1895 Army Cadets football team

The 1895 Army Cadets football team represented the United States Military Academy in the 1895 college football season. In their second and final season under head coach Harmon S. Graves, the Cadets compiled a 5–2 record, shut out five of their seven opponents, and outscored all opponents by a combined total of 141 to 32.[1] The Army–Navy Game was not played in 1895.[2] On November 2, 1895, Army lost to Yale by a 28 to 8 score in what one press account called the greatest and most exciting game of football ever played on the West Point grounds."[3]

1895 Army Cadets football
ConferenceIndependent
1895 record5–2
Head coach
Home stadiumThe Plain
1895 Eastern college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Penn      14 0 0
Yale      13 0 2
Princeton      10 1 1
Harvard      8 2 1
Lafayette      6 2 0
Syracuse      6 2 2
Army      5 2 0
Bucknell      5 2 0
Colgate      4 2 0
Tufts      8 5 0
Wesleyan      6 3 0
Amherst      6 5 0
Brown      7 6 1
Carlisle      4 4 0
Rutgers      4 4 0
Villanova      3 3 0
Penn State      2 2 3
Cornell      3 4 1
New Hampshire      2 3 1
Frankin & Marshall      3 5 1
Boston College      2 4 2
Lehigh      3 6 0
CCNY      2 5 1
Temple      1 4 1
MIT      1 4 0
Trinity (CT)      1 4 0
Massachusetts      1 5 0
Western Univ. Penn.      1 6 0

No Army Cadets were honored on the 1895 College Football All-America Team.

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResult
October 5TrinityW 50–0
October 12Harvard
  • The Plain
  • West Point, NY
L 0–4
October 19Tufts
  • The Plain
  • West Point, NY
W 35–0
October 26Dartmouth
  • The Plain
  • West Point, NY
W 6–0
November 2Yale
  • The Plain
  • West Point, NY
L 8–28
November 16Union
  • The Plain
  • West Point, NY
W 16–0
November 23BrownNewburgh, NYW 26–0

References

  1. "Army Yearly Results (1895-1899)". College Football Data Warehouse. David DeLassus. Retrieved August 1, 2015.
  2. "1895 Army Black Knights Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved August 1, 2015.
  3. "Other Games". The Salt Lake Tribune. November 3, 1895.


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