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词条 1919 Michigan Wolverines football team
释义

  1. Schedule

  2. Players

     Letter winners  Non-letter winners 

  3. Awards and honors

  4. Coaching staff

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Infobox NCAA team season
|Year=1919
|Team=Michigan Wolverines
|Image=1919 Michigan Wolverines football team.jpg
|ImageSize=300
|Conference=Big Ten Conference
|Division=
|ShortConference=Big Ten
|Record=3–4
|ConfRecord=1–4
|HeadCoach=Fielding H. Yost
|HCYear=19th
|CoachRank=
|APRank=
|OffCoach=
|DefCoach=
|OScheme=
|DScheme=
|Captain=Angus Goetz
|StadiumArena=Ferry Field
|Champion=
|BowlTourney=
|BowlTourneyResult=
|uniform=20smichiganuniform2.png
}}{{1919 Big Ten football standings}}

The 1919 Michigan Wolverines football team represented the University of Michigan in the 1919 college football season. The team's head coach was Fielding H. Yost. The Wolverines played their home games at Ferry Field.

Schedule

{{CFB schedule
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 4
| w/l = w
| nonconf = y
| opponent = {{cfb link|year=1919|team=Case Scientists|title=Case}}
| site_stadium = Ferry Field
| site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI
| score = 34–0
| attend =
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 18
| w/l = w
| nonconf = y
| opponent = Michigan Agricultural
| site_stadium = Ferry Field
| site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI
| gamename = rivalry
| score = 26–0
| attend = 21,000
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 25
| w/l = l
| opponent = Ohio State
| site_stadium = Ferry Field
| site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI
| gamename = rivalry
| score = 3–13
| attend = 25,000
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 1
| w/l = w
| opponent = Northwestern
| site_stadium = Ferry Field
| site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI
| score = 16–13
| attend = 12,000
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 8
| w/l = l
| away = y
| opponent = Chicago
| gamename = series
| site_stadium = Stagg Field
| site_cityst = Chicago, IL
| score = 0–13
| attend = 24,000
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 15
| w/l = l
| away = y
| opponent = Illinois
| site_stadium = Illinois Field
| site_cityst = Champaign, IL
| gamename = rivalry
| score = 7–29
| attend = 14,000
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 22
| w/l = l
| homecoming = y
| opponent = Minnesota
| site_stadium = Ferry Field
| site_cityst = Ann Arbor, MI
| gamename = Little Brown Jug
| score = 7–34
| attend = 30,000
}}
}}

Players

Letter winners

  • John C. Cary - end (Grand Rapids, Michigan)
  • Elmer W. Cress[1] - end (Grand Rapids, Michigan)
  • William R. Cruse[2] - started 2 games at left halfback, 2 games at right halfback, 2 games at fullback (Detroit, Michigan)
  • Frank Culver - started 3 games at center, 1 game at left guard (Detroit, Michigan)
  • Frank T. Czysz[3] - started 1 game at right tackle (Dunkirk, New York)
  • Roland Glenn Dunn[4] - started 3 games at right tackle, 1 game at right guard (Muskegon Heights, Michigan)
  • Robert J. Dunne - started 6 games at left end (Chicago, Illinois)
  • Donald A. Finkbeiner[5] - tackle (Perrysburg, Ohio)
  • William Fortune - started 3 games at left guard (Springfield, Illinois)
  • Gerald W. Froemke[6] - started 1 game at right halfback (Sheldon, North Dakota)
  • Angus Goetz - started 7 games at left tackle (Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan)
  • J. Vinton Hammels[7] - tackle (Glendale, Arizona)
  • William P. Henderson - started 1 game at right end (Detroit, Michigan)
  • Roy W. Johnson - started 2 games at center, 1 game at left guard (Grand Rapids, Michigan)
  • Kenneth T. Knode - started 1 game at quarterback, 1 game at right halfback (Martinsburg, West Virginia)
  • Alvin Loucks - guard (Grand Rapids, Michigan)
  • Willard L. Peach[8] - started 2 games at right end, 1 game at left end, 1 game at right tackle (Fremont, Ohio)
  • Harold Rye - started 3 games at right end (Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan)
  • Cliff Sparks - started 6 games at quarterback, 1 game at right halfback (Jackson, Michigan)
  • Ernie Vick - started 4 games at fullback, 2 games at center (Toledo, Ohio)
  • Archie Weston - started 2 games at right halfback (Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan)
  • Hugh Wilson - started 4 games at right guard, 2 games at right tackle, 1 game at left guard (Grand Rapids, Michigan)

