1928 Florida Gators football team

The 1928 Florida Gators football team represented the University of Florida in the sport of American football during the 1928 Southern Conference football season. The season was future Hall-of-Famer Charlie Bachman's first of five as the team's head coach. The Gators finished 8–1 overall,[1] and 6–1 in the Southern Conference (SoCon), placing third of twenty-three teams in the conference, behind the national champion Georgia Tech Golden Tornado (7–0 SoCon), and the Tennessee Volunteers (6–0–1 SoCon).[2]

1928 Florida Gators football
ConferenceSouthern Conference
1928 record8–1 (6–1 SoCon)
Head coach
Offensive schemeNotre Dame Box
CaptainGoof Bowyer
Home stadiumFleming Field
Uniform
1928 Southern Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Georgia Tech $ 7 0 0  10 0 0
Tennessee 6 0 1  9 0 1
Florida 6 1 0  8 1 0
VPI 4 1 0  7 2 0
Alabama 6 2 0  6 3 0
LSU 3 1 1  6 2 1
Clemson 4 2 0  8 3 0
Vanderbilt 4 2 0  8 2 0
Tulane 3 3 1  6 3 1
Ole Miss 3 3 0  5 4 0
North Carolina 2 2 2  5 3 2
Kentucky 2 2 1  4 3 1
South Carolina 2 2 1  6 2 2
Maryland 2 3 1  6 3 1
VMI 2 3 1  5 3 2
Georgia 2 4 0  4 5 0
NC State 1 3 1  4 5 1
Mississippi A&M 1 4 0  2 4 2
Virginia 1 6 0  2 6 1
Washington and Lee 1 6 0  2 8 0
Sewanee 0 5 0  2 7 0
Auburn 0 7 0  1 8 0
  • $ Conference champion

The Gators led the nation in scoring with 336 points, and were remembered by many sports commentators as the best Florida football team until at least the 1960s. The large scores were mostly due to its "Phantom Four" backfield which included: quarterback Clyde Crabtree, halfbacks Carl Brumbaugh and Royce Goodbread, and fullback Rainey Cawthon.[3][4] Other backs who were key contributors included: captain Goof Bowyer, sophomore halfback Lee Roy "Red" Bethea, alternate-captain and halfback Tommy Owens, and fullback Ed Sauls. One account reads: "There were twelve backs on the squad. Six of them can do the hundred in 10.1 seconds. Eight of them are fine punters and ten of them are great passers. And all of them are good receivers."[5]

At ends were future coach Dutch Stanley, and Florida's first-ever, first-team All-American, Dale Van Sickel. Van Sickel and quarterback Crabtree, who was ambidextrous and could throw passes with either hand, or punt with either foot, while on the run or stationary, were both unanimous All-Southern selections.

Among the many football highlights of 1928 were the Gators' 26–6 victory over the Georgia Bulldogs, which ended a six-game losing streak versus the Bulldogs, and the controversial loss to Tennessee ending their bid at an undefeated season and possible Rose Bowl berth.

Before the season

Head coach Charlie Bachman succeeded Tom Sebring, his former player at Kansas State.[6] Bachman had attended Notre Dame and used Knute Rockne's system.[6] Sebring graduated from the University of Florida's College of Law,[n 1] and left Bachman several recruits.[7][8]

Players not returning from the previous season included: Horse Bishop, Cecil Beck, Speedy Walker, Tom Fuller, Charlie Tucker, and Bill Middlekauff.[9] Practice was opened on September 3.[7][10] A wealth of talented players from Florida high schools was expected.[11] After spending just two weeks with the team, while many players were engaged in other sports, Bachman declared his backfield material as the finest he ever had.[12]

John J. Tigert became UF president in 1928, and began a drive to construct a new and larger stadium upon his arrival.[13]

