1931 College Football All-America Team
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The 1931 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers that chose College Football All-America Teams in 1931. The organizations that chose the teams included: Associated Press, United Press, Collier's Weekly/Grantland Rice, Newspaper Enterprise Association, Hearst/INS, Central Press, and College Humor.
The only unanimous All-American selection in 1931 was Tulane's Gerald “Jerry” Dalrymple.
Contents |
[edit] NCAA consensus All-American team
The following players make up the consensus All-American team recognized in the NCAA All-American guide.
Position | Name | School | Unanimous | College Hall of Fame |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ends | Jerry Dalrymple Vernon “Catfish” Smith |
Tulane Georgia |
Yes No |
Dalrymple HOF Profile Smith HOF Profile |
Tackles | Dallas “Dal” Marvil Jess Quatse Jack Riley |
Northwestern Pittsburgh Northwestern |
No No No |
No No Riley HOF Profile |
Guards | Clarence “Biggie” Munn John “Johnny” Baker |
Minnesota Southern California |
No No |
Munn HOF Profile Baker HOF Profile |
Center | Thomas Yarr | Notre Dame | No | Yarr HOF Profile |
Quarterback | Barry Wood | Harvard | No | Wood HOF Profile |
Halfbacks | Marchmont "Marchy" Schwartz Ernest “Pug” Rentner |
Notre Dame Northwestern |
No No |
Schwartz HOF Profile Rentner HOF Profile |
Fullback | Gaius "Gus" Shaver | Southern California | No | No |
[edit] Proliferation of All-American teams
In 1931, Damon Runyon wrote a column about the proliferation of “All-America” teams. He noted: “The ‘All’ boys are it, tooth and nail. They are ‘All’-ing North, South East and West. They will wind up ‘All’-Americaing, the most virulent form of the ‘All’ plague that besets us every Winter. The late Walter Camp little realized what he was bringing upon the country . . . At the moment, Mr. Camp probably had no idea that he was sowing the seed of a fearful pestilence.”[1] Runyon noted that Camp’s word was viewed as gospel, but with his passing “the rush to fill his shoes was prodigious,” and the “’All’ business became a national obsession.”[1]
[edit] All-Americans of 1931
[edit] Key
Bold = unanimous first-team All-American selection
Italics = consensus first-team All-American selection
Selectors recognized by NCAA in consensus determinations
AP = Associated Press[2]
UP = United Press[3]
COL = Collier's Weekly as selected by Grantland Rice[4]
NEA = Newspaper Enterprise Association[5]
INS = International News Service, the wire service of the Hearst newspapers[6]
Other selectors
CP = Central Press, also known as the Captain's Poll, selected by a poll of the captains of the major football teams[7]
WCFF = Walter Camp Football Foundation[8]
HSM = All-American team selected by 18,006 fans through nation-wide contest sponsored by clothier Hart, Schaffner and Marx[9]
CH = College Humor magazine[10]
LP = selected by Lawrence Perry, a former Princetonian who wrote a nationally-syndicated sports colyum called For The Game's Sake[11]
[edit] Ends
- Gerald “Jerry” Dalrymple, Tulane (AP – 1; UP – 1; COL – 1; CP –1; NEA – 1; INS – 1; WCFF - 1; HSM - 1; CH - 1; LP - 1)
- Vernon “Catfish” Smith, Georgia (AP -1; COL – 1; NEA – 2; INS – 2; HSM - 1; CP – 1; CH - 2; LP - 1)
- Henry Cronkite, Kansas State (AP – 2; UP – 1; NEA – 1; INS - 2; CP – 3; CH - 1)
- John “Johnny” Orsi, Colgate (AP – 2; CP – 2; NEA – 2; INS - 1; WCFF - 1; CH - 2)
- Paul Moss, Purdue (NEA – 3; INS - 3l CP – 2; )
- Koontz, Southern Methodist (CP -3)
- Bill Hewitt, Michigan (NEA - 3)
- Garrett Arbelbide, Southern California (AP - 3)
- Fred Felber, Univ. of North Dakota (AP - 3)
- Barres, Yale (INS- 3)
[edit] Tackles
- Dallas “Dal” Marvil, Northwestern (AP – 1; NEA – 3; INS - 1; CP – 1; CH - 2; HSM - 1)
- Jess Quatse, Pittsburgh (UP – 1; COL – 1; CP - 2; WCFF - 1; CH - 1)
- Jack Riley, Northwestern (NEA – 1; INS - 2; WCFF - 1)
- Paul Schwegler, Washington (AP – 1; COL – 1; INS - 3; CP – 2)
- Joseph Kurth, Notre Dame (AP – 2; UP – 1; NEA – 1; INS – 2; CP – 3; LP - 1)
- John “Jack” Price, Army (AP – 3; CP – 1; NEA – 2; INS - 1; CH - 2)
- James MacMurdo, Pittsburgh (AP – 2; NEA – 3; INS - 3; HSM - 1)
- Ira Hardy, Harvard (NEA – 2; CH - 1; LP - 1)
- Hugh Rhea, Nebraska (AP - 3)
- Saunders, Tennessee (CP - 3)
[edit] Guards
- Clarence “Biggie” Munn, Minnesota (AP – 1; UP – 1; COL – 1; NEA – 1; INS – 1; CP – 1; HSM - 1; CH - 1; LP - 1; WCFF - 1)
