1927 College Football All-America Team
The 1927 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 1927. The seven selectors recognized by the NCAA as "official" for the 1927 season are (1) Collier's Weekly, as selected by Grantland Rice with cooperation from ten coaches, (2) the Associated Press, (3) the United Press, selected based on consensus among UP newspapers throughout the country and prominent football coaches, (4) the All-America Board, (5) the International News Service (INS), (6) the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), and (7) the North American Newspaper Alliance (NANA).
1927 College Football All-America Team |
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College Football All-America Team |
1927 college football season |
1925 1926 ← → 1928 1929 |
Consensus All-Americans
Following the death of Walter Camp in 1925, there was a proliferation of All-American teams in the late 1920s. For the year 1927, the NCAA recognizes seven published All-American teams as "official" designations for purposes of its consensus determinations. The following chart identifies the NCAA-recognized consensus All-Americans and displays which first-team designations they received. Michigan end Bennie Oosterbaan and Pittsburgh halfback Gibby Welch were the only players to be unanimously selected by all seven selectors as first-team All-Americans.
Name | Position | School | Number | Selectors |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bennie Oosterbaan | End | Michigan | 7/7 | AAB, AP, CO, INS, NANA, NEA, UP |
Gibby Welch | Halfback | Pitt | 7/7 | AAB, AP, CO, INS, NANA, NEA, UP |
Morley Drury | Quarterback | USC | 6/7 | AAB, AP, CO, INS, NEA, UP |
Clipper Smith | Guard | Notre Dame | 6/7 | AAB, AP, CO, INS, NEA, UP |
Herb Joesting | Fullback | Minnesota | 6/7 | AAB, AP, CO, INS, NEA, UP |
Bill Webster | Guard | Yale | 5/7 | AAB, AP, INS, NANA, NEA |
Tom Nash | End | Georgia | 4/7 | AAB, CO, INS, NANA |
Jesse Hibbs | Tackle | USC | 4/7 | AAB, INS, NANA, UP |
Ed Hake | Tackle | Penn | 3/7 | AP, NANA, UP |
Larry Bettencourt | Center | St. Mary's | 3/7 | AAB, AP, INS |
John Charlesworth | Center | Yale | 3/7 | CO, NEA, UP |
Red Cagle | Halfback | Army | 3/7 | AAB, CO, NANA |
All-American selections for 1927
Ends
- Bennie Oosterbaan, Michigan (CFHOF) (AAB; AP-1; UP-1; COL-1; INS-1; NEA; NANA; CP-1; CEP-1; HE-1; NYS-1; BE-1; LP-1; WE-1)
- Tom Nash, Georgia (AAB; AP-3; UP-3; COL-1; INS-1; NANA; CEP-3; HE-1; BE-3; LP-1; WE-1)
- Ivey Shiver, Georgia (AP-1; UP-1; NEA; CP-2; HE-2; INS-3; NYS-1; BE-1; LP-2)
- Dwight Fishwick, Yale (CP-1; WE-3)
- George Cole, Dartmouth (AP-2; CEP-3; HE-3; INS-2)
- Rags Matthews, TCU (CFHOF) (AP-2; INS-2; NYS-2; BE-3)
- Irvine Phillips, California (AP-3; CP-2)
- Stewart Scott, Yale (UP-2; BE-2)
- Charles Born, Army (UP-2; CEP-1; HE-2; INS-3; NYS-2; BE-2)
- Charlie Moeser, Princeton (HE-3; LP-2; WE-2)
- Matthews, SMU (CEP-2)
- Lou Jennings, Centenary (CEP-2)
- Joe Donchess, Pittsburgh (CFHOF) (WE-2)
- Charles Walsh, Notre Dame (UP-3)
- Ted Fleck, Kansas Aggies (WE-3)
Tackles
- Jesse Hibbs, USC (AAB; AP-2; UP-1; INS-1; NANA; CP-1; CEP-2; HE-1; NYS-1; BE-2; LP-1; WE-1)
- Ed Hake, Penn (AP-1; UP-1; NANA; CP-2; CEP-3; HE-2; BE-3)
- Bud Sprague, Army (CFHOF) (AP-1; UP-2; INS-1; CP-1; HE-1)
- Bill Kern, Pittsburgh (INS-2; NEA; HE-2; NYS-2; BE-1)
- John Smith, Penn (AP-2; COL-1; LP-2; INS-3; WE-2)
- Leo Raskowski, Ohio State (AP-3; COL-1; NEA; HE-3; BE-1; CEP-1; LP-1; WE-1)
