1939 Duke Blue Devils football team

The 1939 Duke Blue Devils football team represented the Duke Blue Devils of Duke University during the 1939 college football season. Dutch Stanley succeeded Carl Voyles as end coach of the "Iron Dukes".[2] Halfback George McAfee led the team in rushing, receiving, scoring, kickoff returns, punt returns, interceptions, and punting.[3]

1939 Duke Blue Devils football
A Wallace Wade Stadium attendance record was set on November 18, 1939, in a game against North Carolina The 13–3 Duke win was seen by over 52,000 fans.[1] (The record was subsequently broken three times over the next decade.)
SoCon champion
ConferenceSouthern Conference
Ranking
APNo. 8
1939 record8–1 (5–0 SoCon)
Head coach
Assistant coaches
Offensive schemeSingle-wing
1939 Southern Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
No. 8 Duke $ 5 0 0  8 1 0
No. 12 Clemson 4 0 0  9 1 0
William & Mary 2 0 1  6 2 1
North Carolina 5 1 0  8 1 1
VMI 3 1 1  6 3 1
Richmond 3 1 1  7 1 2
Furman 3 3 0  5 4 0
Wake Forest 3 3 0  7 3 0
NC State 2 4 0  2 8 0
Washington and Lee 1 2 0  3 4 1
South Carolina 1 3 0  3 6 1
VPI 1 4 1  4 5 1
Davidson 1 7 0  2 7 0
Maryland 0 1 0  2 7 0
The Citadel 0 4 0  3 8 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

Schedule

DateOpponentRankSiteResult
September 30at Davidson*Davidson, North CarolinaW 26–6
October 7at Colgate*W 37–0
October 14at Pittsburgh*PittsburghL 13–14
October 21Syracuse*No. 13
  • Duke Stadium
  • Durham, North Carolina
W 33–6
October 28Wake ForestNo. 12
  • Duke Stadium
  • Durham, North Carolina
W 6–0
November 4at Georgia Tech*W 7–6
November 11at VMINo. 15Lexington, VirginiaW 20–7
November 18No. 7 North CarolinaNo. 13
  • Duke Stadium
  • Durham, North Carolina
W 13–3
November 25at NC StateNo. 8W 28–0
  • *Non-conference game
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game

[4]

References

  1. Stevens, Patrick (2015-11-05). "Most memorable Duke-North Carolina football games". The News & Observer.
  2. "Dutch Joins Duke Football Staff". The Evening Independent. February 6, 1939.
  3. "Hall of Famer George McAfee Passes Away". National Football Foundation. March 5, 2009. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  4. "1939 Duke Blue Devils". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.


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