- John “Johnny” Baker, Southern California (AP – 2; UP – 1; NEA – 1; INS – 1; CP – 2; WCFF - 1; HSM - 1; CH - 2; LP - 1)
- Herman Hickman, Tennessee (AP – 3; COL – 1; NEA – 3; INS - 3; CP – 1; CH - 1)
- Frank (Nordy) Hoffman, Notre Dame (AP - 1; NEA – 2; INS - 2)
- Joe Zeller, Indiana (NEA - 2)
- Ignatius "Jim" Zyntell, Holy Cross (CP - 2)
- James Evans, Northwestern (AP – 2; CP - 3)
- Maurice “Mush” Dubofsky, Georgetown (NEA - 3)
- Gregory Kabat, Wisconsin (AP – 3; CP - 3)
- Milton "Red" Leathers, Georgia (INS - 2)
- H.R. Myerson, Harvard (INS - 3)
- Corbus, Stanford (CH - 2)
[edit] Centers
- Thomas Yarr, Notre Dame (AP – 1; NEA – 2; INS - 1; WCFF - 1; HSM - 1; CH - 2)
- Maynard Morrison, Michigan (AP – 3; COL – 1; NEA - 1; CP – 3)
- Ralph Daugherty, Pittsburgh (AP – 2; NEA – 3; INS – 3; CP – 1; LP - 1)
- Charles Miller, Purdue (UP - 1; CH - 1)
- Pete Gracey, Vanderbilt (CP - 2)
- McDuffie, Columbia (INS - 2)
[edit] Quarterbacks
- W. Barry Wood, Jr., Harvard (AP – 1; COL – 1; NEA – 1; INS - 1; CP – 1; HSM - 1; CH - 2)
- Austin Downes, Georgia (CP - 3)
- William Morton, Dartmouth (AP – 2; NEA – 2; INS - 3; CH - 1)
- Carl Cramer, Ohio State (AP - 3)
[edit] Halfbacks
- Marchmont "Marchy" Schwartz, Notre Dame (AP – 1; UP – 1; COL – 1; NEA – 1; INS – 1; WCFF - 1; HSM - 1; CH - 1; LP - 1)
- Ernest “Pug” Rentner, Northwestern (AP – 1; UP – 1; COL – 1; NEA – 1; INS – 1 [named as fullback by Hearst]; CP – 1; WCFF - 1; HSM - 1 [named as fullback]; CH - 1; LP - 1)
- Donald Zimmerman, Tulane (AP – 2; NEA – 2; INS - 1; CP – 1; CH - 2)
- Bob Monnett, Michigan State (CP - 1)
- Eugene McEver, Tennessee (AP – 2; NEA – 2; INS - 2; CP – 2)
- Francis "Bud" Toscani, St. Marys (NEA - 2)
- Cornelius Murphy, Fordham (CP - 3; CH - 2) {Murphy died from a ruptured blood vessel in the brain in December 1931}
- J.W. Crickard, Harvard (NEA - 3)
- Albert J. "Mighty Atom" Booth, Jr., Yale (AP – 3; INS - 2)
- Weldon Mason, Southern Methodist (AP - 3)
- Ray Stecker, Army (INS - 3)
[edit] Fullbacks
- Gaius "Gus" Shaver, Southern California (COL – 1 [selected as fullback]; UP – 1 [selected as quarterback]; NEA – 3 [selected as quarterback]; INS – 2 [selected as quarterback]; CP – 1 [selected as fullback]; WCFF - 1 [selected as quarterback]; LP - 1 [selected as quarterback])
- Erny Pinckert, Southern California (AP – 1; NEA – 1; INS – 3 [picked as halfback]; HSM - 1 [named as halfback]; CH-1)
- John Lewis Cain, Alabama (UP – 1; NEA – 3 [picked as halfback]; INS - 3; WCFF - 1; CH - 2)
- Ralston “Rusty” Gill, California (NEA – 3; LP - 1)
- Orville Mohler, Southern California (AP - 3; CP - 2 [picked as quarterback])
- Jack Manders, Minnesota (CP - 2)
- Bart J. Viviano, Cornell (AP - 2)
- Clarke Hinkle, Bucknell (INS - 2)
- Nollie Felts, Tulane (CP - 3)
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b Runyon, Damon. "Runyon Makes One Selection for ‘All’ Eleven", Chester Times, 1931-12-03.
- ^ "All Sections of Country Represented on Team; National Honors Given 1931 Grid Star", Reno Evening Gazette, 1931-12-05.
- ^ McLemore, Henry. "United Press Selects Stellar All-American", The Piqua Daily Call (Ohio), 1931-12-04.
- ^ "Munn Placed on Rice’s All-American Team: Rentner and Morrison Get Honor Posts", The Evening Tribune (Albert Lea, Minn.), 1931-12-18.
- ^ "Dalrymple Highest Vote-Getter In NEA Board’s All-American Team", The Daily News (Frederick, Md.), 1931-12-14.
- ^ Frick, Ford. "Schwartz and Dalrymple Most Popular Choices on ‘Hearst All-American’", Chester Times, 1931-12-05.
- ^ Bitt, Bill (Central Sports Editor). "Real 1931 All-American Team Selected by College Captains", The Evening Independent (Massillon, Ohio), 1931-12-09.
- ^ Walter Camp Football Foundation All-American Selections. Walter Camp Football Foundation.
- ^ "Mythical Team Nominated by Fans Announced", The Muscatine Journal and News-Tribune, 1931-12-11.
- ^ "All-America Selected by Coll. Humor", The Greeley Daily Tribune (Colo.), 1932-12-31.
- ^ Perry, Lawrence. "Gill Named on Perry’s U.S. Star Eleven: Baker and Shaver Also Honored by Eastern Grid Expert", Oakland Tribune, 1931-12-05.
[edit] See also
- College Football All-America Team
- 2007 College Football All-America Team
- 2006 College Football All-America Team
- 2005 College Football All-America Team
- 2004 College Football All-America Team
- 1970 College Football All-America Team
- 1925 College Football All-America Team
- 1910 College Football All-America Team