1934 College Football All-America Team

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The 1934 College Football All-America team is composed of

Sporting News
(SN).

No player was the unanimous choice of all nine selectors. Quarterback Bobby Grayson of Stanford and fullback Pug Lund of Minnesota led the group with first-team designations from eight of the nine official selectors. Dixie Howell of Alabama and Chuck Hartwig of Pittsburgh each received six official first-team designations.

Consensus All-Americans

For the year 1934, the NCAA recognizes nine published All-American teams as "official" designations for purposes of its consensus determinations. The following chart identifies the NCAA-recognized consensus All-Americans and displays which first-team designations they received.

Name Position School Number Official Other
Bobby Grayson Quarterback Stanford 8/9 AAB, AP, COL, INS, NANA, NEA, SN, UP CP, NYS, WC
Pug Lund Fullback Minnesota 8/9 AAB, AP, COL, INS, LIB, NANA, SN, UP NYS, WC
Chuck Hartwig Guard Pittsburgh 6/9 AAB, AP, INS, LIB, NANA, SN CP, NYS, WC
Dixie Howell Halfback Alabama 6/9 AAB, INS, LIB, NANA, NEA, UP CP, WC
Monk Moscrip[1] End Stanford 5/9 AAB, LIB, NEA, SN, UP CP, WC
Don Hutson End Alabama 5/9 AAB, AP, INS, LIB, UP NYS, WC
Frank Larson End Minnesota 5/9 AP, COL, NANA, NEA, SN CP, NYS
Bill Lee Tackle Alabama 5/9 AP, COL, LIB, NANA, SN --
Bill Bevan Guard Minnesota 5/9 COL, LIB, NANA, SN, UP --
Bob Reynolds Tackle Stanford 4/9 AP, COL, INS, NANA NYS
Buzz Borries Halfback Navy 4/9 AP, COL, SN, UP CP, NYS
Darrell Lester Center TCU 2/9 AP, INS NYS
Jack Robinson Center Notre Dame 2/9 AAB, NANA WC
George Shotwell Center Pittsburgh 2/9 COL, UP CP

All-American selections for 1934

Ends

  • Don Hutson, Alabama (College and Pro Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AP-1; COL; INS-1; LIB-1; NANA-2; UP-1; CSW-2; NYS-1; WC-1)
  • Frank Larson, Minnesota (AP-1; COL; NANA-1; NEA-1; SN; CP-1; NYS-1)
  • Jim Moscrip, Stanford (AAB; AP-2; LIB-1; NANA-2; NEA-1; UP-1; SN; CP-1; WC-1)
  • Joseph Bogdanski, Colgate (AP-3; NANA-1)
  • Merle Wendt, Ohio State (INS-1)
  • Lester Borden, Fordham (AP-2)
  • Willis Ward, Michigan (CSW-2)
  • Larry Kelley, Yale (AP-3)

Tackles

  • Bill Lee, Alabama (AP-1; COL; LIB-1; NANA-1; SN)
  • Bob Reynolds, Stanford (AP-1; COL; INS-1; NANA-1; NYS-1)
  • James Steen
    , Syracuse (AP-2; LIB-1; UP-1; CP-1)
  • Slade Cutter, Navy (AP-3; NEA-1; SN)
  • George Maddox
    , Kansas State (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; WC-1)
  • Clyde Carter, SMU (UP-1)
  • Cassius "Cash" Gentry, Oklahoma (NEA-1; CSW-2)
  • Ed Widseth, Minnesota (College Football Hall of Fame) (INS-1)
  • George Theodoratus, Washington State (NEA-1)
  • Joseph Ferrara, Columbia (AP-2)
  • Charles Galbreath, Illinois (AP-3)
  • Phil Bengtson, Minnesota (NANA-2)
  • Charley Hamrick, Ohio State (NANA-2)
  • Charles "Buzz" Harvey, Holy Cross (CSW-2)

