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1923 All-America college football team

Official list of the best college football players of 1923

1923 All-America college football team

Summary

Official list of the best college football players of 1923

The 1923 All-America college football team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers that chose All-America college football teams in 1923. The only two selectors recognized by the NCAA as "official" for the 1923 season are Walter Camp, whose selections were published in Collier's Weekly, and Football World magazine. Additional selectors who chose All-American teams in 1923 include Athletic World magazine, selected by 500 coaches, Norman E. Brown, sports editor of the Central Press Association, and Davis J. Walsh, sports editor for the International News Service.

The consensus All-Americans recognized by the NCAA include: halfback Red Grange of Illinois, known as "The Galloping Ghost" and who in 2008 was named by ESPN as the best college football player of all time; halfback Harry Wilson of Penn State, who was later inducted into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame; quarterback George Pfann of Cornell, who later became a Rhodes scholar; end Lynn Bomar of Vanderbilt, who became one of the first Southern players to be recognized as a consensus All-American; tackle Marty Below of Wisconsin, who Red Grange called "the greatest lineman that I ever played against"; and center Jack Blott of Michigan, who later played professional baseball for the Cincinnati Reds.

Consensus All-Americans

For the year 1923, the NCAA recognizes two All-American teams as "official" designations for purposes of its consensus determinations. The following chart identifies the NCAA-recognized consensus All-Americans and displays which first-team designations they received.

NamePositionSchoolNumber - OfficialOfficialOtherNumber - Total
Century MilsteadTackleYale2/2FW, WCAW, DW, LP, NB, PH, TT8/8
George PfannQuarterbackCornell2/2FW, WCAW, DW, LP, NB, PH, TT8/8
Red GrangeHalfbackIllinois2/2FW, WCAW, DW, LP, NB, PH, TT8/8
Charles HubbardGuardHarvard2/2FW, WCAW, DW, LP, NB, PH7/8
Pete MacRaeEndSyracuse1/2FWAW, DW, LP, NB, PH, TT7/8
Ray EklundEndMinnesota1/2FWAW, LP, NB, PH, TT6/8
Jack BlottCenterMichigan2/2FW, WCAW, DW, NB5/8
Jim McMillenGuardIllinois1/2FWAW, DW, NB, TT5/8
Bill MalloryFullbackYale1/2WCDW, NB, PH, TT5/8
Marty BelowTackleWisconsin1/2FWAW, DW, NB4/8
Harry WilsonHalfbackPenn State1/2FWAW, PH3/8
Lynn BomarEndVanderbilt2/2FW, WC--2/8

All-Americans of 1923

Ends

Lynn Bomar of Vanderbilt.
  • Lynn Bomar, Vanderbilt (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-2; WC-1; FW)
  • Ray Eklund, Minnesota (AW-1; FW; LP-1; NB-1; DW-2; TT-1; PH-1, BE)
  • Pete MacRae, Syracuse (AW-1; WC-2; FW; LP-1; NB-1; DW-1; TT-1; PH-1, BE)
  • Homer Hazel, Rutgers (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1)
  • Henry Wakefield, Vanderbilt (NB-2; DW-1, BE)
  • Richard Luman, Yale (AW-3; WC-3; DW-2, BE)
  • Bill Supplee, Maryland (LP-2; DW-3; TT-2, BE)
  • Charles Tallman, West Virginia (AW-3; WC-2, BE)
  • Charlie Berry, Lafayette (AW-2)
  • Frank Rokusek, Illinois (LP-2)
  • Elmer A. Lampe, Chicago (NB-2)
  • Fred Graham, West Virginia (TT-2)
  • Edmund Stout, Princeton (WC-3)
  • Frank L. Henderson, Cornell (DW-3)
  • Wayne Hall, Washington (TT-3)
  • Henry Bjorkman, Dartmouth (TT-3)
  • John W. Hancock, Iowa (BE)
  • Jim Lawson, Stanford (BE)

Tackles

Marty Below
  • Century Milstead, Yale (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-1; WC-1; FW; LP-1; NB-1; DW-1; TT-1; PH-1, BE)
  • Marty Below, Wisconsin (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-1; FW; LP-2; NB-1; DW-1; TT-2, BE)
  • Frank Sundstrom, Cornell (AW-2; WC-1; LP-1; NB-2; DW-3; TT-3; PH-1, BE)
  • Stanley Muirhead, Michigan (AW-2; LP-2; NB-2, BE)
  • Chet Widerquist, Washington & Jefferson (WC-2; TT-2, BE [as g])
  • Pappy Waldorf, Syracuse (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-3; DW-2)
  • Stewart "Stew" Beam, California (WC-3; DW-2, BE)
  • Henry Bassett, Nebraska (AW-3; WC-3, BE)
  • Art Deibel, Lafayette (WC-2)
  • Edwin F. Blair, Yale (DW-3)
  • Joe Bach, Notre Dame (TT-1)
  • Norman Anderson, USC (TT-3)
  • Joe Bennett, Georgia (BE)
  • Robbie Robinson, Florida (BE)

Guards

Charles Hubbard
  • Charles Hubbard, Harvard (AW-1; WC-1; FW; LP-1; NB-1; DW-1; TT-2; PH-1, BE)
  • Jim McMillen, Illinois (AW-1; FW; NB-1; DW-1; TT-1, BE)
  • Joe Bedenk, Penn State (AW-2; WC-1; DW-2; TT-3; PH-1, BE)
  • Edliff Slaughter, Michigan (LP-1)
  • James Welsh, Colgate (AW-2; LP-2; NB-2; DW-2; TT-1)
  • August Farwick, Army (AW-3; NB-2; DW-3; TT-2)
  • Cyril Aschenback, Dartmouth (AW-3; WC-2; LP-2; TT-3)
  • Harvey Brown, Notre Dame (WC-2)
  • Arthur G. Carney, Navy (WC-3)
  • William Johnson, Texas A&M (WC-3)
  • Richard Faville, Stanford (DW-3, BE)
  • Goldy Goldstein, Florida (BE)
  • Tuck Kelly, Vanderbilt (BE)
  • Adolph Bieberstein, Wisconsin (BE)

