1934 San Diego State Aztecs football team

1934 San Diego State Aztecs football
Conference Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
1934 record 3–5–1 (2–1–1 SCIAC)
Head coach Walter Herreid (5th season)
Home stadium Balboa Stadium
Aztec Field
Navy "Sports" Field
1934 SCIAC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
Whittier $ 5 0 0     7 2 1
San Diego State 2 1 1     3 5 1
Occidental 2 2 0     3 5 1
Redlands 2 3 0     3 4 1
La Verne 1 2 1     4 3 1
Santa Barbara State 0 4 0     2 5 1
  • $ Conference champion

The 1934 San Diego State Aztecs football team represented San Diego State Teachers College[note 1] during the 1934 NCAA football season.

San Diego State competed in the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC). The 1934 San Diego State team was led by head coach Walter Herreid in his fifth season with the Aztecs. They played home games at three San Diego sites: four games at Balboa Stadium, one game at Navy "Sports" Field, and one game on campus. The Aztecs finished the season with three wins, five losses and one tie (3–5–1, 2–1–1 SCIAC). Overall, the team was outscored by its opponents 61–106 points for the season.

Schedule

Date Opponent Site Result Attendance
September 22 at UCLA* Spaulding Field • Westwood, CA L 0–20   [1]
September 28 at Arizona* Arizona StadiumTucson, AZ L 0–7   6,000[2]
October 6 Army-Navy Academy (CA)* Aztec Field • San Diego, CA W 19–7   3,500[3]
October 13 Occidental Balboa Stadium • San Diego, CA W 20–7   5,500[4]
October 19 La Verne Navy "Sports" Field[note 2] • San Diego, CA T 0–0   3,500[5]
November 3 Whittier Balboa Stadium • San Diego, CA L 6–26   5,500[6]
November 10 Loyola (CA)[note 3]* Balboa Stadium • San Diego, CA L 3–19   3,500[7]
November 17 at Redlands Redlands Stadium[note 4]Redlands, CA W 7–6   2,500[8]
November 29 Arizona State[note 5]* Balboa Stadium • San Diego, CA L 6–14   4,000[9]
*Non-conference game.

[10][11]

Notes

  1. San Diego State University was known as San Diego State Teachers College from 1921–1934. See: San Diego State
  2. The Navy "Sports" Field was the original name of what became Lane Field in downtown San Diego. It was converted to a baseball-only configuration in 1936.
  3. Loyola Marymount University was known as Loyola University of Los Angeles from 1930–1973. See: Loyola Marymount
  4. This stadium is the predecessor to the current Ted Runner Stadium on the University of Redlands campus, which was opened for the 1968 season
  5. Arizona State University was known as Arizona State Teachers College from 1929–1944. See: Arizona State University

References

  1. "Bruins Turn Back Aztec Invasion; State College Gridders Lose First Tussle". The San Diego Union. September 23, 1934. p. P-1 S-5.
  2. "Arizona Defeats State College Eleven, 7-0;Blocked Punt Paves Way For Wildcats' Win". The San Diego Union. September 29, 1934. p. P-3 S-2.
  3. Kenwood Bojens (October 7, 1934). "State College Downs Cadet Jaysees, 19-7". The San Diego Union.
  4. Kenwood Bojens (October 14, 1934). "State College Trounces Occidental, 20 to 7; Aztecs Hold Situation Well In Hand Throughout Contest". The San Diego Union.
  5. Kenwood Bojens (October 20, 1934). "La Verne Holds San Diego State to Scoreless Tie; Aztecs Fail To Get Inside 20-Yard Line". The San Diego Union. p. P-3 S-2.
  6. Ted Steinmann (November 4, 1934). "Whittier Defeats Aztecs, 26 To 6; Poets Show Real Strength In Crushing San Diegans". The San Diego Union.
  7. Kenwood Bojens (November 11, 1934). "Loyola Defeats Fighting State College Eleven, 19 To 3; Aztecs Display Improvement Against Powerful Lion '11'". The San Diego Union. p. 2.
  8. "State College Noses Out Redlands Team, 7-6; Charlie Lee's Kick Defeats Bulldog '11'". The San Diego Union. November 18, 1934.
  9. Kenwood Bojens (November 30, 1934). "Tempe Teachers Beat San Diego State, 14-6; Last Quarter Touchdown Decides Tilt; Lee Is Hurt". The San Diego Union. p. P-3 S-2.
  10. "San Diego State Yearly Results". College Football Data Warehouse. Retrieved January 16, 2017.
  11. "San Diego State 2016 Football Media Guide". Retrieved December 7, 2016.
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