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendance
October 6Florida Southern*W 26–04,000
October 13Auburn
  • Fleming Field
  • Gainesville, FL (rivalry)
W 27–06,000
October 20Mercer*
  • Fleming Field
  • Gainesville, FL (HC)
W 73–08,000
October 27vs. NC StateW 14–713,000
November 3vs. Sewanee
  • Fairfield Stadium
  • Jacksonville, FL
W 71–6
November 10vs. GeorgiaW 26–616,000
November 17vs. Clemson
  • Fairfield Stadium
  • Jacksonville, FL
W 27–615,000
November 29vs. Washington & Lee
  • Fairfield Stadium
  • Jacksonville, FL
W 60–614,000
December 8at TennesseeL 13–1213,000
  • *Non-conference game

Primary source: 2015 Florida Gators Football Media Guide.[1]

Season summary

Week 1: Florida Southern

Week 1: Florida Southern at Florida
1 234Total
Southern 0 000 0
Florida 0 0260 26

In the first game of the 1928 season, the Gators posted a 26–0 victory over the Florida Southern Moccasins, whose quarterback weighed just 98 pounds (44 kg).[15] The Gators were held scoreless in the first half of the game, and achieved only two first downs; but then scored 26 points in the third quarter.[14]

The starting lineup was: W. DeHoff (left end), Norfleet (left tackle), Grandoff (left guard), Clemons (center), Perry (right guard), Hicks (right tackle), Green (right end), Bowyer (quarterback), Bethea (left halfback), Owens (right halfback), and Sauls (fullback).[14]

Week 2: Auburn

Week 2: Auburn at Florida
1 234Total
Auburn 0 000 0
Florida 0 2700 27
  • Date: October 13
  • Location: Fleming Field
    Gainesville, Florida
  • Game attendance: 6,000
  • Game weather: Rain

In the second week of play, the Gators easily defeated the Auburn Tigers 27–0. Carl Brumbaugh ran for three touchdowns in a single quarter, including one scoring run of 85 yards.[17][18] The other touchdown occurred near the start of the second quarter, when Royce Goodbread carried a pass from Clyde Crabtree 16 yards to the goal. Dutch Stanley kicked the extra point.[16]

In less than three quarters of play, Crabtree had directed 8 touchdowns.[19] Crabtree was an ambidextrous triple threat,[20] able to pass with either arm and punt with either foot, and both while on the run.[21] Crabtree said he learned this technique "from sheer fright."[22] Assistant Nash Higgins added "he played by instinct."[22] "He was a double-quadruple option." said coach Bachman.[22]

"Cannonball" Clyde Crabtree (pictured) could throw with either hand and punt with either foot.

It began to rain as the third quarter started, and the Gators' substitutes were on the field. This hampered play and prevented a larger score. The rain sent the 6,000 spectators seeking shelter.[16]

The starting lineup was: Green (left end), Norfleet (left tackle), McRae (left guard), Clemons (center), Houser (right guard), Hicks (right tackle), Nolan (right end), Bowyer (quarterback), Bethea (left halfback), Van Sickel (right halfback), and Brumbaugh (fullback).[16]

Week 3: Mercer

Week 3: Mercer at Florida
1 234Total
Mercer 0 000 0
Florida 14 281912 73
  • Date: October 20
  • Location: Fleming Field
    Gainesville, Florida
  • Game attendance: 8,000
  • Referee: Arthur R. Hutchins

During Florida's homecoming celebrations, the Gators played coach Bernie Moore's Mercer Bears, winning 73–0, and setting a scoring mark that remains the fifth-highest single-game scoring total in team history.[1] Tommy Owens scored four touchdowns, tying a school record; Brumbaugh scored three touchdowns; and Bowyer, Sauls, McEwan, and Stanley had one each.[23] The Mercer Cluster wrote: "The student body is laughing at the football team."[24] This was the last time Florida played Mercer.[25]

