USC and Ohio State would soon hit the superpower sweet spot, but the mid-1960s represented a lull for both programs.
In the 1964 college football season, USC and Ohio State were far from the top tier of the sport. The 1964 campaign was a Southern and Southwestern season, with Arkansas winning the national title and Alabama playing Texas in a classic Orange Bowl game.
USC won the 1962 national championship but then went through a lull of several seasons before its late-1960s rise to supreme power under O.J. Simpson, which launched the heart of the John McKay dynasty and fed into the greatest 13-year run in program history, from 1967 through 1979. Ohio State similarly became a true college football superpower in the late 1960s, delivering annual top-tier results on a regular basis.
Both schools eventually took off, but in the 1960s, they were still stuck on the launching pad. In 1964, USC lost to Ohio State on the road, 17-0. The Trojans ended the year with a 7-3 record and Ohio State finished the season with a 7-2 mark. USC watched Oregon State — yes, the Beavers! — go to the Rose Bowl, the last time OSU made the January trek to Pasadena. The Buckeyes watched Michigan travel to Los Angeles for the Granddaddy. Michigan was a mediocre program for much of the 1960s, but in this one year, the Wolverines broke through.
The year 1964 was a year USC and Ohio State fans would like to forget, except for that one moment when the Trojans denied Notre Dame and its first-year coach Ara Parseghian a national championship.