1908 College Football All-America Team

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

1908 Official All-America Selectors

The 1908 College Football All-America team is composed of

Collier's Weekly,[1] and Whitney's selections were published in Outing magazine.[2]

Many other sports writers, newspapers, coaches and others also selected All-America teams in 1910. The Philadelphia Inquirer published a consensus All-America team based on the first-team All-America selections made by 25 football experts.[3]

Consensus All-Americans

The only two individuals who have been recognized as "official" selectors by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) for the 1908 season are Walter Camp and Caspar Whitney, who had originated the College Football All-America Team 14 years earlier in 1889.[2] In its official listing of "Consensus All-America Selections," the NCAA designates players who were selected by either Camp or Whitney as "consensus" All-Americans.[2] Using this criterion, the NCAA recognizes 16 players as "consensus" All-American for the 1908 football season.[2] The consensus All-Americans are identified in bold on the list below ("All-Americans of 1908").

All-American selections for 1908

Hunter Scarlett of Penn.

Ends

  • Hunter Scarlett, Penn (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; CON-1 [23]; ERB-1 [30]; NYW; PI; FY; TT; NYG; CSM; NYET; BSU; BP; PD; TJ; KCJ; PP; PT; PES; WH; FC)
  • George Schildmiller, Dartmouth (WC-1; CON-1 [18]; ERB-1 [23]; PI; TT; NYG; NYT; NYET; BSU; BP; PD; PT; PES; CIO; FC)
  • Claude Fisher, Syracuse (NYW; FY; TJ; KCJ)
  • Frank Dennie, Brown (WC-2; CSM; NHR)
  • Lawrence Fairfax Reifsnider, Navy (WC-2)
  • Harlan Page, Chicago (WC-3)
  • Ronald D. Johnson, Army (WC-3)
  • George Kennedy, Dartmouth (NYT; NHR; WH)
  • Gilbert Goodwin Browne, Harvard (PP)

Tackles

Bill Horr hurling the discus.
  • Hamilton Fish, Harvard (WC-1; CON-1 [14]; ERB-1 [25]; PI; FY; TT; NYG; CSM; NYT; BSU; BP; KCJ; PT; FC)
  • Bill Horr, Syracuse (WC-1; CON-2 [9]; NYG; NYET; PD [g]; PES [g])
  • Percy Northcroft, Navy (WC-3; CIO)
  • Dexter Draper
    , Penn (WC-3; CON-1 [13]; ERB-1 [25]; PI; TT; BSU; BP; PD; NHR; PP; PT; PES; WH; FC)
  • Rudolph Siegling, Princeton (WC-2; CON-2 [11]; NYW-1; NYT; BP [g]; PD; TJ; PP; WH; CIO)
  • Daniel Pullen, Army (NYW; FY; TJ; KCJ)
  • Robert McKay, Harvard (CSM)
  • Arthur Brides, Yale (NHR)

Guards

  • Hamlin Andrus, Yale (WC-2; CON-1 [13]; ERB-1 [18]; NYW; NYT; NYET; BSU; TJ; KCJ; PT; PES)
  • William Goebel, Yale (WC-1; CON-1 [16]; PI; FY; TT; NYG; CSM; NYT; PD; NHR; PP; WH; CIO; FC)
  • Bernard O'Rourke, Cornell (WC-2 [t]; NYET; PES; WH [g])
  • Clark Tobin, Dartmouth (WC-1; CON-2 [12]; ERB-1 [28]; PI; FY; TT; NYG; CSM; NYET; BSU; BP; KCJ)
  • Samuel Hoar, Harvard (WC-3; NYW; TJ; PP)
  • Francis Burr, Havard (PT)
  • John Messmer, Wisconsin (WC-2)
  • Forest Van Hook, Illinois (WC-3)
  • Orlo L. Waugh, Syracuse (NHR)
  • Edward Rich, Dartmouth (FC)

Centers

  • Charles Nourse, Harvard (WC-1; CON-1 [12]; NYG; NYT; CIO [g])
  • Germany Schulz, Michigan (College Football Hall of Fame) (CON-2 [9]; ERB-1 [20]; NYW; PI; FY; TT; CSM; NYET; BSU; BP; PD; NHR; TJ; KCJ; PP; PT; PES)
  • Wallace Philoon, Army (WC-2; WH; CIO; FC)
  • Joseph C. Brusse, Dartmouth (WC-3)

Quarterbacks

Walter Steffen of Chicago
  • Walter Steffen, Chicago (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; FY; NYET; PD; NHR; KCJ)
  • Ed Lange, Navy (CON-1 [12]; TT; NYG; BP; PP; WH; CIO)
  • Allie Miller, Penn (WC-3; CON-2 [6]; ERB-1 [20]; PI; BSU; TJ; PT; PES; FC)
  • Johnny Cutler, Harvard (WC-2; CSM; NYT)

Halfbacks

  • Hamilton Corbett, Harvard (CIO)
  • Bill Hollenback, Penn (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; CON-1 [21]; ERB-1 [30]; NYW; PI; FY; TT; NYG; NYT; NYET; BSU; BP; PD; TJ; KCJ; PP; PT; PES; WH; FC)
  • Frederick Tibbott, Princeton (WC-1; CON-1 [21]; ERB-1 [25]; NYW; FY; TT; CSM; NYT; NYET; BSU; BP; NHR; TJ; KCJ; PP; PT; PES; WH; CIO)
  • Jim Thorpe, Carlisle (College and Pro Football Hall of Fame) (WC-3; PI)
  • Ernest Frederocl Ver Wiebe, Harvard (WC-2; CSM; NHR)
  • John W. Mayhew, Brown (WC-2)
  • Edward Gray, Amherst (WC-3)

Fullbacks

Ted Coy of Yale
  • Ted Coy, Yale (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; CON-1 [24]; ERB-1 [30]; NYW; PI; FY; TT; NYG; CSM; NYT; NYET; BSU; BP; PD; NHR; TJ; KCJ; PP; PT; PES; WH; CIO [e]; FC)
  • George Walder, Cornell (WC-2; CIO; FC; PD [hb])
  • George McCaa, Lafayette (WC-3)

Key

NCAA recognized selectors for 1908

Other selectors

Bold = Consensus All-American[2]

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

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Camp's 1908 All-America Selections". Reading Eagle. November 26, 1930.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. p. 6. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  3. ^ a b ""Consensus" All-American Football Team of 1908". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 20, 1908.
  4. ^ "Walter Camp Football Foundation". Archived from the original on March 30, 2009.
  5. ^ "Three Cinch All-America: Scarlett, Hollenback, Coy Picked by Thirty Critics Without One Dissent; Twenty of These Give Schulz His Position". Detroit Free Press. December 13, 1908. Archived from the original on February 16, 2013.
  6. ^ "Another All-American. Tad Jones of Yale Picks Best Football Team". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 5, 1908.
  7. ^ Franklin (December 6, 1908). ""All American" Team Should Have Clever Placement Kicker: Thorpe Is Best Man". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
  8. Syracuse Herald
    . December 7, 1908. p. 12. Retrieved August 12, 2022 – via NewspaperArchive.
  9. ^ Tom Thorpe (November 30, 1908). "Thorpe Picks All American Eleven". The Evening Telegram (Salt Lake city).
  10. ^ "More All-American: The New York Globe Would Have Horr As Tackle". Syracuse Herald. December 4, 1908.
  11. ^ a b c Spalding's Official Foot Ball Guide 1909. p. 27.
  12. ^ a b Spalding, p. 23
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Spalding, p. 27
  14. ^ a b c Spalding, p. 25