The starting lineup was: Green (left end), Norfleet (left tackle), Grandoff (left guard), Bono (center), Houser (right guard), Hicks (right tackle), Nolan (right end), Bowyer (quarterback), McEwen (left halfback), Owens (right halfback), and Sauls (fullback).[23]

Week 4: North Carolina State

Week 4: North Carolina State at Florida
1 234Total
NC State 0 007 7
Florida 0 662 14
  • Date: October 27
  • Location: Fairfield Stadium
    Jacksonville, Florida
  • Game attendance: 13,000
  • Referee: Arthur R. Hutchins

Because of the hot autumn weather in Gainesville, the Gators had begun practicing at night.[27] In a closely contested game,[26] the Gators defeated coach Gus Tebell's North Carolina State Wolfpack 14–7 in Jacksonville, Florida, in front of an audience of 13,000.[28]

Both of Florida's touchdowns were scored by Royce Goodbread on 70-yard runs.[26] One of those was around left end, and the other was a punt return.[28] Dutch Stanley missed both extra points after the Gators' two touchdowns, but Rainey Cawthon made up for it when he netted a safety.[26] The Wolfpack scored on the return of a punt blocked off the toe of Gators team captain Goof Bowyer.[26] Just before the game ended, the Wolfpack missed on a long pass to a receiver with a clear field to the goal.[28]

The starting lineup was: Green (left end), Waters (left tackle), McRae (left guard), Bono (center), Houser (right guard), Allen (right tackle), Nolan (right end), Bowyer (quarterback), McEwen (left halfback), Owens (right halfback), and Sauls (fullback).[28]

Week 5: Sewanee

Week 5: Sewanee at Florida
1 234Total
Sewanee 0 600 6
Florida 6 252713 71
  • Date: November 3
  • Location: Fairfield Stadium
    Jacksonville, Florida
  • Referee: Walter Powell (Wisconsin)

In the fifth week, Florida crushed the mismatched Sewanee Tigers 71–6 in Jacksonville despite Sewanee's highly publicized aerial attack.[n 2] Clyde Crabtree and Tommy Owens had to sit out with injuries.[32] Goof Bowyer, Red Bethea, and Broward McClellan were seen as the stars of the game.[29] The Gators played substitutes throughout the second half, putting the first stringers back in by the middle of the fourth quarter.[30] Florida's center, Frank Clark, also drew praise for his play on the line.[30] This score placed the Gators in first place for scoring within the Southern Conference,[33] and still remains one of the seven highest single-game scoring totals in Gators team history.[1]

The scoring started in the first period after some three minutes when Red Bethea caught a 25-yard pass from Goof Bowyer and ran the additional 10 yards for a touchdown.[29] Bethea also had a 14-yard touchdown run in the second period, and a 58-yard touchdown run in the third. Royce Goodbread had two touchdowns, on end runs around the Sewanee line of 15 and 25 yards. Ed Sauls also had two touchdowns, including the second-half kickoff return for 75 yards and a score. Bowyer, Cawthon, Clark, and McClellan all had one touchdown each. Bowyer netted four extra points, and the Gators had another conversion due to a Sewanee penalty.[30]

The starting lineup was: Green (left end), Waters (left tackle), Grandoff (left guard), Clark (center), Houser (right guard), Hicks (right tackle), Nolan (right end), Bowyer (quarterback), Bethea (left halfback), Yancey (right halfback), and Sauls (fullback).[30][32]

Week 6: at Georgia

Week 6: Florida at Georgia
1 234Total
Florida 6 776 26
Georgia 0 600 6
  • Date: November 10
  • Location: Municipal Stadium
    Savannah, Georgia
  • Game attendance: 16,000
  • Referee: Arthur R. Hutchins

Before the 1928 Florida–Georgia game, Georgia fans trumpeted the return of center Ike Boland to bolster its defense.[35] Florida's defense, however, rendered the Georgia Bulldogs' running game, including that of fullback Herdis McCrary, ineffective en route to a 26–6 victory.[36] This was Florida's first victory over Georgia in seven match-ups and solidified the Gators as legitimate contenders for their first-ever conference title.[34][37] Two Bulldogs' fumbles, and two Gators pass plays, accounted for Florida's four touchdowns.[34]

