1933 All-SEC football team

The 1933 All-SEC football team consists of American football players selected to the All-Southeastern Conference (SEC) chosen by various selectors for the 1933 college football season. This was the inaugural SEC season; the All-SEC teams now taking precedence over the All-Southern team. The Associated Press (AP) All-SEC teams are the only ones which become a part of official conference records.[1] The Alabama Crimson Tide won the conference, the only blemish on its conference record a scoreless tie with the Ole Miss Rebels. Tennessee halfback Beattie Feathers was voted SEC Player of the Year.

All-SEC selections

Ends

  • David Ariail, Auburn (AP-1, UP-1)
  • Graham Batchelor, Georgia (AP-1, UP-1)
  • J. R. Slocum, Georgia Tech (AP-2, UP-2)
  • Joe Rupert, Kentucky (AP-2, UP-2)
  • Don Hutson, Alabama (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-3)
  • Bart Herrington, Ole Miss (AP-3)

Tackles

  • Jack Torrance, LSU (AP-1, UP-1)
  • B. W. Williams, Georgia Tech (AP-3, UP-1)
  • Bob Tharpe, Georgia Tech (AP-1)
  • Bill Lee, Alabama (AP-2, UP-2)
  • Hal Starbuck, Florida (AP-2)
  • F. G. McCollum, Auburn (UP-2)
  • Jesse Flowers, Ole Miss (AP-3)

Guards

  • Leroy Moorehead, Georgia (AP-1, UP-1)
  • Thomas Hupke, Alabama (AP-1, UP-1)
  • J. B. Ellis, Tennessee (AP-2, UP-2)
  • W. H. Chambliss, Auburn (AP-2, UP-2)
  • Bowe, Vanderbilt (AP-3)
  • D. Wilcox, Georgia Tech (AP-3)

Centers

  • Talmadge Maples, Tennessee (AP-1, UP-1)
  • Homer Robinson, Tulane (AP-2, UP-2)
  • Welcome Shearer, Florida (AP-3)

Quarterbacks

Halfbacks

  • Beattie Feathers, Tennessee (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1, UP-1)
  • Joseph Grant, Georgia (AP-2, UP-1)
  • Dixie Howell, Alabama (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1)
  • Floyd Roberts, Tulane (AP-2)
  • Abe Mickal, LSU (College Football Hall of Fame) (UP-2)
  • Casy Kimbrell, Auburn (AP-3)
  • Homer Key, Georgia (AP-3)
  • Bob Herrington, Miss. St. (AP-3)
  • George Chapman, Georgia (AP-3)

Fullbacks

  • Ralph Kercheval, Kentucky (AP-1, UP-2 [as hb])
  • D. J. Phillips, Georgia Tech (AP-2, UP-2)

Key

AP = Associated Press.[2][3]

UP = United Press[4]

Bold = Consensus first-team selection by both AP and UP

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gollark: Yes, exactly.
gollark: What people would *like*, I suppose, is "each actual person gets some fixed amount of coins per day", but there's no way to enforce that cryptographically.
gollark: Yes, I agree, although the alternative seems to be pretty much be "burn electricity and computing power for new stuff".
gollark: Did it just start with some big pool of them in one account?

See also

References

  1. "Tide Places Three Stars on Twu Unites". The Anniston Star. December 2, 1952. p. 9. Retrieved June 11, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  2. "Feathers Is Easy Choice". The Evening Independent. December 1, 1933. p. 14. Retrieved May 26, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  3. the Associated Press. "Southeastern Loop All-Star Team Named". The Palm Beach Post.
  4. Garnett D. Horner (December 1, 1933). "Feathers Is U. P. All-Southeastern: Kercheval Is Able To Make Second". Middlesboro Daily News. p. 2. Retrieved June 11, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
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