1903 Colgate football team

The 1903 Colgate football team was an American football team that represented Colgate University as an independent during the 1903 college football season. In its first and only season under head coach Bob Hatch, the team compiled a 4–2–1 record. Carl Smith was the team captain.[1] The team played its home games on Whitnall Field in Hamilton, New York.

1903 Colgate football
ConferenceIndependent
1903 record4–2–1
Head coachBob Hatch (1st season)
CaptainCarl Smith
Home stadiumWhitnall Field
1903 Eastern college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Princeton      11 0 0
Yale      11 1 0
Columbia      9 1 0
Dartmouth      9 1 0
Geneva      9 1 0
Temple      4 1 0
Lehigh      9 2 1
Harvard      9 3 0
Penn      9 3 0
Army      6 2 1
Carlisle      6 2 1
Amherst      7 3 0
Lafayette      7 3 0
Cornell      6 3 1
Colgate      4 2 1
Penn State      5 3 0
Brown      5 4 1
Syracuse      5 4 0
Fordham      1 1 0
Frankin & Marshall      5 5 1
Rutgers      4 4 1
Villanova      2 2 0
Tufts      5 8 0
Pittsburgh College      3 5 0
Wesleyan      3 6 1
NYU      2 5 0
New Hampshire      2 6 1
Western U. Penn.      1 8 1

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResult
September 26at ArmyT 0–0
October 4St. Lawrence
  • Whitnall Field
  • Hamilton, NY
W 40–0
October 10at Cornell
L 0–12
October 17at Syracuse Syracuse, NYW 10–5
October 30Rochester
  • Whitnall Field
  • Hamilton, NY
W 23–5
November 7at Williams
  • Weston Field
  • Williamstown, MA
L 0–6
November 14Hamilton
  • Whitnall Field
  • Hamilton, NY
W 16–0
gollark: Again, the consequences for getting a test wrong are much lower.
gollark: Lots of things are "possibly good systems". They should probably be demoted in the rankings after repeated failures.
gollark: When they were tested at scale we were pretty sure they wouldn't be particularly harmful.
gollark: I actually don't want multiple things.
gollark: Scientific progress does not generally require subjecting lots of people to your thing for ages.

References

  1. "2008 Colgate Football Media Guide" (PDF). Colgate University. 2008. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.