The first score came after Rip Reeves recovered a Georgia fumble at the 30-yard line. On the second play after this, Red Bethea ran off left tackle for a touchdown. Goof Bowyer missed the extra point.[34] By the second quarter Georgia had failed to consistently move the ball on the ground against Florida's line and tried to pass. Bulldogs' quarterback H. F. Johnson completed a 10-yard pass to back Frank Dudley, who ran 30 additional yards for a touchdown. Johnson missed the extra point and the score was tied.[34] A 16-yard touchdown run by Florida's Clyde Crabtree, starting around right end, then reversing field, broke the tie.[38] Carl Brumbaugh converted the extra point.[34]

A touchdown pass reception by end Dale Van Sickel of more than 30 yards provided another score in the third period,[34][38] followed by Brumbaugh's extra point kick. To close the third quarter, fullback Rainey Cawthon made a 40-yard broken field run. On the first play of the fourth quarter, Crabtree passed to Brumbaugh for another score, but Brumbaugh's extra point attempt was blocked by the Bulldogs.[34] In the middle of the fourth quarter, Gator fans rushed the field to tear down the goal posts, and fist fights broke out between Georgia and Florida fans.[34]

The starting lineup was: Van Sickel (left end), J. Clemons (left tackle), Steele (left guard), Clark (center), Reeves (right guard), Bryan (right tackle), Stanley (right end), Bowyer (quarterback), Goodbread (left halfback), Bethea (right halfback), and Sauls (fullback).[34]

Red Bethea (pictured in 1930).

Week 7: Clemson

Week 7: Clemson at Florida
1 234Total
Clemson 6 000 6
Florida 0 7614 27
  • Date: November 17
  • Location: Fairfield Stadium
    Jacksonville, Florida
  • Game attendance: 15,000
  • Referee: Severance (Oberlin)

Coach Josh Cody's Clemson Tigers, captained by O. K. Pressley, held extra practices to prepare for the undefeated Gators.[40]

Clemson scored first on a 30-yard pass, leading 6–0 after the first quarter.[39][41] From then on the Gators dominated, winning 27 to 6. Brumbaugh, Van Sickel, and Bethea were cited as players of the game.[39][42] In the second quarter, Florida's Owens went around end and Brumbaugh finished the drive with a touchdown.[39]

Florida used both the run and the pass effectively, as Bethea "looked for all the world like the famous Red Grange" according to Associated Press (AP) staff writer Benton E. Jacobs.[43] Florida's second touchdown occurred in the second half, when Bethea caught a pass that went 25 yards in the air, and when he gathered it ran 36 yards more for the score.[39] The third score came in the fourth quarter on a pass from Crabtree to Cawthon. The Gators' fourth and final score was on a pass from Brumbaugh to Van Sickel.[39]

The starting lineup was: Green (left end), Waters (left tackle), McRae (left guard), B. Clemons (center), Allen (right guard), Hicks (right tackle), Nolan (right end), Bowyer (quarterback), Bethea (left halfback), Goodbread (right halfback), and Sauls (fullback).[39]

Week 8: Washington & Lee

Week 8: Washington & Lee at Florida
1 234Total
W&L 6 000 6
Florida 21 7266 60
  • Date: November 29
  • Location: Fairfield Stadium
    Jacksonville, Florida
  • Game attendance: 14,000
  • Referee: Buck Flowers

The 60–6 victory over coach Pat Herron's Washington & Lee Generals made the Gators the highest-scoring team in the entire nation in total points scored.[45] In front of 14,000 fans, Tommy Owens scored two touchdowns, as did Brumbaugh and Goodbread; while Bethea, Crabtree, and McEwan had one each. Morgan Blake wrote: "At this writing, it is a matter for serious debate as to which is the dizziest—the Washington and Lee football team or this groggy sports scribe from Atlanta ... Florida's great football team—magnificent in the fullest sense of the word, keen, alert, fast, and powerful—gave Washington and Lee the most crushing defeat it has encountered in many years."[46] The Gators tallied 590 total yards.[46]

