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词条 1919–20 Chicago Maroons men's basketball team
释义

  1. Regular season

     National Collegiate Championship Series 

  2. Roster

  3. Schedule

  4. Awards and honors

  5. References

{{Infobox NCAA team season
|Mode=Basketball
|Year=1919–20
|Prev year=1918–19
|Next year= 1920–21
|Team=Chicago Maroons
|Image=University of Chicago Basketball Team, Intercollegiate Champions, 1919-20.jpg
|ImageSize= 300px
|Conference=Big Ten Conference
|Division=
|ShortConference=Big Ten
|CoachRank=
|APRank=
|Record= 14–4
|ConfRecord= 10–2
|HeadCoach=Harlan "Pat" Page
|HCYear = 9th
| Captain = Paul Hinkle
| MVP =
|AsstCoach1=Samuel A. Rothermel
|AsstCoach2=Coach Twohig
|AsstCoach3=
|StadiumArena= Bartlett Gymnasium
|Champion=Big Ten Conference Champions
|BowlTourney=
|BowlTourneyResult=
}}{{1919–20 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings}}

The 1919–20 Chicago Maroons men's basketball team represented the University of Chicago.

Regular season

The 1919–20 Chicago Maroons men's basketball season was the final of nine seasons for head coach Pat Page. This group was first Big Ten champion in ten years for the Maroons. The campaign began with a three-game home winning streak, a loss to Iowa, followed by a seven-game winning streak. The team would play 12 conference games with only two defeats. The Maroons were led by captain Paul Hinkle, who would go on to coach Butler University in basketball as well as football for nearly 50 years. Complimenting Hinkle at guard, the Maroons also started Herbert "Fritz" Crisler who also would create a legacy for himself as a coach and athletic director. Additionally, the team rounded out the starting five with combinations of Clarence Vollmer, Robert Birkhoff and Ted Curtiss at forward, Harry Williams and Robert Halladay at center.

At seasons end, Paul "Tony" Hinkle, was named an All-American, while also being named 1st-team all-conference guard.[1] For Hinkle, it was his second consecutive All-American honor and it was the third consecutive all-conference award. Crisler and Vollmer would be named to the all-conference honorable mention team for the 1920 season with Crisler being named defensive player of the year.

National Collegiate Championship Series

At the end of the regular season, Chicago sat at the top of the Big Ten and was considered the champion of the Western Intercollegiate Conference. Simultaneously the Penn Quakers had won the Eastern Intercollegiate Conference. To decide the 1920 national collegiate basketball championship a series of three games was arranged between the two champions. On March 22, 1920, the first game was played before a crowd of 3,600 fans in Bartlett Gymnasium. The champions of the east would fall behind the Maroons at the half by a score of 17–6; however, the final score of the game would be much tighter at 28–24. In the game both Vollmer and Birkhoff each scored 12 points, while Curtiss and Halladay each added a basket.

The second game was played at the University of Pennsylvania's gymnasium which was also the YMCA. The Maroons were not equipped to play in a facility such as this and struggled to a 10–10 halftime score. But, in the end, the champions of the west would succumb to the Quakers and be defeated by a final score of 29–18. In the game both Hinkle and Halladay would foul out as the Maroons would be the recipients of 20 fouls, allowing the Quakers to have multiple free throw opportunities.

The final game was played on the campus of Princeton University within the University Gymnasium. Back on a familiar setting and playing on a semi-neutral court, the Maroons played a very close game. In the end, the Quakers would come out on top by a score of 23–21 and win the Intercollegiate National Championship.[2]

Roster

PlayerPositionClassHometown
Paul Daniel Hinkle captainGuardSeniorLogansport, IN
Herbert "Fritz" Orin CrislerGuardJuniorEarlville, Illinois
Clarence VollmerForwardSophomoreAlma, WI
Robert Droppers BirkhoffForwardJuniorChicago, IL
Edwin "Ted" Charles CurtissForwardSeniorDowners Grove, IL
Harry George WilliamsCenterJuniorChicago, IL
Robert Thayer HalladayCenterSophomoreChicago, IL
Paul C. HitchcockSubstituteJuniorBeltrami, Minnesota
Edgar Henry PalmerSubstituteSophomore
Charles Euclid McGuireSubstituteSophomoreSweetwater, TN
Frank John MaddenSubstituteSeniorChicago, IL
Jerome Price NeffSubstituteSophomore
Perry SegalSubstituteJunior
[3]
  • Head Coach: Harlan Page (9th year at Chicago)

