1902 Tennessee Volunteers football team

1902 Tennessee Volunteers football
Conference Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association
1902 record 6–2 (3–2 SIAA)
Head coach H. F. Fisher
Captain Nash Buckingham
Home stadium 15th and Cumberland Field
1902 SIAA football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
Clemson + 6 0 0     6 1 0
Vanderbilt + 6 1 0     8 1 0
LSU 4 1 0     6 1 0
Texas 4 1 0     6 3 1
Sewanee 4 2 0     7 2 0
Georgia 4 2 1     4 2 1
Tennessee 3 2 0     6 2 0
Ole Miss 3 3 0     4 3 0
Auburn 2 4 1     2 4 1
Alabama 2 4 0     4 4 0
Furman 1 2 1     4 3 4
Nashville 1 2 0     1 3 0
Davidson 1 3 0     3 5 1
Cumberland 1 3 0     1 3 0
Kentucky State 0 1 0     4 6 1
Tulane 0 4 2     1 4 2
Mississippi A&M 0 4 1     1 4 1
Georgia Tech 0 5 2     0 6 2
  • + Conference co-champions

The 1902 Tennessee Volunteers football team represented the University of Tennessee in the 1902 college football season. The Volunteers won a school record six games in 1902 and beat rivals Sewanee and Georgia Tech. The team was guided by a new head coach, H. F. Fisher, who came from Princeton University, as did his predecessor, George Kelley.

1902 was the first game that Tennessee scored on Vanderbilt in their Rivalry game.[1]

Schedule

Date Opponent Site Result
October 11, 1902 King* 15th and Cumberland Field • Knoxville, TN W 12–0  
October 21, 1902 Maryville* 15th and Cumberland Field • Knoxville, TN W 34–0  
October 25, 1902 Vanderbilt 15th and Cumberland Field • Knoxville, TN (Rivalry) L 5–12  
November 1, 1902 Sewanee 15th and Cumberland Field • Knoxville, TN W 6–0  
November 7, 1902 at Nashville* Nashville, TN W 10–0  
November 15, 1902 vs. Ole Miss Memphis, TN W 11–10  
November 22, 1902 at Georgia Tech Atlanta, GA W 10–6  
November 27, 1902 Clemson 15th and Cumberland Field • Knoxville, TN L 0–11  
*Non-conference game. All times are in Eastern.

Season summary

Week 3: Vanderbilt

Vanderbilt won 12 to 5 despite a weak line due to its running game.[2] John Edgerton scored both Vanderbilt touchdowns. Tennessee's score, its first ever against Vanderbilt, was provided by an A. H. Douglas run around right end, breaking two tackles and getting the touchdown. Nash Buckingham once had a 40-yard run through the line.[2]

Week 8: Clemson

The team closed the season with an 11 to 0 loss to John Heisman's Clemson Tigers. A. H. Douglas holds the record for the longest punt in school history when he punted a ball 109 yards (the field length was 110 yards in those days) during the Clemson game.[3][4][5] Heisman described the kick:

"The day was bitterly cold and a veritable typhoon was blowing straight down the field from one end to the other. We rushed the ball with more consistency than Tennessee, but throughout the entire first half they held us because of the superb punting of "Toots" Douglas, especially because, in that period he had the gale squarely with him. Going against that blizzard our labors were like unto those of Tantalus. Slowly, with infinite pains and a maximum of exertion, we pushed the ball from our territory to their 10-yard line. We figured we had another down to draw on, but the referee begged to differ. He handed the ball to Tennessee and the "tornado." Their general cheerfully chirped a signal – Saxe Crawford, it must have been –; and "Toots" with sprightly step, dropped back for another of his Milky Way punts. I visualize him still, standing on his own goal line and squarely between his uprights. One quick glance he cast overhead – no doubt to make sure that howling was still the same old hurricane.
I knew at once what he proposed to do. The snap was perfect. "Toots" caught the ball, took two smart steps and – BLAM!–away shot the ball as though from the throat of Big Bertha. And, say, in his palmiest mathematical mood, I don't believe Sir Isaac Newton himself could have figured a more perfect trajectory to fit with that cyclone. Onward and upward, upward and onward, the crazy thing flew like a brainchild of Jules Verne. I thought it would clear the Blue Ridge Mountains. Our safety man, the great Johnny Maxwell, was positioned 50 yards behind our rush line, yet the punt sailed over his head like a phantom aeroplane. Finally, it cam down, but still uncured of its wanderlust it started in to roll–toward our goal, of course, with Maxwell chasing and damning it with every step and breath. Finally it curled up and died on our one-footline, after a bowstring journey of just 109 yards."[6]

Douglas was selected All-Southern.[7]

References

  1. Tennessee–Vanderbilt football rivalry
  2. 1 2 "Volunteers Lose To Commodores". Atlanta Constitution. October 26, 1902. p. 5. Retrieved March 29, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  3. Wiley Lee Umphlett. Creating the Big Game: John W. Heisman and the Invention of American Football. pp. 64–65.
  4. "Records" (PDF). p. 324.
  5. "Prodigious Kick". Schenectady Gazette. October 10, 1934.
  6. John M. Heisman. Heisman: The Man Behind the Trophy. pp. 104–105.
  7. "From Southeastern College Teams The Constitution Selects An Eleven". Atlanta Constitution. December 1, 1902.
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