Centers

Jack Blott of Michigan.
  • Jack Blott, Michigan (AW-1; WC-1; FW; NB-1; DW-1, BE)
  • Edgar Garbisch, Army (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-2; WC-3; NB-2; DW-2; TT-1; PH-1, BE)
  • Edwin C. Horrell, California (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-3; LP-1; DW-3, BE)
  • Winslow Lovejoy, Yale (WC-2; LP-2; TT-2, BE)
  • Adam Walsh, Notre Dame (TT-3)
  • Clyde Propst, Alabama (BE)
  • Claire Frye, Georgia Tech (BE)
  • Ralph Claypool, Purdue (BE)
  • Dolph Eckstein, Brown (BE)

Quarterbacks

George Pfann
  • George Pfann, Cornell (AW-1; WC-1; FW; LP-1; NB-1; DW-1; TT-1; PH-1, BE)
  • Lyle Richeson, Yale (WC-2; DW-2; TT-2, BE)
  • Hoge Workman, Ohio State (AW-2; NB-2, BE)
  • Irwin Uteritz, Michigan (LP-2; DW-3, BE)
  • Harry Stuhldreher, Notre Dame (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-3; TT-3, BE)
  • Red Dunn, Marquette (WC-3)
  • Herb Covington, Centre (BE)
  • Harold Chapman, Oregon (BE)
  • Charles Darling, Boston College (BE)

Halfbacks

Red Grange of Illinois.
  • Red Grange, Illinois (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-1; WC-1; FW; LP-1; NB-1; DW-1; TT-1; PH-1, BE)
  • Harry Wilson, Penn State (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-1; WC-2; FW; DW-2; TT-2; PH-1, BE)
  • Don Miller, Notre Dame (College Football Hall of Fame) (LP-2; NB-1; DW-1; TT-2 [fb], BE)
  • Earl Martineau, Minnesota (AW-3; WC-1; NB-2; TT-3 [fb], BE)
  • Harry Kipke, Michigan (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-2; LP-1; TT-3)
  • Don Nichols, California (AW-2; TT-1; BE)
  • Mal Stevens, Yale (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-2 [fb]; LP-2; DW-3; TT-3)
  • Dave Noble, Nebraska (LP-2; DW-2; TT-2)
  • Eddie Tryon, Colgate (AW-3; WC-2; BE)
  • Walter Koppisch, Columbia (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-3)
  • Karl Bohren, Pittsburgh (WC-3)
  • Gil Reese, Vanderbilt (DW-3, BE)

Fullbacks

Bill Mallory of Yale
  • Bill Mallory, Yale (College Football Hall of Fame) (AW-2; WC-1; NB-1; DW-1; TT-1; PH-1, BE)
  • John Levi, Haskell (AW-1; FW, BE)
  • Elmer Layden, Notre Dame (College Football Hall of Fame) (LP-1; DW-2, BE)
  • Merrill Taft, Wisconsin (LP-2; NB-2, BE)
  • Ernie Nevers, Stanford (College and Pro Football Hall of Fame) (AW-3; WC-3, BE)
  • John Webster Thomas, Chicago (DW-3)
  • Doug Wycoff, Georgia Tech (BE)
  • Gus Eckberg, West Virginia (BE)
  • Charles E. Cassidy, Cornell (BE)

Key

NCAA recognized selectors for 1923

  • WC = Collier's Weekly as selected by Walter Camp
  • FW = Football World magazine

Other selectors

  • AW = Athletic World magazine, selected by 500 coaches
  • NB = Norman E. Brown, sports editor of the Central Press Association
  • LP = Lawrence Perry
  • DW = Davis J. Walsh, sports editor for the International News Service
  • TT = Tom Thorp, for the Baltimore News
  • PH = Percy Haughton, Cornell coach
  • BE = Billy Evans's "National Honor Roll"

Bold = Consensus All-American

  • -1 – First-team selection
  • -2 – Second-team selection
  • -3 – Third-team selection

References

References

  1. Dave Anderson. (2005). "University of Wisconsin Football". Arcadia Publishing.
  2. (1923-12-19). "Walter Camp's All-American Team". Alton Evening Telegraph.
  3. ''ESPN College Football Encyclopedia'', p. 1155
  4. (1923-12-16). "Athletic World All America". The Decatur Review.
  5. Norman E. Brown. (1923-12-10). "Marty Below On First All-American Eleven: Merrill Taft Gets Berth On Second Team". The Capital Times.
  6. Lawrence Perry. (1923-12-16). "Cornell and Michigan Get Two Places on Perry Eleven, One for Syracuse: Famed Gridiron Expert Rates Pfann, Sundstrom and MacRae Among Best". Syracuse Herald.
  7. (1923-12-06). "Walsh Picks Three Teams of All-Americans In 1923 Seasonal Postmortem". The Coshocton Tribune.
  8. Tom Thorp. (1923-12-08). "Eastern Grid Players Get Six Places On All-American: Tom Thorp Picks Star Mythical Eleven of 1923 for the Baltimore News". Cumberland Evening Times.
  9. (1923-12-11). "All Americans: Percy Haughton's Team". Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune.
  10. (December 29, 1923). "150 Leading Sport Writers Pick All-American Eleven". Santa Ana Register.
  11. (December 17, 1922). "National All-Star". The Wichita Beacon.
  12. (2016). "Football Award Winners". National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).
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