Ben Lee Boynton:The Purple Streak
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Statistical Leaders of the ‘20S
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 14, No. 2 (1992) Statistical Leaders of the ‘20s By Bob GIll Probably the most ambitious undertaking in football research was David Neft’s effort to re-create statistics from contemporary newspaper accounts for 1920-31, the years before the NFL started to keep its own records. Though in a sense the attempt had to fail, since complete and official stats are impossible, the results of his tireless work provide the best picture yet of the NFL’s formative years. Since the stats Neft obtained are far from complete, except for scoring records, he refrained from printing yearly leaders for 1920-31. But it seems a shame not to have such a list, incomplete though it may be. Of course, it’s tough to pinpoint a single leader each year; so what follows is my tabulation of the top five, or thereabouts, in passing, rushing and receiving for each season, based on the best information available – the stats printed in Pro Football: The Early Years and Neft’s new hardback edition, The Football Encyclopedia. These stats can be misleading, because one man’s yardage total will be based on, say, five complete games and four incomplete, while another’s might cover just 10 incomplete games (i.e., games for which no play-by-play accounts were found). And then some teams, like Rock Island, Green Bay, Pottsville and Staten Island, often have complete stats, based on play-by-plays for every game of a season. I’ll try to mention variations like that in discussing each year’s leaders – for one thing, “complete” totals will be printed in boldface. -
NOVEMBER an the H En Nrd Le"I at D Unstaters, .Swarlhmor« 1 75 6 S 1 ! Virtuall) a D 0 No Kocln Feller Mo
Eastern Football Title" Rests Among Four Teams as Result of Saturday's Play "Penn Yale Coaches State., - Pitt, When a Feller Needs a - ßy briggs IN ALL FAIRNESS Harvard, Friend Seem Worried Tigers By W. O. M* GE EH AN Cuä the Pace THE baseball magnates will gather ¡il Chicago to-day u, discuss Over Their Men W Setting plans for the rehabilitation of professional baseball. Whether or Bezdek's Gridiron Warriors not the public confidence^ professional baseball will be restored Dirken*. Aldrirh, Jordan ¡ what the Appear to Have Edge on by the start of the nexi baseball season will depend upon mag¬ antí Acosta in Bar! Shape, All of Their Rival» nates do at Chicago. Is From Only the egotist ami the deaf men among the magnates do not realize Report Hospital that professional baseball has been badly hurt, by the crookedness laid Special orrtspaitdttce WWW ^\ By Kay McCarthy bare the Cook Followers of baseball believe that 7. W tl The í astci f< dbal) championship by County grand jury. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. situation simmers down to four teams baseball needs a thorough housecleaning, and they are right. Magnates only th«? Princetojo and Harvard gam Yale's officials ex as » result of Satnrday'3 games. Wash were too busy with their own petty politics to foresee and forestall the unplayed, football mgton and Jetfcrsi Brown, Cornel) corruption of the game. There must be now men in supreme control of pressed I lernselves to-night a ¿ on their hands. Yal« and Georgetown «rere the elevens to organized baseball, men who will inspiro public confidence. -
2013-14 Men's Basketball Records Book
Award Winners Division I Consensus All-America Selections .................................................... 2 Division I Academic All-Americans By School ..................................................... 8 Division I Player of the Year ..................... 10 Divisions II and III Players of the Year ................................................... 12 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans by School ....................... 13 Divisions II and III Academic All-Americans by School ....................... 15 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners by School................................... 17 2 2013-14 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL RECORDS - DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Division I Consensus All-America Selections 1917 1930 By Season Clyde Alwood, Illinois; Cyril Haas, Princeton; George Charley Hyatt, Pittsburgh; Branch McCracken, Indiana; Hjelte, California; Orson Kinney, Yale; Harold Olsen, Charles Murphy, Purdue; John Thompson, Montana 1905 Wisconsin; F.I. Reynolds, Kansas St.; Francis Stadsvold, St.; Frank Ward, Montana St.; John Wooden, Purdue. Oliver deGray Vanderbilt, Princeton; Harry Fisher, Minnesota; Charles Taft, Yale; Ray Woods, Illinois; Harry Young, Wash. & Lee. 1931 Columbia; Marcus Hurley, Columbia; Willard Hyatt, Wes Fesler, Ohio St.; George Gregory, Columbia; Joe Yale; Gilmore Kinney, Yale; C.D. McLees, Wisconsin; 1918 Reiff, Northwestern; Elwood Romney, BYU; John James Ozanne, Chicago; Walter Runge, Colgate; Chris Earl Anderson, Illinois; William Chandler, Wisconsin; Wooden, Purdue. Steinmetz, Wisconsin; -