The starting lineup was: Baldwin (left end), Hicks (left tackle), Houser (left guard), Clark (center), Grandoff (right guard), Waters (right tackle), Green (right end), Bowyer (quarterback), Bethea (left halfback), Goodbread (right halfback), and Sauls (fullback).[44]

Week 9: at Tennessee

Week 9: Florida at Tennessee
1 234Total
Florida 0 066 12
Tennessee 0 706 13

The 1928 Gators played their final game against coach Robert Neyland's Tennessee Volunteers on the Vols' home field in Knoxville, Tennessee. Neyland was sick with the flu.[48] The game was played on a soft, wet field, following a hard rain, and both teams scored two touchdowns on the muddy field. The Volunteers missed one of their two extra-point conversion attempts after touchdowns, but the Gators missed two conversion attempts and lost the game by a single point, 12–13.[49] In what would become a trend in the series, controversy swirled around the contest. By all accounts, the playing surface had been a muddy mess. Some Gators claimed that the home team had watered down the field in an effort to slow down the speedy Gator backs.[50] The Vols protested that the sloppy conditions were simply the result of heavy rain the night before the game.[51][52] One contemporary sportswriter called the game "the biggest upset of the year down South."[53] Tennessee's usual quarterback, Roy Witt, was out with an injury, and was replaced by Bobby Dodd.[47][54]

Coach Bachman

Prior to the contest, coach Bachman used a motivational trick learned from Knute Rockne and waved a telegram in front of his players, telling them a win over Tennessee meant an invitation to the Rose Bowl, the only postseason bowl in those days, even though conference champion Georgia Tech was already invited. The loss curtailed Florida's hopes of its first conference title, and fans and players have long since mourned the missed chance at a Rose Bowl.[55] Coach Bachman later added: "We would have beaten California in the Rose Bowl. Worse than Tech did on a dry field."[56]

Tennessee quarterback Bobby Dodd depicted on a football card from the 1950s.

Tennessee led the scoring for most of the game; Florida only making it close with late rallies.[47] Early in the second quarter, Tennessee made the half's lone score. It was set up by a "bullet-like"[47] 25-yard pass from Dodd, who was on the run to evade tacklers, to Paul Hug, who was downed at the 2-yard line. After Florida's defense held for three downs, Gene McEver scored between the center's legs on fourth down. The ensuing extra point on a pass from Dodd to Herc Alley would decide the game.[47]

Down 7–0 at the half, the Gators seemed to begin a comeback and scored two minutes into the third quarter.[47] On a similar play to Tennessee's score, a 16-yard pass from Royce Goodbread was caught by Dale Van Sickel, down at the 1-yard line. Goodbread went over left tackle for the touchdown the very next play. Dodd deflected Carl Brumbaugh's pass for the extra point attempt.[47] After the beginning of the fourth quarter, Florida had the ball inside its own 15-yard line after Tennessee turned it over on downs. Clyde Crabtree ran instead of punting, and was tackled just as he tried to execute a lateral to Goodbread near the 30-yard line. The lateral was intercepted by Tennessee's Buddy Hackman, who out-sprinted Brumbaugh to the goal.[47]

The Gators later drove to the 4-yard line before they were held on downs. After Dodd's punt to midfield, the Gators' engineered their final scoring drive. A 27-yard pass from Brumbaugh to Van Sickel got the Gators out of bounds at the 1-yard line. Crabtree ran it in for the touchdown, but Brumbaugh's place kick for the extra point was wide and short.[47] Some sources, such as Peter Golenbock's Go Gators!, claim it was blocked.[55]

