1919 Washington Sun Dodgers football team

The 1919 Washington Sun Dodgers football team was an American football team that represented the University of Washington during the 1919 college football season. In its second, non-consecutive season under coach Claude J. Hunt, the team compiled a 5–1 record, was co-champion of the Pacific Coast Conference, and outscored its opponents by a combined total of 202 to 31.[1] Ervin Dailey was the team captain. 1919 marked the university's adoption of the Sun Dodgers nickname.[2]

1919 Washington Sun Dodgers football
PCC co-champion
ConferencePacific Coast Conference
1919 record5–1 (2–1 PCC)
Head coachClaude J. Hunt (2nd season)
CaptainErvin Dailey
Home stadiumDenny Field
1919 Pacific Coast Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Oregon ^ + 2 1 0  5 2 0
Washington + 2 1 0  5 1 0
California 2 2 0  6 2 1
Washington State 2 2 0  5 2 0
Stanford 1 1 0  4 3 0
Oregon Agricultural 1 3 0  4 4 1
  • + Conference co-champions
  • ^ – Selected as Rose Bowl representative

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendance
October 18USS New York*W 35–03,000
October 25Whitman*
  • Denny Field
  • Seattle, WA
W 120–05,000
November 1Oregon
L 13–248,000
November 8Pacific Fleet*
  • Denny Field
  • Seattle, WA
W 14–02,500
November 15at Washington State
W 13–73,000
November 28California
  • Denny Field
  • Seattle, WA
W 7–016,000
  • *Non-conference game
gollark: Even an efficiency maximiser has an ethical system. Broadly speaking. A goal system, at least.
gollark: Also convenience.
gollark: I, of course, do ethical things based on averaging various philosophy-derived ethical systems, arbitrary human intuition, and a neural network thing which weakly approximates average human judgements.
gollark: You can ignore those, but good luck spreading your preferred ethical behaviour patterns in that case.
gollark: It also might work out worse on consequentialist grounds to do it all the time.

References

  1. "Washington Yearly Results (1915-1919)". College Football Data Warehouse. David DeLassus. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  2. "Traditions". University of Washington Athletics. Retrieved December 16, 2015.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.