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1942 college football season

American college football season


American college football season

FieldValue
year1942
imageLA Coliseum scoreboard 1942.jpg
image_size250
image_captionRose Bowl scoreboard, preseason game of OSC (Army) v Duke All-Stars
preseason_apOhio State
regular_season
championOhio State (AP)
Georgia (various)
number_of_bowls5
bowl_start
bowl_end
heismanFrank Sinkwich (halfback, Georgia)

Georgia (various) The 1942 college football season was the 74th season of intercollegiate football in the United States. Competition included schools from the Big Ten Conference, the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC), the Southeastern Conference (SEC), the Big Six Conference, the Southern Conference, the Southwestern Conference, and numerous smaller conferences and independent programs. The season was the first after the entry of the United States into World War II.

The teams ranked highest in the final AP poll in December 1942 were:

  1. The Ohio State Buckeyes won the Big Ten championship and compiled an overall record of 9–1 record with the team's one loss coming against No. 3 Wisconsin. The Buckeyes ranked second nationally in scoring offense (33.7 points per game) and fourth in total offense (397.5 yards per game). They were ranked No. 1 in the final AP Poll but did not appear in a bowl game. Gene Fekete led the Big Ten with 910 rushing yards. Ohio State was selected as the national champion by the Associated Press (AP).
  2. The Georgia Bulldogs won the SEC championship and had an overall record of 11–1, including a victory over UCLA in the 1943 Rose Bowl. The Bulldogs ranked first nationally with 429.5 yards of total offense per game and were voted second in the final AP Poll in December 1942, prior to the Rose Bowl.
  3. The Wisconsin Badgers finished second in the Big Ten with an overall record of 8–1–1 record, including a 17–7 victory over eventual AP national champion Ohio State. They were ranked No. 3 in the final AP Poll. The Helms Athletic Foundation selected Wisconsin as 1942 national champions following the bowl games.
  4. The Tulsa Golden Hurricane won the Missouri Valley Conference (MVC) championship with a 10–1 record and was ranked No. 4 in the final AP Poll. They ranked first nationally in scoring offense (39.5 points per game) and passing offense (233.9 yards per game). Glenn Dobbs ranked fourth nationally with 1,427 yards of total offense.
  5. The Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets finished second in the SEC and compiled a 9–2 record, including a loss to Texas in the 1943 Cotton Bowl Classic. They were ranked No. 5 in the final AP Poll.

Frank Sinkwich of Georgia won the Heisman Trophy and led the nation with 2,187 yards of total offense (including 1,392 passing yards), making him the first major-college player to tally more than 2,000 yards in a season. Paul Governali of Columbia won the Maxwell Award. The year's other statistical leaders included Rudy Mobley of Hardin-Simmons with 1,281 rushing yards, Ray Evans of Kansas with 1,117 passing yards, Harding Miller of SMU with 531 receiving yards, and Bob Steuber of Missouri with 121 points scored.

With large numbers of college and professional football players serving in the armed forces, "service teams" competed against the college teams. The top-ranked service teams were Great Lakes Navy (No. 1), Iowa Pre-Flight (No. 2), and Georgia Pre-Flight (No. 3).

Conference and program changes

Conference changes

The Nebraska Intercollegiate Athletic Association, which had been active since 1928, played its final season in 1942. The Northern Teachers Athletic Conference, an active NCAA Division II conference now known as the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference, changed its name to the State Teacher's College Conference of Minnesota.

Membership changes

School1941 Conference1942 Conference
American EaglesMason-DixonDropped Program
Centenary GentlemenSIAADropped program
Gonzaga (WA) BulldogsIndependentDropped Program
Oglethorpe Stormy PetrelsIndependentDropped program
Providence FriarsIndependentDropped program
Transylvania PioneersSIAADropped program

September

On September 19, in Louisville, Georgia defeated Kentucky, 7–6. The following Friday, Georgia defeated the Jacksonville Naval Air Station, 14–0, in Macon. The soldiers at the Flight School at the University of Iowa, organized as the Iowa Pre-Flight Seahawks, overwhelmed Kansas, 61–0.

Most schools got their seasons underway on September 26. Defending champion Minnesota beat Pittsburgh, 50–7. Duke beat Davidson 21–0. Notre Dame and Wisconsin played to a 7–7 tie in Madison. Illinois beat South Dakota 46–0. In Montgomery, Alabama beat South Louisiana Institute (later University of Louisiana at Lafayette), 54–0. Texas beat the Corpus Christi Naval Air Station, 18–7. Michigan beat the Great Lakes Naval Training Station, 9–0. Before its smallest crowd since 1933 (22,555) Ohio State defeated a service team, the Fort Knox Armoraiders, 59–0. Iowa Pre-Flight won again, at Northwestern, 20–12.

