The NAIA began using a four-team playoff to determine a national champion in 1958. St. John's had gone unbeaten in 1962 and was hopeful of an invitation to the playoff that never came. ¶ "We had heard some things late in the season that, if we stayed unbeaten, we were going to make it,'' John Gagliardi said. "We were following what was happening around the country closely. And nervously.''
Gagliardi was in his 11th season at Collegeville in 1963. He would last 60, before retiring after 2012 with more wins (489) than any coach in college football history.
St. John's had closed its second consecutive 8-0 regular season with a 32-7 victory over archrival St. Thomas on Nov. 2. It took until the middle of the month for St. John's to find out that it had been selected for the NAIA playoff and would play Emporia [Kan.] State in a semifinal.
Arrangements were made to play the game Nov. 30 at Met Stadium. The other semifinal was Prairie View A&M of Texas playing at Kearney State in Nebraska on Dec. 7.
The Johnnies blew out Emporia 54-0 on a bitterly cold day in Bloomington. A week later, Prairie View defeated Kearney 20-7.
The NAIA came up with this money-saving plan to get the two winners to Sacramento, Calif., to decide the national title in the Camellia Bowl: The Panthers from Prairie View would hang tight in Nebraska and the charter flight that carried St. John's out of Minneapolis would stop and pick them up.
Prairie View was a historically black college from near Houston. St. John's was a bastion of whiteness in the woods of central Minnesota.
"Remember, this was two weeks after President Kennedy was assassinated,'' said Ken Roering, a standout end for the Johnnies. "There was unrest over civil rights, and then the president was shot … it was such a crazy time.