The starting lineup was: Van Sickel (left end), Waters (left tackle), Steele (left guard), Clark (center), Reeves (right guard), Hicks (right tackle), Stanley (right end), Bowyer (quarterback), Bethea (left halfback), Owens (right halfback), and Sauls (fullback).[47]

Postseason

Awards and honors

The Gators scored 336 points, then one of few stats kept, the most of any team in the nation.[57][58] After the conclusion of the 1928 season, seven Gator players were tabbed for postseason honors by major media outlets: the "Phantom Four" as well as end Dale Van Sickel, and linemen Jimmy Steele and William McRae.[59]

Dale Van Sickel (pictured) was the school's first All-American.

Junior end Van Sickel was chosen a first-team, All-American, the first in Gators' team history, by the AP, Collier's Weekly, and the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA).[1][60][61][62] Sophomore guard Steele was a second-team, All-American selection by the NEA, and received honorable mention honors from the AP.[60][61] Sophomore guard McRae was a second-team, All-American selection by United Press (UP).[63] Junior back Clyde Crabtree received third-team, All-American honors from each of the AP, the NEA, and UP.[60][61][63][64]

Crabtree and Van Sickel were both first-team, All-Southern selections of the AP and UP composite teams. Steele was a first-team, UP, All-Southern selection. Dutch Stanley, Dale Waters, Steele, Carl Brumbaugh, Royce Goodbread, and Rainey Cawthon received All-Southern honorable mention honors from the AP.[65]

Departing seniors

Seniors graduating included captain Goof Bowyer, Tommy Owens, Dutch Stanley, Jus Clemons, Willie DeHoff, and Chester Allen.[66] All but DeHoff played all three years for the Florida varsity.[67] Despite this, hopes were high for the team and its backs in 1929.[18]

Four 1928 Gators would later play professional football in the National Football League (NFL): halfback/quarterback Carl Brumbaugh, halfback/quarterback Clyde Crabtree, halfback Royce Goodbread, and tackle Dale Waters.[68] Brumbaugh went on to win multiple NFL Championships with the Chicago Bears in 1932 and 1933.[n 3]

Personnel

Depth chart

The following chart provides a visual depiction of Florida's lineup during the 1928 season with games started at the position reflected in parenthesis. The chart mimics a Notre Dame Box on offense.

LE
Harry Green (5)
Dale Van Sickel (2)
Loyd Baldwin (1)
Willie DeHoff (1)
Lloyd Wilson (0)
LTLGCRGRT
Muddy Waters (4)Bert Grandoff (3)Frank Clark (4)Mike Houser (4)Dashwood Hicks (6)
Joe Norfleet (3)Bill McRae (3)Ben Clemons (3)Rip Reeves (2)Chester Allen (1)
Jus Clemons (1)Jimmy Steele (2)Louis Bono (2)Chester Allen (1)Joe Bryan (1)
Dashwood Hicks (1)Mike Houser (1)Loyd Baldwin (0)Bert Grandoff (1)Muddy Waters (1)
Wayne Ripley (0)Tom Perry (1)
RE
Jimmy Nolan (5)
Harry Green (2)
Dutch Stanley (2)
J. W. Chapman (0)
 
QB
Goof Bowyer (9)
Clyde Crabtree (0)
RHB
Tommy Owens (4)
Royce Goodbread (2)
Red Bethea (1)
Dale Van Sickel (1)
Harvey Yancey (1)
Carl Brumbaugh (0)
Broward McClellan (0)
LHB
Red Bethea (6)
Red McEwen (2)
Royce Goodbread (1)
John Allen (0)
Johnny Bryson (0)
FB
Ed Sauls (8)
Carl Brumbaugh (1)
Rainey Cawthon (0)
Wilbur James (0)
Elmer Ihrig (0)