Non-letter winners

  • John M. Barnes - halfback (Washington, D.C.)
  • James V. Campbell - tackle (Ann Arbor, Michigan)
  • Charles Eades - started 1 game at fullback (Conneaut, Ohio)
  • Robert E. Hamilton - center (Erie, Pennsylvania)
  • Earle Magrath[9] - started 1 game at right end (Oak Park, Illinois)
  • Barry Stuart - fullback (Grand Rapids, Michigan)
  • Theodore Timchac[10] - tackle (Saginaw, Michigan)
  • Murray Van Wagoner - started 1 game at left guard (Pontiac, Michigan)
  • Arthur A. Weadock[11] - quarterback (Saginaw, Michigan)
  • Charles O. Wilson - fullback (Muskegon, Michigan)

Awards and honors

  • Captain: Angus Goetz
  • All-Americans:
  • All-Conference: Ernie Vick

Coaching staff

  • Head coach: Fielding H. Yost
  • Assistant coaches: Prentiss Douglass, Ernest Allmendinger, Carl Lundgren, Edwin Mather
  • Manager: Leland N. Scofield

References

1. ^Elmer Weirich Cress, born February 10, 1898, Michigan; died November 1969, Benton Harbor, Michigan.
2. ^William Roy Cruse, born May 23, 1895. At the time of the 1930 Census, he was a civil engineer for the city of Jackson, Michigan.
3. ^Francis Thomas "Frank" Czysz, born January 19, 1899, Dunkirk, New York. Graduated U.M. Dental School, 1920. He lived and worked as a dentist at North Tonawanda, New York. Died September 1971, North Tonawanda.
4. ^Roland Glen Dunn, born August 22, 1892, St. Johns, Michigan. He became a lawyer in Muskegon Heights, Michigan. He ran as a Republican candidate for Congress in 1928. He also served as legal aid to Michigan Governor Frank Fitzgerald, assistant state attorney general, and chairman of the Michigan State Liquor Control Commission. His papers are kept at the Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan. He died in April 1972 at Mason, Michigan.
5. ^Donald Arthur Finkbeiner, born May 26, 1894, Perrysburg, Ohio. After graduating from Michigan, he returned to Perrysburg and began a law practice. Died April 30, 1973, Toledo, Ohio.
6. ^Gerald William Froemke, born July 6, 1897, Sheldon, North Dakota. He lived in Ladue, Missouri. He died July 22, 1970, while on vacation at Wequetonsing, Michigan.
7. ^James Vinton Hammels, born July 21, 1894, Phoenix, Arizona. Died January 1984, Phoenix, Arizona.
8. ^Willard L. Peach (middle name listed as Levi in early records, later as Lawrence), born June 23, 1895, Fremont, Ohio. At the time of the 1930 Census, he was living in Detroit and working as an automobile salesman. He died March 30, 1975, Birmingham, Michigan.
9. ^Earle Knight Magrath, born June 26, 1898, Illinois. Died February 4, 1972, Fort Pierce, Florida.
10. ^Theodore Andrew Timchac, born November 11, 1897.
11. ^Arthur A. Weadock, born February 23, 1897. After graduating from Michigan, he returned to Saginaw, Michigan as an attorney. Died January 1981, Saginaw, Michigan.

External links

  • 1919 Football Team -- Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan Athletics History
  • [https://books.google.com/books?id=8wwrAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_v2_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q=&f=false 1919-1920 Michigan Alumnus - includes accounts of each game]
  • 1920 Michiganensian
{{Michigan Wolverines football navbox}}

3 : 1919 Big Ten Conference football season|Michigan Wolverines football seasons|1919 in sports in Michigan

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