1912 Vanderbilt Commodores football team

1912 Vanderbilt Commodores football
SIAA champion
Conference Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association
1912 record 811 (401 SIAA)
Head coach Dan McGugin (9th year)
Assistant coach Owsley Manier
Offensive scheme Short-punt
Captain Lewie Hardage
Home stadium Dudley Field
1912 SIAA football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
Vanderbilt $ 4 0 1     8 1 1
Texas A&M 2 0 0     8 1 0
Kentucky State 1 0 0     7 2 0
Auburn 5 1 1     6 1 1
Georgia 5 1 1     6 1 1
Sewanee 2 1 2     5 1 2
Georgia Tech 5 3 0     5 3 1
Tulane 3 2 0     5 3 0
Mississippi A&M 3 3 0     4 3 0
Alabama 3 3 1     5 3 1
Ole Miss 2 2 0     5 3 0
Mercer 2 3 1     5 3 1
LSU 2 3 0     4 3 0
Clemson 2 4 0     4 4 0
Tennessee 1 4 0     4 4 0
Mississippi College 1 4 0     3 4 0
Florida 0 2 1     5 2 1
Central 0 2 0     4 5 0
The Citadel 0 3 0     2 4 0
Howard 0 4 0     1 6 0
  • $ Conference champion

The 1912 Vanderbilt Commodores football team represented Vanderbilt University in the 1912 college football season. The 1912 season was Dan McGugin's 9th year as head coach. The Commodores won their third straight SIAA conference title this year. Their only loss was to national champion Harvard. Vanderbilt outscored its opponents 393 to 19. The 105 to 0 victory over Bethel was the largest in school history.[1]

Before the season

Vanderbilt lost varsity letter winners in quarterback Ray Morrison, tackle Ewing Y. Freeland and guard Will Metzger. Freeland in Texas and Metzger in business.[2] Aside from Morrison, Vanderbilt retained the rest of its great backfield of last year with halfbacks Lew Hardage, the team's captain, and Wilson Collins, and fullback Ammie Sikes. Replacing Morrison at quarterback was renowned drop kicker Zach Curlin.[3]

Schedule

Date Opponent Site Result Attendance
September 28 Bethel (TN)* Dudley FieldNashville, TN W 1050  
October 5 Maryville (TN)* Dudley Field • Nashville, TN W 1003  
October 12 Rose Polytechnic* Dudley Field • Nashville, TN W 540  
October 19 at Georgia Ponce de Leon ParkAtlanta, GA (Rivalry) W 460   4,500
October 26 Ole Miss Dudley Field • Nashville, TN (Rivalry) W 240  
November 2 Virginia Dudley Field • Nashville, TN W 130   4,000
November 9 at Harvard* Harvard StadiumAllston, MA L 39  
November 16 Centre* Dudley Field • Nashville, TN W 210  
November 23 at Auburn Rickwood FieldBirmingham, AL T 77  
November 28 Sewanee Dudley Field • Nashville, TN (Rivalry) W 160   10,000
*Non-conference game.

[4]

Season summary

Bethel

The season started with a bang, the largest win in school history, a 1050 win over Bethel College. Future Vanderbilt star Josh Cody played for Bethel.

Maryville

The Commodores then rolled up a 1003 score on the Maryville Scots. Despite the first two games being like practice games, the large scores were quite the surprise.[5]

Rose Polytechnic

Rose Polytechnic at Vanderbilt
1 234Total
Rose Poly 0 000 0
Vanderbilt 20 2077 54

The game with Rose Polytechnic was seen as the first real test of the season. Still, the Commodores romped 540, subs replacing the regulars by the end of the first half.[5] The first score came on a 35-yard interception return by Lew Hardage. Rose Poly once tried a trick play with a player in civilian clothes receiving the ball.[6]

The starting lineup for Vanderbilt was Turner (left end), Shipp (left tackle), Daves (left guard), Morgan (center), Swofford (right guard), T. Brown (right tackle), E. Brown (right end), Robins (quarterback), Hardage (left halfback), Collins (right halfback), Chester (fullback).[6]

at Georgia

The Commodores easily defeated the Georgia Bulldogs 460 in the rain. Coaching the Bulldogs was McGugin product Alex Cunningham. The game was played on the infield and part of the right outfield of Ponce de Leon Park.[7] The score would have been larger but for the water and mud.[5] Georgia star Bob McWhorter was held in check, with his longest gain being 12 yards.[5]

The first score of the game came when Wilson Collins got away for a 20-yard run, but fumbled. The ball was picked up by Zach Curlin and run in for a touchdown. When the game ended, Georgia men tried to steal the ball, and a fight broke out, broken up by coach McGugin and umpire Ted Coy.[7]

The starting lineup for Vanderbilt was Turner (left end), Shipp (left tackle), Daves (left guard), Morgan (center), Huffman (right guard), T. Brown (right tackle), E. Brown (right end), Robins (quarterback), Hardage (left halfback), Shea (right halfback), Chester (fullback).[7]

Mississippi

Vanderbilt beat Mississippi 240, the visitors showing a strong team. Morgan, Collins, and Sikes were on the sidelines all game. Multiple times, the Commodores fumbled near the goal line.[8]

Virginia

Vanderbilt met Virginia for the first time since 1898.[9] The Commodores won 130.

at Harvard

Vanderbilt at Harvard
1 234Total
Vanderbilt 0 030 3
Harvard 0 603 9

Vanderbilt suffered its only loss of the season on the road to coach Percy Haughton's national champion Harvard Crimson 93. Only Dartmouth played the Crimson closer. "As usual Harvard tried out the strength of its defense in the first period, kicking usually on the second down."[10] Harvard used mostly substitutes and scored a touchdown five minutes after the second period began.[10] Lew Hardage was injured and taken off the field.[10] Vanderbilt's lone score was a 28-yard field goal from Zach Curlin early in the third quarter, after Harvard muffed a punt.[10] The Crimson added another field goal in the final period.[10]

