Langston led the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) in both total defense (81.2 yards per game) and passing defense (23.6 yards per game) and ranked second in total offense (468.8 per game). Quarterback Donald Lee Smith led the NAIA in individual total offense with an average of 235.3 yards per game and was selected as a second-team player on the 1961 Little All-America college football team.
Langston was one of the first historically black universities to compete in a previously segregated football conference. The Lions joined the OCC in 1958 and won conference championships in 1959 and 1960.
Langston set a new National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) record, allowing opponents to gain an average of only 81.2 yards per game.[13][14] The Lions also led the NAIA in pass defense, giving up only 23.6 passing yards per game.[13][14] Langston's opponents completed only 35 of 123 passes for 213 yards.[14] Langston's rushing defense ranked fifth in the NAIA, as the team allowed only 518 rushing yards, an average of 57.5 yards per game.[14]
Langston also ranked second in the NAIA with 4,025 yards of total offense (468.8 per game), consisting of 1,946 rushing yards and 2,079 passing yards.[14] Quarterback Donald Lee Smith led the NAIA in individual total offense with an average of 235.3 yards per game (2,118 yards on 233 plays).[15][14] Smith ranked fourth in the NAIA in passing, completing 87 of 171 passes (54.0%) for an average of 172.9 passing yards per game.[14] Smith also had an 80-yard touchdown run against Panhandle A&M that was the fifth longest run in the NAIA during the 1961 season.[14]
Langston also had two of the top receivers in the NAIA. Senior end DeWitt Anderson ranked ninth in the NAIA with 37 catches for 661 yards, an average of 73.4 yards per game. Sophomore end Randolph Furch ranked 13th with 37 catches for 587 yards, an average of 65.2 yards per game.[14]
Backup quarterback Marvin Williamson handled punting duties for the team and ranked fourth in the NAIA with an average of 43.6 yards per punt.[14]
Smith was also named back of the year in the OCC, and five Langston players received first-team honors on the 1961 All-OCC team: Smith at back; DeWitt Anderson and Randolph Furch at end; Roosevelt Nivens at offensive tackle; and Edison Harrington at defensive tackle.[17]
Personnel
Players
Leroy Adams, end, sophomore, 196 pounds
DeWitt Anderson, end, senior, 173 pounds
John Bates
Gene Batson
George C. Brown
Donald Butler
Joe Butler, center, senior, 170 pounds
Don Crockett
James Cummings, guard, junior, 195 pounds
Theodis Fipp
Randolph Furch, end, sophomore, 198 pounds
Silas Goree, center, junior, 195 pounds
Edison Harrington (#66), guard, tackle and captain, senior, 220 pounds
Ed Hurd
Ralph Hurd
Billy Hurte, halfback, senior, 165 pounds
Archie Jones, halfback, junior, 170 pounds
Fred Jones
Jacob Knight
Ovid Lacey
Wilbur Law, tackle, senior, 190 pounds
Leroy Mack
Silver McQuarters, fullback, junior, 200 pounds
Henry Moore, halfback, senior, 196 pounds
Odell Nathaniel
Roosevelt Nivens, tackle, senior, 220 pounds
James Petit, end, junior, 172 pounds
Robert Phillips
Jimmy Pugh, guard, junior, 225 pounds
Grover Quinn, tackle, junior, 202 pounds
Charles Reed
Richard Robinson
Eddie Shegog
Donald Lee Smith (#10), quarterback, senior, 175 pounds