- Fred Pickhard, Alabama (UP-2; CP-2)
- Leo Nowack, Illinois (AP-3)
- George Perry, Army (LP-2; NYS-1; BE-2)
- Jap Douds, Washington & Jefferson (BE-3; CEP-1; HE-3; INS-2)
- Sidney Quarrier, Yale (AAB; UP-3; CEP-2; WE-2)
- James J. Fitzgerald, Tufts (UP-3)
- Alton C. Sprott, Texas A&M (INS-3; NYS-2; BE-3 [g])
- Roy Randells, Nebraska (CEP-3)
- Fritz Coultrin, California (WE-3)
- Francis E. Lucas, Missouri (WE-3)
Guards
- Bill Webster, Yale (AAB; AP-1; UP-2; INS-1; NEA; NANA; CP-1; CEP-1; HE-1; NYS-1; BE-1; LP-1; WE-1)
- John "Clipper" Smith, Notre Dame (CFHOF) (AAB; AP-1; UP-1; COL-1; INS-1; NEA; CP-1; CEP-2; HE-1; NYS-1; BE-1; WE-1)
- Russ Crane, Illinois (COL-1; LP-2)
- Ray Baer, Michigan (AP-2; UP-2; CP-2; HE-2; INS-2; BE-2; WE-2)
- John Barnhill, Tennessee (AP-2)
- Harold Hanson, Minnesota (AP-3; UP-1; NANA; CP-2; CEP-1; HE-2; INS-3; NYS-2; BE-2; LP-1; WE-3)
- Gene Smith, Georgia (AP-3)
- William Wright, Washington (INS-2; NYS-2; BE-3; LP-2)
- John Roberts, Pittsburgh (WE-2)
- Justin Whitlock Dart, Northwestern (UP-3)
- R. Van I. Miller, Amherst (UP-3)
- Danny McMullen, Nebraska (INS-3)
- J. M. French, Princeton (HE-3)
- Seraphim Post, Stanford (HE-3)
- Raleigh Drennon, Georgia Tech (CEP-2; WE-3)
- Robert N. Miller, Missouri (CEP-3)
- E. G. Blake, Princeton (CEP-3)
Centers
- Larry Bettencourt, St. Mary's (CFHOF) (AAB; AP-1; INS-1; CP-2; HE-1; NYS-1; BE-2; LP-2; WE-1)
- John Charlesworth, Yale (UP-1; COL-1; NEA; CP-1; HE-2; BE-1)
- Claude Grigsby, Georgetown (AP-2; HE-3)
- Ken Rouse, Chicago (AP-3; UP-3; WE-2)
- Robert Reitsch, Illinois (NANA; CEP-2; INS-3; NYS-2; BE-3; LP-1; WE-3)
- Charles Howe, Princeton (CEP-1)
- John McCreery, Stanford (UP-2)
- Elvin Butcher, Tennessee (CEP-3; INS-2)
Quarterbacks
- Morley Drury, USC (CFHOF) (AAB; AP-1 [hb]; UP-1; COL-1; INS-1 [hb]; NEA; CP-1; CEP-1; HE-1; NYS-1; BE-1; LP-1; WE-1)
- Bill Spears, Vanderbilt (CFHOF) (AP-1; UP-2; INS-1; NANA; CP-2; CEP-2; HE-3; LP-2; WE-2)
- Harold Almquist, Minnesota (AP-3)
- Jack Connor, NYU (HE-2; INS-2; NYS-2; BE-2; LP-2)
- Gerald Mann, SMU (CFHOF) (BE-3)
- Frederick M. Ellis, Tufts (CEP-3)
- Dominic E. Engbarth, Texas
Halfbacks
- Gibby Welch, Pittsburgh (AAB; AP-1; UP-1; COL-1; INS-1; NEA; NANA; CP-1; CEP-1; HE-1; NYS-1; BE-1; LP-1; WE-1)
- Red Cagle, Army (CFHOF) (AAB; AP-3; UP-3; COL-1; NANA; CEP-3; HE-2; WE-1)
- Christie Flanagan, Notre Dame (UP-1; NEA; CP-1; HE-3; INS-3; BE-1)
- Alton Marsters, Dartmouth (AP-2; UP-2; HE-3; INS-2; NYS-2; BE-2; CEP-1; LP-2; WE-2)
- Glenn Presnell, Nebraska (AP-2; UP-2; HE-2; INS-2; NYS-2; BE-2; CEP-2; LP-1; WE-2)
- Joel Hunt, Texas A&M (CFHOF) (AP-2 [qb]; INS-3 [qb]; BE-3; CEP-2; LP-2; WE-3 [qb])
- Chuck Carroll, Washington (CFHOF) (AP-3)
- Louis Gilbert, Michigan (UP-3 [qb]; CP-2; BE-3; WE-3)
- Walter "Swede" Gebert, Marquette (UP-3; INS-3; LP-2)
- Bruce Caldwell, Yale (CP-2; HE-1; NYS-1; LP-2)
- Bob Nork, Georgetown (CEP-3)
- Johnny Roepke, Penn State (WE-3)
Fullbacks
- Herb Joesting, Minnesota (CFHOF) (AAB; AP-1; UP-1; COL-1; INS-1; NEA; CP-1; CEP-3; HE-1; NYS-1; BE-1; LP-1; WE-1)
- Herdis McCrary, Georgia (AP-2; UP-2; CEP-1; HE-3; INS-2; WE-2)
- Bill Amos, Washington & Jefferson (AP-3; CEP-2; HE-2; BE-3)
- Mike Miles, Princeton (NANA; NYS-2; BE-2; WE-3)
- Pat Wilson, Washington (LP-2)
- Biff Hoffman, Stanford (INS-3; LP-2)
- Lou Tesreau, Washington (UP-3)
- Frank Briante, NYU (CP-2)
Key
- Bold – Consensus All-American[1]
- -1 – First-team selection
