1904 University of Florida Blue and White football team
1904 University of Florida Blue and White football | |
---|---|
Conference | Independent |
1904 record | 0–5 |
Head coach | Marvin O. Bridges |
Captain | Bernard Bridges |
The 1904 University of Florida White and Blue football team represented the University of Florida in the sport of American football during the 1904 college football season. This was not the modern Florida Gators of the University of Florida in Gainesville, which begins in 1906, but one of its four predecessor institutions: a school previously known as Florida Agricultural College, based in Lake City. The team played several major colleges, including Mike Donahue's first year coaching Auburn and John Heisman's first coaching Georgia Tech, failing to post a win. Only a single first down was scored on Tech.[1]
Schedule
Date | Opponent | Site | Result | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
October 3, 1904 | at Alabama | The Quad • Tuscaloosa, AL | L 0–29 | ||||||
October 4, 1904 | at Auburn | Auburn, AL | L 0–44 | ||||||
October 15, 1904 | at Georgia | Macon, GA | L 0–52 | ||||||
October 17, 1904 | at Georgia Tech | Piedmont Park • Atlanta, GA | L 0–77 | ||||||
October 21, 1904 | Florida State College | Lake City, Florida | L 0–23 | ||||||
*Non-conference game. |
Season summary
Auburn
The October 4, 1904 game against the University of Florida was considered a practice game by Auburn[3] and is not included in the official record of 5–0 for the season.[4]
Florida-Georgia dispute
Florida and Georgia do not agree on when the Florida–Georgia rivalry began.[5] The University of Georgia's athletic department counts the 1904 match.[6] The game was held in Macon, Georgia, and Georgia won 52–0.[6] UGA sports historian Dan Magill sums up Georgia's attitude: "That's where Florida was back then. We can't help it if they got run out of [Lake City]."[7]
Florida State College
Florida State College wore purple and gold and were state champions.[8] The team's coach was Jack Forsythe, later the first head coach of the Florida Gators. FSC's assistant was Jock Hanvey. Both coaches played for the Clemson Tigers the year before when it faced Bridges and Cumberland in the SIAA championship game.
A newspaper account reported: "The people of Lake City had expected at least one victory after a long series of defeats encountered by the university and were greatly disappointed. The university should be made stronger before it attempts to play again."[9]
Coach Marvin O. Bridges founded UF's Alpha Eta chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha at Lake City on November 17, 1904.[10][11]
References
- ↑ "Georgia Score Badly Beaten". Atlanta Constitution. October 18, 1904. p. 9. Retrieved September 11, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ http://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/florida/1904-schedule.html
- ↑ "1905 Glomerata" "(Annual),p182, Retrieved August 18, 2011"
- ↑ 2011 Auburn Tigers Football Media Guide, Auburn University Athletic Department, Auburn, Alabama, pp. 178–189, 191 (2011). Retrieved August 16, 2011
- ↑ Steve Rajtar. Gone Pro: Florida: Gator Athletes Who Became Pros. p. 25.
- 1 2 2011 Georgia Football Media Guide, University of Georgia Athletic Department, Athens, Georgia, pp. 157 & 158 (2011). Retrieved August 19, 2011.
- ↑ Patrick Garbin. I Love Georgia/I Hate Florida.
- ↑ http://guides.lib.fsu.edu/c.php?g=353010&p=2381672
- ↑ Tom McEwen. A Story of Florida Football. p. 33.
- ↑ "Pledging Athletes". Shield & Diamond: 17. Spring 2011.
- ↑ "Alpha Eta Chapter". Register of the Pi Kappa alpha fraternity: 470. 1916.
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