Don't look now, but there is another Game of the Century candidate when on November 18, 1967, the UCLA Bruins, 7–0–1 and ranked No. 1, with senior quarterback Gary Beban as a Heisman Trophy candidate, played the USC Trojans, 8–1 and ranked No. 4, with junior running back O. J. Simpson also as a Heisman candidate. This game is widely regarded as the signature game in the UCLA–USC rivalry all-time, and that is quite a statement to be made. It all came down to one big play. Just after UCLA's QB, Gary Beban, threw his second touchdown pass of the game to put the Bruins up, 20-14. A behemoth 6-foot-8 Trojan, Bill Hayhoe blocked the extra point, just as he did with two field goals earlier in the contest. On the next series, on a third-and-7 play, O.J. Simpson burst through the left side of the Trojan line, cut to the middle of the field, and dashed 64 yards to put the Trojans ahead to stay. USC triumphed 21-20, and those blocked points made quite the difference! ESPN in 2019 ranked it as the 14th Greatest College Game ever.