October

October 3

Minnesota's winning streak ended when the defending national champs lost their first game in almost four years, to the Seahawks of Iowa Pre-Flight (who just happened to be coached that season by "former" Minnesota head coach Bernie Bierman who had taken leave from Minnesota to serve as an officer in the military during World War II), 7–6. Ohio State beat Indiana 32–21. Michigan beat Michigan State 20–0. Illinois defeated Butler 67–0. Texas beat LSU 27–14. Notre Dame lost to Georgia Tech 13–6. Georgia defeated Furman 40–7. Alabama beat Mississippi State 21–6. Duke lost at Wake Forest, 20–7.

October 10

Minnesota lost at Illinois, 20–13. Ohio State beat visiting USC, 28–12. Michigan lost to Iowa Pre-Flight, 26–14. Georgia beat Ole Miss, 48–13, at Memphis. In Mobile, Alabama defeated the Pensacola NAS, 27–0. Texas lost at Tulane, 18–7. In the poll that followed, the Top Five consisted of three teams from the Big Nine (No. 1 Ohio State, No. 3 Michigan, and No. 5 Illinois) and two from the SEC (No. 2 Georgia and No. 4 Alabama).

October 17

No. 1 Ohio State beat Purdue 26–0. No. 2 Georgia beat Tulane 40–0. No. 3 Michigan defeated Northwestern 34–16. In Birmingham, No. 4 Alabama beat No. 15 Tennessee, 8–0. No. 5 Illinois won at No. 19 Iowa, 12–7. Losing also that day was Iowa Pre-Flight, which sustained its first loss at Notre Dame, 28–0.

In the next poll, the Top Five shuffled slightly, with Alabama and Michigan trading places: Ohio State (No. 1), Georgia (No. 2), Alabama (No. 3), Michigan (No. 4), Illinois (No. 5).

October 24

No. 1 Ohio State won at Northwestern 20–6. No. 2 Georgia won at Cincinnati 35–13. No. 3 Alabama won at Kentucky, 14–0. No. 4 Michigan lost at No. 13 Minnesota, 16–14. No. 5 Illinois lost to No. 8 Notre Dame, 21–14. No. 6 Georgia Tech won at Navy, 21–0.

In the poll that followed, Notre Dame and Georgia Tech replaced Michigan and Illinois: Ohio State (No. 1), Georgia (No. 2), Alabama (No. 3), Notre Dame (No. 4), Georgia Tech (No. 5).

October 31

No. 1 Ohio State lost at No. 6 Wisconsin, 17–7. In Atlanta, No. 2 Georgia beat No. 3 Alabama, 21–10. No. 4 Notre Dame beat Navy in Cleveland, 9–0. No. 5 Georgia Tech won at Duke, 26–7. No. 7 Boston College beat Georgetown, 47–0. The Georgia Bulldogs took over first place in the poll that followed, and Wisconsin and Boston College moved in while Ohio State and Alabama fell out: 1. Georgia 2. Wisconsin 3. Georgia Tech 4. Notre Dame 5. Boston College.

November

November 7

In Jacksonville, No. 1 Georgia beat Florida, 75–0. No. 2 Wisconsin lost at unranked Iowa, 6–0. No. 3 Georgia Tech beat Kentucky 47–7. No. 4 Notre Dame beat Army 13–0 at Yankee Stadium. No. 5 Boston College beat Temple, 28–0. No. 8 Alabama beat South Carolina 29–0 and moved into the Top Five as Wisconsin dropped out. The nation's top two teams were Georgia and Georgia Tech: Georgia (No. 1), Georgia Tech (No. 2), Boston College (No. 3), Notre Dame (No. 4), Alabama (No. 5).

November 14

No. 1 Georgia won at Chattanooga, 40–0. In Atlanta, No. 2 Georgia Tech beat No. 5 Alabama 7–0. No. 3 Boston College beat Fordham at home, 56–6. No. 4 Notre Dame lost to No. 6 Michigan, 32–20, while in Cleveland, No. 10 Ohio State beat No. 13 Illinois 44–20. The poll: Georgia (No. 1), Georgia Tech (No. 2), Boston College (No. 3), Michigan (No. 4), Ohio State (No. 5).

