Rival top 10 games
2. Oct. 31, 1936: No. 3 Northwestern 6, No. 1 Minnesota 0
This is an all-but forgotten classic in Northwestern history that very few people talk about. But they should. It was the biggest showdown in college football that season, No. 1 against No. 3.
The win lifted the Wildcats to No. 1 and helped them win the Big Ten title, the fifth conference championship in the school's history and third in six years. It remains the only time in school history the Wildcats beat the top-ranked team in the nation.
Minnesota came into Evanston as the two-time defending national champions with a 28-game unbeaten streak. Northwestern was 4-0 and was led by College Football All-America Steve Reid. As the highlight video shows, the game is scarcely recognizable, with both teams running into the line again and again out of tight formations.
The Wildcats took advantage of a Minnesota fumble in its own territory, and then a penalty against the Gophers for unnecessary roughness put the ball at the Minnesota 1. On the third try, fullback Steve Toth finally broke through the line for the only score of the game. The extra-point attempt was blocked. The Gophers reached the NU 18-yard line late in the game but came away empty.
Northwestern was named No. 1 in the AP poll the following week. They beat Wisconsin and Michigan the next two weeks, but then lost the season finale to No. 11 Notre Dame, 26-6, in South Bend to drop out of the top spot.
The Wildcats won the Big Ten title but finished seventh in the final poll. Who won the national title? Minnesota, believe it or not, even though the Gophers had an identical 7-1 record, had lost to Northwestern head-to-head and finished second to the Cats in the Big Ten. Go figure. That anti-Northwestern bias goes back a long time.