The 1901 College Football All-Southern Team consists of American football players selected to the College Football All-Southern Teams selected by various organizations in 1901. Vanderbilt won the SIAA championship. Most said Virginia ranked best in the south.[1] Gallaudet, a school for deaf-mutes, also claimed a championship.
Consensus selection
editThose players who made both Outing's team and received mention by the Washington Post included:
- Christie Benet, tackle for Virginia. He was later a Senator for South Carolina.
- Hunter Carpenter, fullback for VPI. College Football Hall of Fame
- Robert M. Coleman, halfback for Virginia. A native of Lexington, Kentucky, Coleman first attended local Kentucky University, and later coached there.
- Gilbert O. Erickson, end for Gallaudet. He was a photographer and one of the founders of the National Literary Society of the Deaf.
- Percy Given, center for Georgetown. Georgetown authorities claimed it was Given, as opposed to Germany Schulz, who was the first "roving center" or linebacker in the game against Navy in 1902.
- Buck Harris, guard for Virginia. He was later a physician; an eye, ear, nose and throat specialist in Birmingham, Alabama.
- Hub McCormick, tackle for VPI. He was later an engineer.
- Ormond Simkins, fullback for Sewanee. His father William Stewart Simkins may have fired the first shot of the Civil War.
- Ed Tutwiler, quarterback for Virginia. He was the son of Confederate veteran and Birmingham industrialist Ed Tutwiler, Sr.
- Joe Ware, end for VPI. He was later a second lieutenant in World War I, and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
All-Southerns of 1901
editEnds
edit- Joe Ware†, VPI (WP, O)
- Gilbert O. Erickson, Gallaudet (WP, O)
- Alexis Hobson, Virginia (WP-s)
- Sam Edmonston, Georgetown (WP-s)
- Frank M. Ridley, Georgia
Tackles
edit- W. Christie Benet†, Virginia (WP, O)
- Hub McCormick, VPI (WP-s, O)
- Lew Drill, Georgetown (WP)
- Bradley Walker, Virginia (WP-s)
Guards
edit- Buck Harris†, Virginia (WP, O)
- Branch Johnson, VMI (WP)
- Alvin Lee Abbott, VPI (O)
- Joe Lynch, Georgetown (WP-s)
- Frank Kearns, Georgetown (WP-s)
Centers
edit- Percy Given†, Georgetown (WP, O)
- H. Dorsey Waters, Virginia (WP-s)
Quarterbacks
edit- Ed Tutwiler†, Virginia (WP, O)
- Kit DeCamps, VPI (WP-s)
Halfbacks
edit- Robert M. Coleman†, Virginia (WP, O)
- Ormond Simkins, Sewanee (WP-s, O)
- Hub Hart, Georgetown (WP)
- John Counselman, VPI (WP-s)
Fullbacks
edit- Hunter Carpenter†, VPI (College Football Hall of Fame) (WP, O)
- Albert Carr, North Carolina (WP-s)
Key
editBold = consensus choice by a majority of the selectors
† = Unanimous selection
WP = posted by Oscar P. Schmidt in The Washington Post, selected by M. J. Thompson, graduate manager of athletics at Georgetown University and Richard Armstrong, formerly of Yale. It had a second team referred to as substitutes.[2][3]
O = selected by Caspar Whitney in Outing.[4]
References
edit- ^ e. g. "Champions of the South regardless of conference affiliation".
- ^ ""All Southern" Eleven". The State. February 7, 1902.
- ^ Oscar P. Schmidt (1902). "Football in the Southern Colleges". The Official National Collegiate Athletic Association Football Guide: 129.
- ^ "Southern Intercollegiate Football". Outing. 37: 726. 1902.