November 21

In Columbus, Georgia, No. 1 Georgia lost to unranked Auburn, 27–13. No. 2 Georgia Tech beat Florida 20–7. No. 3 Boston College defeated Boston University, 37–0. No. 4 Michigan and No. 5 Ohio State met in Columbus, with OSU winning 21–7, capturing the Big Nine championship. No. 7 Wisconsin beat No. 10 Minnesota 21–6 to finish its season at 8–1–1. In the next poll, the Boston College Eagles were No. 1: Boston College (No. 1), Georgia Tech (No. 2), Ohio State (No. 3), Wisconsin (No. 4), Georgia (No. 5).

November 28

No. 1 Boston College lost to unranked Holy Cross, 55–12. No. 2 Georgia Tech visited No. 5 Georgia, and lost 34–0. No. 3 Ohio State defeated the Iowa Pre-Flight Seahawks, 41–12, finishing 9–1–0 and capturing the No. 1 ranking in the final AP poll, ahead of No. 2 Georgia, No. 3 Wisconsin, No. 4 Tulsa, and No. 5 Georgia Tech.

Conference standings

Major conference standings

Independents

Minor conferences

ConferenceChampion(s)Record
Central Intercollegiate Athletics AssociationMorgan State College5–1–1
Central Intercollegiate Athletic ConferencePittsburg State5–0
Far Western ConferencePacific (CA)2–0
Indiana Intercollegiate ConferenceBall State Teachers College5–0
Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceDubuque8–0
Kansas Collegiate Athletic ConferenceBaker6–0
Lone Star ConferenceEast Texas State Teachers2–0–1
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationAlma4–0
Midwest Collegiate Athletic ConferenceLawrence5–0
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceSaint Thomas (MN)5–0
Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationNorthwest Missouri State Teachers
Southeast Missouri State Teachers3–1
Nebraska College Athletic ConferenceDoane4–0
Nebraska Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationNebraska State Teachers (UN–Kearney)2–1
New Mexico Intercollegiate ConferenceNew Mexico State Teachers1–0
North Central Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceAugustana (SD)
Iowa State Teachers (Northern Iowa)4–0
5–0
North Dakota College Athletic ConferenceNorth Dakota Science5–0
Ohio Athletic ConferenceOhio Northern5–0–1
Oklahoma Collegiate Athletic ConferenceCentral State College (OK)2–0
Pacific Northwest ConferenceWillamette4–0
Pennsylvania State Athletic ConferenceEast Stroudsburg State Teachers4–0
Rocky Mountain Athletic ConferenceColorado Mines2–0
South Dakota Intercollegiate ConferenceAugustana (SD)2–0
Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceOccidental
Pomona-Pitzer
Whittier2–1
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceFlorida A&M College7–0
Southwestern Athletic ConferenceTexas College4–0
State Teacher's College Conference of MinnesotaMankato State Teachers
St. Cloud State Teachers4–0
Texas Collegiate Athletic ConferenceHoward Payne4–0
Washington Intercollegiate ConferenceCentral Washington College4–1–1
Wisconsin State Teachers College ConferenceNorth: La Crosse Teachers
South: Platteville State Teachers4–0
3–0–1

Minor conference standings

Rankings

Main article: 1942 college football rankings

Top 10 in final AP poll

  1. Ohio State (9–1)

  2. Georgia (10–1)

  3. Wisconsin (8–1–1)

  4. Tulsa (10–0)

  5. Georgia Tech (9–1)

  6. Notre Dame (7–2–1)

  7. Tennessee (8–1–1)

  8. Boston College (8–1)

  9. Michigan (7–3)

  10. Alabama (7–3)

Heisman Trophy voting

The Heisman Trophy is given to the year's most outstanding player

PlayerSchoolPositionTotal
Frank SinkwichGeorgiaHB1,059
Paul GovernaliColumbiaQB218
Clint CastleberryGeorgia TechHB99
Mike HolovakBoston CollegeFB90
Billy HillenbrandIndianaHB86
Angelo BertelliNotre DameQB75
Dick WildungMinnesotaOT71
Gene FeketeOhio StateFB65
Glenn DobbsTulsaHB63
Dave SchreinerWisconsinE60

Bowl games

Statistical leaders

Team leaders

Total offense

RankTeamGames playedYards gainedYards per gameFirst downs
1Georgia114725429.5186
2Tulsa104261426.1165
3Boston College93697410.8137
4Ohio State103975397.5152
5Missouri124272356.0169
6Hardin-Simmons93130347.8124
6Iowa Pre-Flight103356335.6133
7Georgia Tech103304330.4136
9Indiana103301330.1154
10Texas103205320.5148