Zach Curlin

In the last ten minutes, the Commodores tried their full repertoire of tricks, including a delayed forward pass in which the ball was handled by four men and netted a 22-yard gain from Rabbi Robins.[11] The International News Service reported: "Although defeated, Vanderbilt was not outplayed; for never was a gamer team seen in the Stadium."[12]

The starting lineup for Vanderbilt was Turner (left end), Shipp (left tackle), Swafford (left guard), Morgan (center), Daves (right guard), T. Brown (right tackle), E. Brown (right end), Curlin (quarterback), Hardage (left halfback), Collins (right halfback), Sikes (fullback).[11]

Centre

Vanderbilt beat the Centre Colonels 210.

at Auburn

Vanderbilt at Auburn
1 234Total
Vanderbilt 0 700 7
Auburn 0 070 7

The Auburn Tigers upset expectations and tied the Commodores 77. Ammie Sikes scored first for Vanderbilt.[13] Auburn's scored after a Sikes fumble. The ball was kicked some fifteen yards down field clear of the melee, picked up by Kirk Newell and run 55 yards to the endzone.[13]

The starting lineup for Vanderbilt was Reams (left end), Shipp (left tackle), Daves (left guard), Moody (center), Covington (right guard), T. Brown (right tackle), E. Brown (right end), Curlin (quarterback), Hardage (left halfback), Collins (right halfback), Turner (fullback).[13]

Sewanee

Sewanee at Vanderbilt
1 234Total
Sewanee 0 000 0
Vanderbilt 2 0014 16

Vanderbilt defeated rival Sewanee 160. In the first period, Sewanee had to punt from its own endzone. The pass to Jenks Gillem went wide, and before he could recover it he was downed by Enoch Brown for a safety.[14] Gillem had one punt of 58 yards that day.[n 1] Vanderbilt's game seemed to stagnate until Wilson Collins was hurt and replaced with Shea in the third quarter.[16] Then two touchdowns came in the fourth period, one by Robins and another Turner.[14] In his last game, Lew Hardage played well despite his hurt left ankle.[17]

The starting lineup for Vanderbilt was Reams (left end), Shipp (left tackle), Daves (left guard), Morgan (center), Swofford (right guard), T. Brown (right tackle), E. Brown (right end), Robins (quarterback), Hardage (left halfback), Collins (right halfback), Sikes (fullback).[17]

Postseason

Lew Hardage

Awards and honors

Lew Hardage was selected third-team All-American by Walter Camp, the fourth ever Southern player to get such a recognition.[18] He was a unanimous All-Southern selection. Innis Brown wrote "Hardage has been rated as probably the most successful man in the south at making forward passes."[19] Ammie Sikes, Hugh Morgan, Tom Brown, and Enoch Brown all made composite All-Southern.

Championships

Vanderbilt won the SIAA title in football, baseball, and track.[20]

Personnel

Depth chart

Offense
LE
Turner
Milholland
LT LG C RG RT
Joe Covington Herman DavesHugh Morgan SwoffordTom Brown
Shipp Darwin Huffman Lowe
RE
Enoch Brown
Reams
QB
Zach Curlin
Rabbi Robins
LHBRHB
Lew HardageWilson Collins
LuckShea
FB
Ammie Sikes
Chester

-

Varsity letter winners

"Wearers of the V."[21]

Line

Backfield

Staff

See also

Notes

  1. Gillem was later selected as the punter for the Associated Press All-Time Southeast 1869-1919 era team.[15]

References

  1. Spick Hall (September 29, 1912). "Vanderbilt Makes The Largest Score In Her Football History". The Tennessean. p. 35. Retrieved September 21, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  2. Vanderbilt University, p. 259
  3. Vanderbilt University, p. 260
  4. "1912 Vanderbilt Commodores Schedule and Results".
  5. 1 2 3 4 Vanderbilt University, p. 261
  6. 1 2 3 "Vanderbilt Smeared It On Rose Poly In Fine Form". The Tennessean. October 13, 1912. p. 8. Retrieved May 2, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  7. 1 2 3 Percy Whiting (October 20, 1912). "Vandy Played A Great Game". The Tennessean. p. 8. Retrieved May 1, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  8. Vanderbilt University, p. 262
  9. Vanderbilt University, p. 29
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Vandy Played A Great Game". The Tennessean. November 10, 1912. p. 8. Retrieved May 1, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  11. 1 2 "Crimson Team Is Victorious". The Courier-Journal. November 10, 1912. p. 35. Retrieved May 1, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  12. Vanderbilt University, p. 263
  13. 1 2 3 4 Spick Hall (November 24, 1912). "Auburn Holds Vandy To A Tie". The Tennessean. p. 14. Retrieved May 1, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  14. 1 2 3 "Vanderbilt Downs Sewanee". Wilmington Morning Star. November 29, 1912. Retrieved May 1, 2016 via Newspapers.compage=12.
  15. "All-Time Football Team Lists Greats Of Past, Present". Gadsden Times. July 27, 1969.
  16. "Commodores On The Desired End". Detroit Free Press. November 29, 1912. p. 8. Retrieved May 1, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  17. 1 2 "Commodores Are Again Victorious". The Tennessean. November 29, 1912. p. 10. Retrieved May 1, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  18. "On the Gridiron and Diamond". The Kappa Alpha Journal 30 (2): 211.
  19. "Innis Brown's All-Southern". Atlanta Constitution. December 1, 1912. Retrieved March 4, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  20. Vanderbilt University, p. 210
  21. Vanderbilt University, p. 213

Bibliography

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