Line

The Gator linemen in formation.
Number Player Position Games
started
High school Height Weight Age
3Chester Allentackle2Lakeland6'0"18524
20Louis Bonocenter2Duval5'10"17823
25Frank Clarkcenter4Culver6'1"17019
36Ben Clemonscenter3Leon6'2"18522
1Bert Grandoffguard4Hillsborough5'7"20421
12Harry Greenend5Gainesville6'2"18223
33Dashwood Hickstackle6Hillsborough6'2"17621
32Mike Houserguard4Duval5'7"17022
29Jimmy Nolanend5Duval5'10"17020
4Joe Norfleettackle3Newberry6'0"17521
9Bill McRaeguard3West Palm Beach6'1"17219
31Alex "Rip" Reevesguard2Alabama5'8"18422
21Dutch Stanleyend2Hillsborough5'8"18122
26Jimmy Steeleguard2Hillsborough6'0"18519
39Dale Van Sickelend3Gainesville5'11"17020
2Dale "Muddy" Waterstackle4Newcastle6'2"18519

Backfield

The Gator backfield.
Number Player Position Games
started
High school Height Weight Age
23Red Betheahalfback6Riverside5'9"17221
38Ernest "Goof" Bowyerquarterback9Lakeland5'10"17024
28Carl Brumbaughhalfback1West Milton5'10"16421
40Rainey Cawthonfullback0Leon5'11"18020
17Clyde "Cannonball" Crabtreequarterback0J. Sterling Morton5'8"14721
42Royce Goodbreadhalfback2St. Petersburg6'0"19020
14Tommy Owenshalfback4Quincy5'11"14622
30Ed Saulsfullback8Leon5'11"18520

Line

Number Player Position Games
started
High school Height Weight Age
27Loyd Baldwincenter1Miami5'11"18020
10Joe Bryantackle1Duval5'11"18223
J. W. Chapmanend
15Justin "Jus" Clemonstackle1Plant City6'0"18422
13Willie DeHoffend1Spring Hill6'0"17022
24Tom Perryguard1Daytona Beach5'10"16019
8Wayne RipleyguardDuval5'11"19022
37Lloyd WilsonendHillsborough5'10"16520

Backfield

Number Player Position Games
started
High school Height Weight Age
John Allenhalfback
16Johnny BrysonhalfbackDuval5'6"14521
19Elmer IhrigfullbackFort Myers5'8"17424
35Wilbur JamesfullbackOrlando5'11"18619
6J. Milton "Red" McEwanhalfback2Wauchula5'8"15519
Broward McClellanhalfbackBlountstown
5Harvey Yanceyhalfback1Duval5'10"16020

[70][71]

Scoring leaders

Player Touchdowns Extra points Field goals Safeties Points
Carl Brumbaugh1190075
Royce Goodbread800048
Tommy Owens600036
Red Bethea600036
Ed Sauls500030
Goof Bowyer2140026
Clyde Crabtree300018
Dale Van Sickel300018
Rainey Cawthon200114
Red McEwen200012
Dutch Stanley140010
Frank Clark10006
Bo McClellan10006
Ben Clemons01001
TOTAL512801336

Coaching staff

See also

Notes

  1. He later became a circuit court judge and chief justice of the Florida Supreme Court.[6]
  2. Florida had not played Sewanee since 1915.[31]
  3. In the Bears' backfield with Brumbaugh were Bronko Nagurski and Red Grange.[69]