Football Award Winners
FOOTBALL AWARD WINNERS Consensus All-America Selections 2 Consensus All-Americans by School 20 National Award Winners 32 First Team All-Americans Below FBS 42 NCAA Postgraduate scholarship winners 72 Academic All-America Hall of Fame 81 Academic All-Americans by School 82 CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS In 1950, the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau (the NCAA’s service bureau) compiled the first official comprehensive roster of all-time All-Americans. The compilation of the All-America roster was supervised by a panel of analysts working in large part with the historical records contained in the files of the Dr. Baker Football Information Service. The roster consists of only those players who were first-team selections on one or more of the All-America teams that were selected for the national audience and received nationwide circulation. Not included are the thousands of players who received mention on All-America second or third teams, nor the numerous others who were selected by newspapers or agencies with circulations that were not primarily national and with viewpoints, therefore, that were not normally nationwide in scope. The following chart indicates, by year (in left column), which national media and organizations selected All-America teams. The headings at the top of each column refer to the selector (see legend after chart). ALL-AMERICA SELECTORS AA AP C CNN COL CP FBW FC FN FW INS L LIB M N NA NEA SN UP UPI W WCF 1889 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – √ – 1890 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – √ – 1891 – – – -
2012 DI Football Records Book
Award Winners Consensus All-America Selections ....... 2 Special Awards .............................................. 19 First-Team All-Americans Below FBS ... 25 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners ........................................................ 39 Academic All-America Hall of Fame ............................................... 43 Academic All-Americans by School ..... 44 2 2012 NCAA FOOTBALL RECORDS - CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Consensus All-America Selections In 1950, the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau (the NCAA’s service bureau) of players who received mention on All-America second or third teams, nor compiled the fi rst offi cial comprehensive roster of all-time All-Americans. the numerous others who were selected by newspapers or agencies with The compilation of the All-America roster was supervised by a panel of ana- circulations that were not primarily national and with viewpoints, therefore, lysts working in large part with the historical records contained in the fi les of that were not normally nationwide in scope. the Dr. Baker Football Information Service. The following chart indicates, by year (in left column), which national media The roster consists of only those players who were fi rst-team selections on and organizations selected All-America teams. The headings at the top of one or more of the All-America teams that were selected for the national au- each column refer to the selector (see legend after chart). dience and received nationwide circulation. Not included are the thousands All-America -
The Professional Football Researchers Association Once
The Professional Football Researchers Association Once More, With Feeling 1921 By PFRA Research Through the winter of 1920-21, the APFA couldn't even say for undecided. It took about fifty years for the NFL to remember the certain which team had won its championship. On the other hand, Akron Pros. there weren't a whole helluva lot of people who cared. How much prestige the title was worth was highly debatable. Of more importance, as it turned out, was the precedent of awarding the title by vote rather than by reading the top line of the In Philadelphia, the Union A.A. of Phoenixville -- while not a standings. The APFA hadn't kept standings in 1920, of course, but member of the APFA -- claimed the mythical "U.S. Professional once the practice was started it did not always yield a certain Championship" by virtue of eleven wins and no ties. Most of the answer at the end of the season, particularly during the next few wins had come against the likes of Edwardsville, Holmesburg, and years. Conshohocken, but the eleventh victim had been the Canton Bulldogs -- the recognized champs of 1919. In the midwest, few After Frank Nied and Ranney, the Akron owners, accepted their fans had ever heard of the Union A.A., and the team itself couldn't trophy, the meeting got down to its raison d'etre. The managers in trumpet its pretensions too loudly because most of its important turn made short speeches outlining conditions in their cities and players doubled on Sundays as the Buffalo All-Americans. -
Protest at the Pyramid: the 1968 Mexico City Olympics and the Politicization of the Olympic Games Kevin B
