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MVP: Bunce starred as quarterback
(right) and later as team physician.
Courtesy Palo Alto Medical
Foundation/Drake Lewis
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WITH 1:48 to play in the 1972
Rose Bowl, Stanford trailed unbeaten Michigan 12-10.
That’s when Don Bunce took over.
The senior quarterback—his
blond hair flapping out the back of his helmet—completed
five straight passes to lead Stanford from its own
22-yard line deep into Michigan
territory. A 31-yard field goal with 12 seconds remaining
clinched the improbable win, and Bunce was named the
game’s
Most Valuable Player.
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Stanford Athletics
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Years later, the former No. 11
was still synonymous with Stanford football. An orthopedic
surgeon with the
Palo Alto
Medical Foundation, Bunce served as the Cardinal’s
team physician for more than a decade.
Donald Randy
Bunce died April 15 in Santa Cruz, Calif., of a heart
attack. He was 54.
Born in Redwood City, Bunce attended
Woodside High and arrived at Stanford on a football
scholarship in
1967. For
three years, he played sparingly while backing up
Heisman Trophy winner Jim Plunkett, ’70. In 1971, Bunce
led Stanford to a 9-3 record and a second straight Pac-8
title.
Selected by the Washington Redskins in the
11th round of the 1972 NFL draft, Bunce opted instead
for the
British Columbia Lions of the Canadian Football
League. But his true
passion was medicine, and after a single season,
the onetime human biology major enrolled at Stanford
Medical
School.
Bunce is survived by his wife, Jennifer;
his son, Cameron; his daughter, Mikele, ’99; his parents,
Carole and Sid; three sisters, Cheryl, Linda and Pam; and
two brothers,
Gary and Steve. His first wife, Diana, ’70, died
in 1987.
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