American college football season
The 1914 college football season had no clear-cut champion, with the Official NCAA Division I Football Records Book listing Army, Illinois, and Texas as having been selected national champions.[1] Only Illinois claims a national championship for the 1914 season.
Conference program and changes
Conference changes
- Three conferences began football play in 1914:
- Oklahoma Intercollegiate Conference – active through the 1928 season; one of two conferences to bear this name, the second would be active between 1974 and 1996
- Hawkeye College Conference – active through the 1917 season
- Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Association – active through the 1916 season
Membership changes
Program changes
Stadiums
Final Season
- Alabama plays their final season at The Quad. The Quad has been Alabama's home field since their first home game in 1893. The final game at The Quad was a 21–3 victory over Chattanooga on 11/13/1914. For 1915, Alabama would move into University Field on the southern edge of campus.
Conference standings
Major conference standings
For this article, major conferences defined as those including multiple state flagship public universities.
Independents
Minor conferences
Minor conference standings
Awards and honors
All-Americans
The consensus All-America team included:
Position | Name | Height | Weight (lbs.) | Class | Hometown | Team |
QB | Charley Barrett | 6'0" | 180 | Jr. | Cleveland, Ohio | Cornell |
HB | John Maulbetsch | 5'9" | 153 | So. | Ann Arbor, Michigan | Michigan |
HB | Eddie Mahan | 5'11" | 171 | Jr. | Natick, Massachusetts | Harvard |
HB | Johnny Spiegel | | | Sr. | | Washington & Jefferson |
FB | Harry LeGore | | | Jr. | Woodsboro, Maryland | Yale |
E | Huntington Hardwick | 6'0" | 171 | Sr. | Quincy, Massachusetts | Harvard |
E | John E. O'Hearn | 5'10" | 173 | Sr. | Brookline, Massachusetts | Cornell |
T | Harold Ballin | 6'1" | 194 | Sr. | New York, New York | Princeton |
G | Stan Pennock | 5'8" | 193 | Sr. | Syracuse, New York | Harvard |
G | Clarence Spears | | | Jr. | De Witt, Arkansas | Dartmouth |
C | John McEwan | 6'4" | 200 | So. | Alexandria, Minnesota | Army |
G | Ralph Chapman | | | Sr. | Vienna, Illinois | Illinois |
T | Walter H. Trumbull | | | Sr. | Salem, Massachusetts | Harvard |
E | Perry Graves | | | Jr. | Rockford, Illinois | Illinois |
Statistical leaders
- Player scoring most points: Buck Mayer, Virginia, 142
References
- ^ Official 2009 NCAA Division I Football Records Book (PDF). Indianapolis, IN: The National Collegiate Athletic Association. August 2009. p. 70. Retrieved October 16, 2009.
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Pre-NCAA | |
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NCAA pre-divisional | |
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NCAA University Division | |
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NCAA Division I | |
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NCAA Division I-A/FBS | |
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NCAA Division I-AA/FCS | |
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NCAA College Division | |
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NCAA Division II | |
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NCAA Division III | |
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