In the Purdue game a lateral bounced off Rocky Blier with Leroy Keys running it over 90 yards for a TD. In the waning moments of the Navy game with the reserves in Navy blocked a punt and ran it in for a TD. As a vaguely remember Alabama had the best points against at 37.
Overall this rating exercise is pointless as is comparing baseball players from the deadball era to modern ones. As a student then my memory of John Ray was a charismatic and highly innovative coach. He "invented" a scheme at John Carroll called the Inside 6 (like the Bear front) gaps were filled like a goal line D making running between the tackles nearly impossible and JCU the "best D" at its level by far. Ara heard him at a coaches conference and hired him "on the spot." At ND in 64 saw the invention of the Notre Dame 4 in Spring practice as all the D coaches (mostly Ara's folk from Northwestern) adapted the Inside 6 to the personnel we had. For three or four years we had an actual "schematic advantage" until teams realized they needed more wideouts to attack it as it relied on a three deep zone. By that time JR moved along as head coach at Kentucky which was a career gamble that failed as K was not prepared to do the things that would make them as competitive on the field as their BB team was on the court. He ended his career in the NFL as the LB coach and D coordinator at Buffalo