Schedule

{{CBB schedule start|attend=yes|rank=no|tv=no|gamehighs=no|time=no}}
|-
|- align="center" bgcolor=""{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 1/10/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = vs Iowa
| site_stadium = Bartlett Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Chicago, IL
| gamename =
| score = 37–18
| overtime =
| attend = –
| record = 1-0 (1-0)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 1/17/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = vs Wisconsin
| site_stadium = Bartlett Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Chicago, IL
| gamename =
| score = 37–19
| overtime =
| attend = –
| record = 2-0 (2-0)}}

{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 1/24/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = vs Michigan
| site_stadium = Bartlett Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Chicago, IL
| gamename =
| score = 42–22
| overtime =
| attend = –
| record = 3-0 (3-0)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 1/27/1920
| w/l = l
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = @ Iowa
| site_stadium = Iowa Armory
| site_cityst = Iowa City, IA
| gamename =
| score = 19–22
| overtime =
| attend = –
| record = 3-1 (3-1)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 1/30/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = vs Ohio State
| site_stadium = Bartlett Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Chicago, IL
| gamename =
| score = 46–22
| overtime =
| attend = –
| record = 4-1 (4-1)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 2/7/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = @ Minnesota
| site_stadium = University of Minnesota Armory
| site_cityst = Minneapolis, MN
| gamename =
| score = 35–10
| overtime =
| attend = -
| record = 5-1 (5-1)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 2/11/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = @ Ohio State
| site_stadium = Ohio Expo Center Coliseum
| site_cityst = Columbus, OH
| gamename =
| score = 19–13
| overtime =
| attend = -
| record = 6-1 (6-1)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 2/14/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = @ Illinois
| site_stadium = Kenney Gym
| site_cityst = Urbana, IL
| gamename =
| score = 23–21
| overtime =
| attend = 4,420
| record = 7-1 (7-1)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 2/21/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = vs Michigan
| site_stadium = Waterman Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI
| gamename =
| score = 31–19
| overtime =
| attend = –
| record = 8-1 (8-1)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 2/28/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = vs Illinois
| site_stadium = Bartlett Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Chicago, IL
| gamename =
| score = 27–20
| overtime =
| attend = –
| record = 9-1 (9-1)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 3/6/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = vs Minnesota
| site_stadium = Bartlett Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Chicago, IL
| gamename =
| score = 58–16
| overtime =
| attend = –
| record = 10-1 (10-1)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 3/12/1920
| w/l = l
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = no
| opponent = @ Wisconsin
| site_stadium = University of Wisconsin Armory and Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Madison, WI
| gamename =
| score = 17–26
| overtime =
| attend = -
| record = 10-2 (10-2)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 3/22/1920
| w/l = w
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = yes
| opponent = vs Penn
| site_stadium = Bartlett Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Chicago, IL
| gamename = National Collegiate Championship game 1
| score = 28–24
| overtime =
| attend = 3,600
| record = 11-2 (10-2)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 3/25/1920
| w/l = l
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = yes
| opponent = @ Penn
| site_stadium = Penn College YMCA
| site_cityst = Philadelphia, PA
| gamename = National Collegiate Championship game 2
| score = 18–29
| overtime =
| attend = -
| record = 11-3 (10-2)}}{{CBB schedule entry
| date = 3/27/1920
| w/l = l
|time = no
|tv = no
|rank = no
|nonconf = yes
| opponent = vs Penn
| site_stadium = University Gymnasium
| site_cityst = Princeton, NJ
| gamename = National Collegiate Championship game 3
| score = 21–23
| overtime =
| attend = -
| record = 11-4 (10-2)}}{{CBB schedule end||timezone=Central Time}}Bold Italic connotes conference game[4][5]

Awards and honors

  • Paul Hinkle selected as an All-American for the 1919–20 season.
  • Fritz Crisler achieved the Big Ten Medal of Honor following the 1921-22 season

References

1. ^{{cite web| title =2013–14 Chicago Maroons Men's Basketball Media Guide| work =History| publisher =University of Chicago| year=2013| url =http://static.psbin.com/r/r/4kbkpifzert7y5/Chicago-MBB-Yearbook-2013-14.pdf| format=PDF| accessdate =May 13, 2014}}
2. ^The Chicago Daily News Almanac and Yearbook for 1921, The Chicago Daily News Company publisher, 1921, p. 434
3. ^The Cap and Gown, Volume XXV, published 1920, p.380
4. ^{{cite web| title =Chicago Maroons season-by-season results| work =sports-reference.com| publisher =Sports Reference LLC| year=2014| url =https://www.sports-reference.com/cbb/schools/chicago/| accessdate =May 13, 2014}}
5. ^The Cap and Gown, Volume XXV, published 1920, p.384
{{Chicago Maroons men's basketball navbox}}{{DEFAULTSORT:1919-20 Chicago Maroons Men's Basketball Team}}

4 : Chicago Maroons men's basketball seasons|1919–20 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season|1919 in sports in Illinois|1920 in sports in Illinois

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