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Terry Brennan, former Notre Dame football coach who ended Oklahoma's 47-game win streak, dies at 93


Former Notre Dame football coach Terry Brennan, who led the Irish to a 7-0 victory over Oklahoma in 1957 that snapped the Sooners’ 47-game win streak, has died at his home in Wilmette, Illinois. He was 93. 

The University announced Brennan’s death Wednesday afternoon. 

A former halfback on Notre Dame’s 1946 and 1947 national championship teams, Brennan was just 25 years old when he was hired as Notre Dame’s head coach in 1954, replacing the legendary Frank Leahy. 

When asked if he was too young, Brennan famously said, “Oh, I don't know. I'll be 26 in a few months.” 

In five seasons as a coach under the Golden Dome, Brennan compiled a 32-18 record, including a 9-1 campaign his first year, the lone loss coming to No. 19 Purdue in the second game when the Irish were ranked No. 1.  

Brennan was 8-2 in 1955 before a dreadful 2-8 mark in 1956. The silver lining in that season was Paul Hornung who led the Irish in passing, rushing, scoring, kickoffs, punt returns and punting on his way to the Heisman Trophy.

“He was a 60-minute performer,” Brennan said of Hornung, who died in November 2020. 

Brennan’s finest hour at Notre Dame came on Nov. 16, 1957, in Norman when the Irish shut out the Oklahoma Sooners, 7-0, snapping their 47-game winning streak.  

Dick Lynch ran in for the game’s only score late in the fourth quarter, capping a 20-play, 80-yard drive. 

Following a 6-4 season in 1958, Brennan was fired. He would not coach football again. He served as a conditioning coach for the Cincinnati Reds baseball team in 1959 before joining a Chicago investment banking firm.

As a player, Brennan rushed for 1,716 yards and averaged 5.8 yards per carry across four seasons (1945-48).