Guards

  • Chuck Hartwig, Pittsburgh (AAB; AP-1; INS-1; LIB-1; NANA-1; SN; CP-1; NYS-1; WC-1)
  • Bill Bevan, Minnesota (AP-2; COL; LIB-1; NANA-1; SN; UP-1)
  • Regis Monahan, Ohio State (AAB; AP-2; NEA-1; UP-1; CP-1; NYS-1 [t]; WC-1; CSW-2)
  • George T. Barclay, North Carolina (AAB [t]; AP-1; COL; NEA-1; WC-1; CSW-2)
  • Charles Mucha, Washington (AP-3; NANA-2)
  • Ken Ormiston, Pittsburgh (AP-3; INS-1; NYS-1)
  • Jac Weller, Princeton (NANA-2)

Centers

  • Jack Robinson, Notre Dame (AAB; AP-2; NANA-1; CSW-2; WC-1)
  • Darrell Lester, TCU (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1; INS-1; NYS-1)
  • George Shotwell, Pittsburgh (COL; NANA-2; UP-1; CP-1)
  • Elmer Ward, Utah State (NEA-1)
  • Ellmore Patterson, Chicago (LIB-1)
  • Elwood Kalbaugh, Princeton (SN)
  • Franklin Meier, Nebraska (AP-3)

Quarterbacks

  • Bobby Grayson, Stanford (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB [fb]; AP-1; COL; NEA-1; INS-1 [fb]; NANA-1; SN; UP-1; CP-1 [fb]; NYS-1; WC-1)
  • Arleigh Williams, California (AP-2; INS-1)
  • Ed Goddard, Washington State (LIB-1)
  • Miller Munjas, Pittsburgh (AP-3; NANA-2)

Halfbacks

  • Dixie Howell, Alabama (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB [qb]; AP-2; INS-1; LIB-1; NANA-1; NEA-1; UP-1; CP-1; CSW-2; WC-1)
  • Buzz Borries, Navy (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1; COL; NANA-2; SN; UP-1; CP-1; NYS-1)
  • Bill Wallace, Rice (AP-1; COL)
  • Bob "Bones" Hamilton, Stanford (LIB-1)
  • Jay Berwanger, Chicago (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AP-2; WC-1)
  • Harry Shuford SMU (NEA-1)
  • Duane Purvis, Purdue (NANA-2; SN)
  • Richard Heekin, Ohio State (AP-3)
  • Claude Simons, Jr.
    , Tulane (AP-3)
  • Jack Buckler, Army (CSW-2)

Fullbacks

  • Pug Lund, Minnesota (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB [hb]; AP-1; COL; INS-1 [hb]; LIB-1; NANA-1 [hb]-1; SN; UP-1; NYS-1 [hb]; WC-1)
  • Izzy Weinstock, Pittsburgh (AP-2; NANA-1; NEA-1; CSW-2)
  • Stan Kostka, Minnesota (NANA-2; NYS-1; CSW-2)
  • David Smukler, Temple (AP-3)

Key

Bold = Consensus All-American[2]

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

Official selectors

Other selectors

See also

References

  1. ^ Despite receiving first-team honors from five of the nine official selectors, the NCAA does not recognize Moscrip as a consensus All-American.
  2. ^ "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. p. 7. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ Alan Gould (December 1, 1934). "HUND, LARSON ON ASSOCIATED PRESS STAR TEAM: ALABAMA GETS TWO POSITIONS ON FIRST TEAM". Rhinelander Daily News.
  5. ^ "TWO GOPHERS GAIN PLAYERS' ALL-AMERICAN: Lund Rates Place on Liberty Magazine Honor Team for Second Season- Bill Bevan Is Other Star". Evening Tribune. January 23, 1935.
  6. ^ "Three Stanford Players Selected on All-American Grid Elevens: Grayson, Reynolds and Moscrip Given Honors". Los Angeles Times. December 2, 1934.
  7. ^ Central Press, "Grid Captains of U.S. Select All-American," Berkeley Daily Gazette, p. 10 (December 13, 1934), Retrieved October 3, 2014.
  8. ^ "All-America Addendum" (PDF). College Football Historical Society Newsletter. May 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 13, 2010. Retrieved March 5, 2010.
  9. ^ "Walter Camp Football Foundation". Archived from the original on March 30, 2009.