References

  1. 2015 Florida Gators Football Media Guide Archived 2015-12-08 at the Wayback Machine, University Athletic Association, Gainesville, Florida, pp. 108 & 115 (2015). Retrieved August 15, 2015.
  2. 2009 Southern Conference Football Media Guide, Year-by-Year Standings, Southern Conference, Spartanburg, South Carolina, p. 74 (2009). Retrieved August 30, 2010.
  3. McEwen 1974, pp. 98–99
  4. Chastain 2002, p. 25
  5. "No Uniforms For the Other Good Ones". Mount Carmel Item. December 15, 1928. p. 5. Archived from the original on 29 June 2016. Retrieved June 22, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  6. Bruce R. Jacob. Remembering A Great Dean: Harold L. "Tom" Sebring (PDF). pp. 83–84, 103–106.
  7. "New Gator Grid Mentor Prepares For Opening of Football Training Work Early Next Month". The Evening Independent. August 23, 1928. pp. 9, 11. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
  8. Carlson 2007, p. 33
  9. McEwen 1974, p. 90
  10. "Coaches Worry Over Material For New Season". The Miami News. August 24, 1928.
  11. "New Material To Help Team Better Lineup". The Miami News. August 9, 1928.
  12. "Coach Bachman Outlines Hopes of the Season". The Miami News. August 21, 1928.
  13. Pleasants 2006, pp. 31–32
  14. "Goodbread Scores First Touchdown During Late Rally". St. Petersburg Times. October 7, 1928. p. 1. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
  15. John Valerine (December 18, 1974). "Moccasins Have Had Their Ups and Downs". Lakeland Ledger. p. 3B. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
  16. "Gators Score Four Times in Second Period". The Anniston Star. October 14, 1928. p. 12. Retrieved December 31, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  17. "Florida Gators Crush Auburn U". Kingsport Times. October 14, 1928. p. 3. Retrieved August 16, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  18. William J. Dunn (December 3, 1928). "Sportsmatter". The Circleville Herald. p. 2. Retrieved August 16, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  19. "Bachman Lauds Clyde Crabtree". St. Petersburg Times. October 19, 1928. p. 2.
  20. "Lining Them Up". The Harvard Crimson. November 1, 1929.
  21. McEwen 1974, pp. 92, 98
  22. McEwen 1974, p. 98
  23. "Fighting Gators Overwhelm Mercer By 73 to 0 Score". St. Petersburg Times. October 21, 1928. p. 1. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
  24. "Why Complain?". Mercer Cluster. October 26, 1928. p. 2. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
  25. Wilder 2011, p. 75
  26. "Florida Defeats North Carolina By Score 14 to 7". Kingsport Times. October 28, 1928. p. 6. Retrieved August 16, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  27. "'Gators Stage Night Practice". The Bee. October 23, 1928. p. 6. Retrieved August 16, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  28. "Stubborn State 'Pack Loses One To Florida Team". The Technician. p. 3.
  29. "Florida Swamps Sewanee, 71 to 6". The Anniston Star. November 4, 1928. p. 12. Retrieved August 16, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  30. "Jinx Follows Tigers To Florida; Score 71 to 6". The Sewanee Purple. 46. November 7, 1928. pp. 2–3. hdl:11005/1307.
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Bibliography

  • Carlson, Norm (2007). University of Florida Football Vault: The History of the Florida Gators. Atlanta, Georgia: Whitman Publishing, LLC. ISBN 978-0-7948-2298-9.
  • Chastain, Bill (2002). The Steve Spurrier Story. Lanham, Maryland: Taylor Trade Publishing. ISBN 1-4617-0340-9.
  • Golenbock, Peter (2002). Go Gators! An Oral History of Florida's Pursuit of Gridiron Glory. St. Petersburg, Florida: Legends Publishing, LLC. ISBN 0-9650782-1-3.
  • Kerasotis, Peter (September 1, 2005). Stadium Stories: Florida Gators. Globe Pequot. ISBN 0-7627-3777-8.
  • Pleasants, Julian M. (2006). Gator Tales: An Oral History of the University of Florida. Gainesville, Florida: University of Florida. ISBN 0-8130-3054-4.
  • McEwen, Tom (1974). The Gators: A Story of Florida Football. Huntsville, Alabama: The Strode Publishers. ISBN 0-87397-025-X.
  • Wilder, Robert E. (2011). Gridiron Glory Days: Football at Mercer, 1892–1942. Mercer University Press. ISBN 978-0-88146-267-8.
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