Florida State University Libraries Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations The Graduate School 2003 Protest at the Pyramid: The 1968 Mexico City Olympics and the Politicization of the Olympic Games Kevin B. Witherspoon Follow this and additional works at the FSU Digital Library. For more information, please contact [email protected] THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES PROTEST AT THE PYRAMID: THE 1968 MEXICO CITY OLYMPICS AND THE POLITICIZATION OF THE OLYMPIC GAMES By Kevin B. Witherspoon A Dissertation submitted to the Department of History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Degree Awarded: Fall Semester, 2003 The members of the Committee approve the dissertation of Kevin B. Witherspoon defended on Oct. 6, 2003. _________________________ James P. Jones Professor Directing Dissertation _____________________ Patrick O’Sullivan Outside Committee Member _________________________ Joe M. Richardson Committee Member _________________________ Valerie J. Conner Committee Member _________________________ Robinson Herrera Committee Member The Office of Graduate Studies has verified and approved the above named committee members. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This project could not have been completed without the help of many individuals. Thanks, first, to Jim Jones, who oversaw this project, and whose interest and enthusiasm kept me to task. Also to the other members of the dissertation committee, V.J. Conner, Robinson Herrera, Patrick O’Sullivan, and Joe Richardson, for their time and patience, constructive criticism and suggestions for revision. Thanks as well to Bill Baker, a mentor and friend at the University of Maine, whose example as a sports historian I can only hope to imitate. Thanks to those who offered interviews, without which this project would have been a miserable failure: Juan Martinez, Manuel Billa, Pedro Aguilar Cabrera, Carlos Hernandez Schafler, Florenzio and Magda Acosta, Anatoly Isaenko, Ray Hegstrom, and Dr. -
New Years Resolutions
January 1, 2018 Soboba Indian Reporter: Ernie C. Salgado Jr., Publisher/Editor Fools Shooting At the Dark! New Years Resolutions As sad as it is, every New Years eve it Well folks it’s that time of to “Unreasonable.” Of seems like it’s a full moon as all the year again for us to make all course some of us are mental giants are out shooting at the those New Year Resolution. more disciplined and dark. hold the line of which I Some of the number one am not included, I tend They either don’t understand or know of resolutions are to drop those to be with the failed Isaac Newtons “Laws of Gravity” of extra pounds, cut down on memory group. what goes up must come down or simple sat and sugar, eat more veg- don’t care. Most likely the latter. etables, drink less soda The good thing is that we or beer, spend more time get to celebrate the start It just don’t make any sense for anyone with the kids and get that of another year. to take out a gun and shoot it into the sky annual doctors check up. not knowing where the bullets will come Happy New Year and may God bless down. Irresponsible at a minimum and Although our intentions are good our you and your family. beyond stupid not to mention cost at memory betrays us before the end of Soboba Indian Reporter about a buck a bullet. the month and we tend to chalk it up Mia Basquez-Gallerito His grandfather, Tony center in the photo Basquez (Pechanga) above with her son, served in the U.S. -
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 21, No. 6 (1999)
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 21, No. 6 (1999) 1920 APFA SCORING (Unofficial) TEAM SCORING TEAM TD TR TP TX XP FG SF PTS Buffalo All-Americans 36 25 3 8 31 3 1 258 Canton Bulldogs 28 20 5 3 24 4 2 208 Rock Island Independents 29 18 4 7 24 1 0 201 Decatur Staleys 22 19 2 1 14 6 0 164 Rochester Jeffersons 21 n/a n/a n/a 16 4 1 156 Akron Pros 21 11 3 7 18 1 2 151 Dayton Triangles 21 9 8 4 18 2 0 150 Chicago Cardinals n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 115 Detroit Heralds 8 n/a n/a n/a 5 0 0 53 Chicago Tigers 7 6 0 1 4 1 0 49 Columbus Panhandles 5 3 2 0 5 2 0 41 Hammond Pros n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 41 Cleveland Tigers 4 1 2 1 4 0 0 28 Muncie Flyers 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 INDIVIDUAL SCORING PLAYER TD TR TP TX XP FG PTS Dutch Sternaman, Sta 12 12 0 0 3 4 87 Ockie Anderson, Buf 11 8 0 3 5 0 71 Tommy Hughitt, Buf 8 8 0 0 5 0 53 Fritz Pollard, Akr 7 5 1 1 0 0 42 Bodie Weldon, Buf 5 4 1 0 5 2 41 Frank Bacon, Day 6 3 1 2 4 0 40 Joe Guyon, Can 6 6 0 0 2 0 38 Bob Argus, Roch 6 n/a n/a n/a 0 0 36 Waddy Kuehl, RI 6 4 1 1 0 0 36 Paddy Driscoll, ChiC 4 4 0 0 10 0 34 Jim Laird, Roch 3 n/a n/a n/a 1 4 31 Arnie Wyman, RI 5 1 1 3 0 0 30 Heinie Miller, Buf 1 0 1 0 16 1 25 Pete Calac, Can 4 4 0 0 0 0 24 Fred Chicken, RI 4 4 0 0 0 0 24 Jimmy Conzelman, Sta 3 3 0 0 0 2 24 Ike Martin, Can 4 3 1 0 0 0 24 Pat Smith, Buf 4 4 0 0 0 0 24 Al Feeney, Can 0 0 0 0 20 1 23 Rube Ursella, RI 1 1 0 0 12 1 21 Tex Grigg, Can 3 3 0 0 0 0 18 John Hendron, Can 3 2 0 1 0 0 18 Bob Koehler, Sta 3 2 0 1 0 0 18 Jerry Mansfield, RI 3 2 1 0 0 0 18 Frank McCormick, Akr 3 2 1 0 0 0 18 Bob Nash, Akr 3 0 -
