1925 Bowling Green Normals football team

The 1925 Bowling Green Normals football team was an American football team that represented Bowling Green State University as a member of the Northwest Ohio League (NOL) during the 1925 college football season. In its second season under head coach Warren Steller, the team compiled a 3–1–3 record (2–0–1 against conference opponents), and won the NOL championship.[1] The team opened the season 0–1–3 but won the final three games of the season.[2] The team played its home games at College Field in Bowling Green, Ohio.[3]

1925 Bowling Green Normals football
NOL champion
ConferenceNorthwest Ohio League
1925 record3–1–3 (2–0–1 NOL)
Head coachWarren Steller (2nd season)
CaptainHarry Crawford
Home stadiumCollege Field
1925 Northwest Ohio League football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Bowling Green 2 0 1  3 1 3
Toledo 1 0 0  1 8 0
Findlay 2 1 1  5 2 2
Bluffton 1 2 0  1 3 0
Defiance 0 3 0  0 6 2
  • $ Conference champion

Paul E. Landis, Robert Younkins, and Franklin Skibbie were assistant coaches. Harry Crawford was the team captain.[3]

Bowling Green refused to play a post-season game with Toledo after university officials, including coach Steller, witnessed unsportsmanlike conduct in an Armistice Day game between Toledo and Findlay.[4]

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultSource
October 3at Otterbein*Westerville, OHT 0–0
October 10Michigan State Normal*
L 0–14
October 16Capital*
  • College Field
  • Bowling Green, OH
T 0–0
October 24at FindlayFindlay, OHT 0–0
October 31at DefianceDefiance, OHW 2–0
November 7Bluffton
  • College Field
  • Bowling Green, OH
W 6–0
November 20Ashland*
  • College Field
  • Bowling Green, OH
W 26–14[5]
  • *Non-conference game
  • Homecoming

Roster

  • Claude Berry, halfback, Bowling Green, OH, 155 pounds
  • Ralph Castner, tackle, Bowling Green, OH, 227 pounds
  • George Crawford, Graysville, OH, 140 pounds
  • Harry Crawford, end, Pemberville, OH, 141 pounds
  • George Evans, tackle, Bloomdale, OH, 171 pounds
  • Edward Fries, quarterback, Bowling Green, OH, 135 pounds
  • Willie Gahn, halfback
  • Vaughn Gill, fullback, Delta, OH, 152 pounds
  • Ora Knecht, guard, Edgerton, OH, 234 pounds
  • Homer Moscoe, Potsdam, NY, 148 pounds
  • Olds, center
  • Ostrander, end
  • Wilbur Swartz, guard, Cygnet, OH, 168 pounds

[3]

gollark: Because instead of "pages have attached files which can be linked the pages", you could just have "pages contain files as a separate type of content, embedded appropriately".
gollark: Minoteaur 7.1 had file management capabilities, but while working on this now I realized I suddenly realized that this could probably be combined with the content model rework somehow, accursedly.
gollark: But I also really don't like writing much code, and want to generalize and combine features as much as possible. Which causes more problems.
gollark: The main causes of this are:- I wanted it to be interactable with externally via an API of some kind, and operating on text strings for that is kind of æ æa æ ææææ æææ.- I wanted some kind of structured data handling mechanism, partly for APIous purposes - see DokuWiki's `struct` plugin, and a cool feature a random journaling website has where you can use `CAPSTHING: bees` in a page and get tables out- I also thought that the design of all previous Minoteaurs, which made pages entirely text strings, hampered rich editing capabilities (such as "to-do lists" where you could easily check/uncheck things, and arbitrarily-nested-bullet-point "outliner" stuff)
gollark: However, design of this in any detail requires making decisions, which immediately induces apionic "bee" incursions.

References

  1. "Bowling Green Yearly Results (1925-1929)". College Football Data Warehouse. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  2. "Turn Back The Clock: The First Decade Of BG Football". Bowling Green State Falcons. June 21, 2019.
  3. "Program for Bowling Green Homecoming game". Bowling Green State College. November 7, 1925.
  4. "untitled". The Cincinnati Enquirer. November 20, 1925. p. 15 via Newspapers.com.
  5. "Bowling Green 26, Ashland 14". The Cincinnati Enquirer. November 21, 1925. p. 12 via Newspapers.com.
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