1927 Dartmouth Indians football team

The 1927 Dartmouth Indians football team was an American football team that represented Dartmouth College as an independent during the 1927 college football season. In their fifth season under head coach Jesse Hawley, the Indians compiled a 7–1 record. Robert MacPhail was the team captain.[1]

1927 Dartmouth Indians football
ConferenceIndependent
1927 record7–1
Head coachJesse Hawley (5th season)
CaptainRobert MacPhail
Home stadiumMemorial Field
1927 Eastern college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Tufts      8 0 0
Geneva      8 0 1
Army      9 1 0
Pittsburgh      8 1 1
Temple      7 1 0
Yale      7 1 0
Princeton      6 1 0
Villanova      6 1 0
Penn State      6 2 1
Carnegie Tech      5 2 1
Columbia      5 2 2
Colgate      4 2 3
Lafayette      5 3 1
Penn      6 4 0
Syracuse      5 3 2
Carnegie Tech      5 4 1
Boston College      4 4 0
Harvard      4 4 0
Rutgers      4 4 0
Duquesne      4 4 1
Cornell      3 3 2
Drexel      3 5 1
Fordham      3 5 0
Brown      3 6 1
Franklin & Marshall      1 7 1
Lehigh      1 7 1

Myles Lane was the team's leading scorer, with 125 points, from 18 touchdowns and 17 kicked extra points.[2]

Dartmouth played its home games at Memorial Field on the college campus in Hanover, New Hampshire.

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 24 Norwich
  • Memorial Field
  • Hanover, NH
W 47–0 [1]
October 1 Hobart
  • Memorial Field
  • Hanover, NH
W 46–0 [1]
October 8 Allegheny
  • Memorial Field
  • Hanover, NH
W 38–7 [1]
October 15 Temple
  • Memorial Field
  • Hanover, NH
W 47–7 [1]
October 22 at Harvard W 30–6 55,000 [3]
October 29 at Yale L 0–19 58,000 [4]
November 5 at Brown W 19–7 20,000 [5]
November 12 Cornell
  • Memorial Field
  • Hanover, NH (rivalry)
W 53–7 [1]
gollark: Maybe I should run it on 1908254717975918 incredibly low-resource VMs, for purposes.
gollark: Does that actually *work*, over slow WAN networks?
gollark: Is that secure?
gollark: Not "oops, we accidentally made something exactly like a human but it's in a computer and it doesn't like us".
gollark: The main thing we probably have to worry about is misaligned things being programmed with goals like "ensure there is no mess on the floor" removing the entire floor, and such.

References

  1. "Season-by-Season Results: 1881-1939". Hanover, N.H.: Dartmouth College. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
  2. "Annual Scoring Leaders (Since 1925)". Hanover, N.H.: Dartmouth College. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
  3. Vidmer, Richards (October 23, 1927). "Dartmouth's Runs Beat Harvard, 30-6". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  4. Danzig, Allison (October 30, 1927). "Yale's Fast Attack Upsets Dartmouth". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  5. Kelley, Robert F. (November 6, 1927). "Dartmouth Routs Brown Eleven, 19-7". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S2.
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