for Grambling, also received first-team honors on one of the major All-America teams.[5]
First team
Position
|
Player
|
Team
|
Offense
|
QB
|
Charlie Green
|
Wittenberg
|
HB
|
Gerald Allen
|
Omaha
|
William Cline
|
East Carolina
|
FB
|
Randy Schultz
|
State College of Iowa
|
E
|
Otis Taylor
|
Prairie View A&M
|
Tom Mitchell
|
Bucknell
|
T
|
William Fuller
|
Sacramento State
|
Alphonse Dotson
|
Grambling
|
G
|
Dan Summers
|
Arkansas State
|
Walter Johnson
|
Los Angeles State
|
C
|
Norman Musser
|
Linfield
|
Defense
|
DE
|
Milt Morin
|
UMass
|
Dave Juaqut
|
St. Norbert
|
DT
|
John Smith
|
Maryland State
|
Robert Burles
|
Willamette
|
LB
|
Dale Lindsey
|
Western Kentucky
|
Louis Pastorini
|
Santa Clara
|
Dick Giessuebel
|
Upsala
|
CB
|
Jerry Cole
|
Southwest Texas State
|
Robert Hardy
|
Washburn
|
S
|
Jerry Harris
|
Chattanooga
|
Jimbo Pearson
|
Middle Tennessee
|
Second team
Position
|
Player
|
Team
|
Offense
|
QB
|
Ben Monroe
|
Maryville (TN)
|
HB
|
Jim Allison
|
San Diego State
|
Allen Smith
|
Findlay
|
FB
|
Dave Heide
|
Concordia (MN)
|
E
|
James Galmin
|
Tampa
|
Rich Kotite
|
Wagner
|
T
|
Dave Grant
|
Northeast Missouri State
|
Gordon Bossos
|
Amherst
|
G
|
Pat Stump
|
Northern Michigan
|
Robert Sundberg
|
Minot State
|
C
|
Marvin Peterson
|
Pacific Lutheran
|
Defense
|
DE
|
John Beane
|
West Virginia Tech
|
Gary DeColati
|
Montana State
|
DT
|
Larry Hand
|
Appalachian State
|
Jerry Jacobs
|
North Dakota
|
LB
|
Dan Davis
|
Sewanee
|
Jack Hambelton
|
Lewis & Clark
|
Dave Jones
|
Fort Hays State
|
CB
|
Jeff Kremer
|
Winona State
|
Timothy Chilcutt
|
Austin Peay
|
S
|
Jerry Wonder
|
Luther
|
Randy Jackson
|
Texas A&I
|
See also
References