Total defense

RankTeamGames playedYards gainedYards per game1st downs
1Texas101173117.363
2Miami91154128.266
3Boston College91186131.872
4William & Mary111516137.877
5North Carolina Pre-Flight101428142.887
6Tennessee101435143.575
7Minnesota91314146.067
8Tulsa101487148.770
9Holy Cross101494149.461
10Great Lakes Navy121917159.891

Rushing offense

RankTeamGamesRushesYards gainedYards per game
1Hardin-Simmons95082767307.4
2Boston College95382635292.8
3Ohio State105712833283.3
4Missouri125973230269.2
5Texas105322496249.6
6Iowa Pre-Flight105152493249.3
7Auburn95002223247.0
8Great Lakes Navy126192906242.2
9Penn95182162240.2
10Georgia114912624238.5

Rushing defense

RankTeamGamesRushesYards gainedYards per game
1Boston College929444048.9
2Texas1030657557.5
3William & Mary1132973466.7
4Alabama1032974374.3
5Tennessee1034776076.0

Passing offense

RankTeamGamesAtt.Compl.Int.Pct.
Compl.YardsYds/GameYds/Attempt
1Tulsa102451389.5632339233.99.55
2Georgia1124512218.4982101191.08.58
3Columbia91999621.4821661184.68.35
4Creighton91577813.4971393154.88.87
5Maryland91709015.5291364151.68.02

Passing defense

RankTeamGamesAtt.Compl.Pct.
Compl.YardsYds/Game
1Harvard98129.35840945.4
1Texas Mines810540.38136345.4
3Miami911546.40043748.6
3Penn State89332.34438948.6
5South Carolina99932.32345350.3

Scoring

RankTeamGamesPointsPts/Game
1Tulsa1143439.5
2Ohio State1033733.7
3Georgia1237631.3
4Boston College1028228.2
5Colorado925127.9
6Indiana1025625.6
7Missouri1228824.0
8Tennessee1125923.5
9Oklahoma A&M1023523.5
10Vanderbilt1023223.2

Individual leaders

Total offense

RankPlayerTeamGamesPlaysRush ydsPass ydsTotal YdsAvg gain
per play
1Frank SinkwichGeorgia11341795139221876.41
2Paul GovernaliColumbia9268168144216106.01
3Bob SteuberMissouri12199109835614547.31
4Glenn DobbsTulsa10179361106614277.97
5Ray EvansKansas10311293111714104.53
6Billy HillenbrandIndiana1023948087713575.68
7Bruce SmithGreat Lakes Navy1224584948613355.45
8Otto GrahamNorthwestern10318235109213274.17
9DuttonPittsburgh930367561012854.24
10Rudy MobleyHardin-Simmons91871281012816.85

Rushing

RankPlayerTeamGamesRushesNet YdsAvg Gain
per Play
1Rudy MobleyHardin-Simmons918712816.85
2Bob SteuberMissouri1214910987.37
3Camp WilsonHardin-Simmons91969815.01
4Mike HolowakBoston College91749655.55
5Gene FeketeOhio State101859104.92
6Bruce SmithGreat Lakes Navy121448495.90
7Bob KennedyWashington State102268133.60
8Frank SinkwichGeorgia111757954.54
9Elroy HirschWisconsin101417675.44
10Roy McKayTexas101327015.31

Passing

RankPlayerTeamGamesAtt.Compl.Int.Pct. Compl.Yds.
1Ray EvansKansas102001019.5051117
2Otto GrahamNorthwestern101828918.4891092
3Paul GovernaliColumbia91658718.5271442
4Frank SinkwichGeorgia11166847.5061392
5Turnbull GilletteVirginia91448214.569920
6Angelo BertelliNotre Dame111627216.4441039
7ClarkTexas Mines91367112.522846
8Glenn DobbsTulsa10107674.6261066
9Tommy MontMaryland91276612.5201076
10Emery Nix±TCU10154669.429672

References

References

  1. (July 2020). "2020 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records". The National Collegiate Athletic Association.
  2. (January 11, 1943). "Badgers Rated Nation's No. 1". Wisconsin State Journal.
  3. "Ohio State Triumphs Over Fort Knox Soldiers," ''The Sunday Times-Signal'' (Zanesville, O.), Sep. 27, 1942, pII-6
  4. (1943). "The Official National Collegiate Athletic Association Football Guide including the Official Rules 1943". A.S. Barnes and Company.
  5. (1943). "The Official National Collegiate Athletic Association Football Guide including the Official Rules 1943". A.S. Barnes and Company.
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