1925 Tulane Green Wave football team

1925 Tulane Green Wave football
SoCon co-champion
Conference Southern Conference
1925 record 901 (50 SoCon)
Head coach Clark Shaughnessy
Offensive scheme Single wing
Captain Lester Lautenschlaeger
Home stadium Second Tulane Stadium
(Capacity: 11,000)
1925 Southern Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
Alabama + 7 0 0     10 0 0
Tulane + 5 0 0     9 0 1
North Carolina 4 0 1     7 1 1
Washington and Lee 5 1 0     5 5 0
Virginia 4 1 1     7 1 1
Georgia Tech 4 1 1     6 2 1
Kentucky 4 2 0     6 3 0
Florida 3 2 0     8 2 0
Auburn 3 2 1     5 3 1
VPI 3 3 1     5 3 2
Vanderbilt 3 3 0     6 3 0
Tennessee 2 2 1     5 2 1
South Carolina 2 2 0     7 3 0
Georgia 2 4 0     4 5 0
VMI 2 4 0     6 4 0
Sewanee 1 4 0     4 4 1
Mississippi A&M 1 4 0     3 4 1
LSU 0 2 1     5 3 1
NC State 0 4 1     3 5 1
Ole Miss 0 4 0     5 5 0
Clemson 0 4 0     1 7 0
Maryland 0 4 0     2 5 1
  • + Conference co-champions

The 1925 Tulane Green Wave football team represented the Tulane Green Wave of Tulane University in the sport of American football during the 1925 college football season. The undefeated backfield included captain and Hall of Fame quarterback Lester Lautenschlaeger; halfback Brother Brown, who coach Clark Shaughnessy said was the best player he ever coached,[1] and halfback Peggy Flournoy, the nation's leading scorer.[2] 1925 also saw the south's widespread use of the forward pass.[3]

Schedule

Date Opponent Site Result
September 26 Louisiana College* New Orleans, LA W 770  
October 3 Missouri* New Orleans, LA T 66  
October 10 Ole Miss New Orleans, LA W 267  
October 17 Mississippi A&M New Orleans, LA W 253  
October 24 at Northwestern* Chicago, IL W 187  
October 31 vs. Auburn Montgomery, AL W 130  
November 7 Louisiana Tech* New Orleans, LA W 370  
November 14 Sewanee New Orleans, LA W 140  
November 21 at LSU Baton Rouge, LA (Battle for the Rag) W 160  
November 26 at Centenary* Shreveport, LA W 140  
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming.

References

  1. Clark Shaughnessy (October 6, 1935). "Brother Brown Finest Played Coached By Shaughnessy". Reading Eagle.
  2. "Charles "Peggy" Flournoy". Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame. Retrieved August 30, 2014.
  3. "Shaping College Football". google.com.
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