- -2 – Second-team selection
- -3 – Third-team selection
- CFHOF – College Football Hall of Fame
Official selectors
- AAB = All America Board[2]
- AP = Associated Press[3]
- COL = Collier's Weekly as selected by Grantland Rice with assistance from well-known coaches, including Glenn Warner, Robert Zuppke, Knute Rockne and Dan McGugin[4][5]
- INS = International News Service selected by Davis Walsh, INS sports editor[6]
- NEA = Newspaper Enterprise Association
- NANA = North American Newspaper Alliance
- UP = United Press, selected based on consensus among UP newspapers throughout the country and prominent football coaches[7]
Other selectors
- BE = Billy Evans with the assistance of "100 of the leading football experts of the country"[8]
- CP = Central Press Association, billed as the "Real" All-American team with selections based on fan input with cooperation from "hundreds of newspapers throughout the country"[9]
- CEP = Charles E. Parker for the New York Evening Telegram[10]
- HE = Hearst newspapers, consensus selection of more than 100 sports writers and editors at the Hearst newspapers[11]
- LP = Lawrence Perry[12]
- NYS = New York Sun "based on a canvas of 129 college teams throughout the country by the Sun's representatives" with gold watches being given to the members of the first eleven[13]
- WC = Walter Camp Football Foundation[14]
- WE = Walter Eckersall[15]
See also
References
- "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. p. 6. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
- Christy Walsh (December 11, 1932). "All-America Board Honors Capt. Bob Smith of Colgate". Syracuse Herald.
- "Associated Press Team". Democrat and Chronicle. December 11, 1927. p. 17. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Grantland Rice's All-American Grid Team Announced". The Scranton Republican. December 2, 1927. p. 17. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- "6 Westerners On Grantland Rice All-Stars". Woodland Daily Democrat. December 2, 1927.
- "All Sections Are Represented in Walsh's All-America Team for 1927". St. Louis Star. November 29, 1927. p. 19. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- Frank Getty (November 25, 1927). "Welch Picked on United Press All-America Team". The Pittsburgh Press. p. 51. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- Billy Evans (December 1, 1927). "Billy Evans' All-America". The Enquirer and Evening News. p. 14. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- Norman E. Brown (December 10, 1927). "Fans Choose All-American Grid Team in Extensive Newspaper Poll". Statesman Journal. Salem, OR. p. 6.
- "Gibby Welch Named Again On Star Team". The Pittsburgh Press. December 4, 1927. p. 18. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- "How About These For All-American Elevens?". San Antonio Light. December 4, 1927.
- Lawrence Perry (December 10, 1927). "Famous Sports Writer Sees Twenty-Nine Teams In Action". Harrisburg (PA) Telegraph. p. 13. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- "New York Sun Selects Team". The Decatur (IL) Revie. Decatur, IL. November 26, 1927. p. 4. Retrieved October 9, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Walter Camp Football Foundation". Archived from the original on 2009-03-30.
- "Three Big Ten Players Are Retained By Eckersall On All-America Eleven". Detroit Free Press. December 11, 1927. p. 19. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.