Chapter Eight
CHAPTER EIGHT PRO FOOTBALL’S EARLY YEARS Then all of a sudden this team was playing to 6,000–8,000 people. I personally think that the Oorang Indians, the Canton Bulldogs, and the Massillon Tigers were three teams that probably introduced people to pro football. — Robert Whitman. Professional football got its start long after pro baseball, and for many years was largely ignored by the general public. Prior to 1915, when Jim Thorpe signed with the Canton Bulldogs, there was little money in the game. The players earned less than was paid, under the table, to some allegedly amateur players on success- ful college teams. Jim Thorpe, 1920s jim thorpe association Things changed when Thorpe entered the pro game. Jack Cusack, the manager of the Canton Bulldogs, recalled: “I hit the jackpot by signing the famous Jim Thorpe … some of my business ‘advisers’ frankly predicted that I was leading the Bulldogs into bankruptcy by paying Jim the enormous sum of $250 a game, but the deal paid off even beyond my greatest expectations. Jim was an attraction as well as a player. Whereas our paid attendance averaged about 1,200 before we took him on, we filled the Massil- lon and Canton parks for the next two games — 6,000 for the first and 8,000 for the second. All the fans wanted to see the big Indian in action. On the field, Jim was a fierce competitor, absolutely fearless. Off the field, he was a lovable fellow, big-hearted and with a good sense of humor.” Unlike Thorpe’s experience in professional baseball, he was fully utilized on the gridiron as a running back, kicker, and fierce defensive player. -
1924:The Third Time Is Charmed
The Professional Football Researchers Association The Third Time is Charmed 1924 By PFRA Research On Sunday, September 21, the Bears and Packers played a bang- That win represented half of Kansas City's victories for the season. up game at Green Bay. After a scoreless first quarter, the Pack They spent most of their time huddled at the bottom of the caught Chicago's "Duke" Hanny with the football behind his own standings, along with Akron, Dayton, Kenosha, Minneapolis, and goal line and dumped him on his dignity for a safety. Green Bay Rochester. held its narrow two-point lead into the final quarter when Pack veteran "Cub" Buck tacked on three more points with a perfect Most of the league members, teams like Green Bay, Racine, and placekick. The Bears needed only a touchdown to win but Green the Chicago Cardinals, were respectable, middle-of-the-deck Bay never gave them the chance. The final was a 5-0 Packer performers. They pulled an occasional upset, played each other victory. well, and were out of the race before Halloween. Nevertheless, once in a while they could do something notable. Green Bay gleefully chalked up a shoutout win over the team that would become through the years their most bitter rival. They still At Chicago, in the Cardinals' opener, "Paddy" Driscoll nailed a 52- claimed the victory in their record book until only a few years ago. yard placekick in leading his team over Milwaukee. It would be ten years before any NFL player cashed a longer field goal. Chicago knew better. -
The Oorang Indians
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 3, No. 1 (1981) THE OORANG INDIANS By Bob Braunwart, Bob Carroll & Joe Horrigan GOING TO THE DOGS "Let me tell you about my big publicity stunt," wrote Walter Lingo, owner and operator of the Oorang Kennels in a 1923 edition of Oorang Comments, his monthly magazine devoted to singing the praises of himself and his Airedales. "You know Jim Thorpe, don't you, the Sac and Fox Indian, the world's greatest athlete, who won the all-around championship at the Olympic Games in Sweden in 1912? Well, Thorpe is in our organization." Lingo went on to explain that he had placed Thorpe in charge of an all-Indian football team that toured the country's leading cities for the express purpose of advertising Oorang Airedales. As far as Lingo was concerned, that was the only thing that really mattered -- how good Thorpe and company made his dogs look. Football was a game he never really cared for very much. Ironically, Lingo's "stunt" produced the most colorful collection of athletes ever to step onto an NFL gridiron. In American sports lore, there never was, and surely never will be again, anything like the Oorangs, the first, the last, and the only all-Indian team ever to play in a major professional sports league. Although Thorpe was given three full pages in Oorang Comments, very little was said about the performance of his team. It was just as well; they weren't very good, despite the presence of two future Hall of Famers and several other former All-Americans in their lineup.