1921 East Tennessee State Normal football team

The 1921 East Tennessee State Normal School football team was an American football team that represented East Tennessee State University (ETSU) in the 1921 NCAA football season. It was the second season of East Tennessee State (Then known as East Tennessee State Normal School) football. They were coached by William R. Windes, a 1917 UT graduate who taught agriculture and biology at the school. It would be his 2nd and final season coaching at the school. He was assisted by English Professor Willis Beeler "Bull" Bible, brother of Dana X. Bible, and by fellow teacher coach A.V. McFee. In the 1921 season, the team was much improved on the playing field against much better competition with only one game against high school competition. The team also played against the Johnson City All-Stars, composed of former high school and college players.[1] W.R. Windes would officially finish his time coaching at the school with a 7-5 record.[2]

1921 East Tennessee State football
ConferenceIndependent
1921 record2–3 (4-3 with non-countable games)
Head coachW.R. Windes (2nd season)
Home stadiumnone
1921 Southern college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Tennessee Docs      8 0 0
Southwest Texas      7 0 0
Talladega      4 0 1
Navy      6 1 0
Erskine      6 2 0
Delaware      5 4 0
West Virginia      5 4 1
Middle Tennessee      3 2 1
East Tennessee      4 3 0
Louisville      2 2 1
Spring Hill      4 4 0
Loyola (LA)      2 4 0
Wake Forest      2 8 0
Texas Mines      1 4 0
Presbyterian      1 7 0

Schedule

OpponentSiteResult
J.C. StarsW 14–7
Carson-Newman
  • N/A
  • Johnson City, TN
L 0–46
Milligan
  • N/A
  • Johnson City, TN
W 12–7
Tusculum
  • N/A
  • Johnson City, TN
W 20–0
Washington
  • N/A
  • Johnson City, TN
W 42–0
King
  • N/A
  • Johnson City, TN
L 7–42
King
  • N/A
  • Johnson City, TN
L 0–35
  • Source:
gollark: I think that's your screen.
gollark: Your parents look at your phone a lot? Troubling.
gollark: Yes, I checked.
gollark: Morphine is opioidish, isn't it?
gollark: > there are evil people and evil deedsright afterward though?

References

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