In sports, where there is an ecstatic winner, there is a corresponding sad loser. Students were so upset that they burned his number-7 in effigy that night on the sucla campus, and he had to wear a mustache and disguise the rest of the school year. at Crossroads Church, 10050 Wolf Road, Grass Valley, CA 95949.Īll us Trojans recall is that 64 yard touchdown, but for the suclas all they recall is that their kicker, Andrusyshyn (correct spelling, I just looked it up) lost that game by missing a crucial extra point that left sucla vulnerable at 20-14 with 10-minutes to go, missed one field goal and had 2 others blocked (I just looked that up too) Lehmer also attended Loara High School in Anaheim and Fullerton Junior College.Ī celebration of Lehmer’s life will be held on Saturday, Augat 11:00 a.m. He graduated from the USC School of Medicine in 1975 and became a surgeon. So I stood up to pass block and a linebacker stayed in his zone and (I) possibly facilitated O.J.’s run.” “(Quarterback) Toby Page called Red 23 (a running play) and I didn’t hear it. “I was left offensive guard and we had a pass play called in the huddle and there was an audible on the line,” Lehmer said. The touchdown gave the Trojans a 21-20 victory and led to them winning the national championship. Simpson exploded through a hole on the left side of the line courtesy of blocks by tackle Mike Taylor and Lehmer. Lehmer was involved in perhaps the most memorable play in USC history when O.J. Lehmer was the only sophomore to start on the 1967 team and was also a member of the 19 NCAA championship track teams as a discus thrower. Steve Lehmer, a three-year starter on the offensive line at USC from 1967-69 and member of the 1967 national championship team, died on July 14.
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