1936 Chicago Maroons football team

The 1936 Chicago Maroons football team was an American football team that represented the University of Chicago during the 1936 college football season. In their fourth season under head coach Clark Shaughnessy, the Maroons compiled a 2–5–1 record, finished in seventh place in the Big Ten Conference, and were outscored by their opponents by a combined total of 166 to 68.[1][2]

1936 Chicago Maroons football
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
1936 record2–5–1 (1–4 Big Ten)
Head coachClark Shaughnessy (4th season)
1936 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
No. 7 Northwestern $ 6 0 0  7 1 0
No. 1 Minnesota 4 1 0  7 1 0
Ohio State 4 1 0  5 3 0
Indiana 3 1 1  5 2 1
Purdue 3 1 1  5 2 1
Illinois 2 2 1  4 3 1
Chicago 1 4 0  2 5 1
Iowa 0 4 1  3 4 1
Wisconsin 0 4 0  2 6 0
Michigan 0 5 0  1 7 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResult
September 26 Lawrence *W 34–0
October 3 Vanderbilt *
L 0–37
October 10 Butler *
  • Stagg Field
  • Chicago
T 6–6
October 17 Purdue
L 7–35
October 31at WisconsinW 7–6
November 7at Ohio State
L 0–44
November 14 Indiana
  • Stagg Field
  • Chicago
L 7–20
November 21 Illinois
  • Stagg Field
  • Chicago
L 7–18
  • *Non-conference game
gollark: If it's just static content, I can add it to the endless list of random things on my website, but there would probably need to be a way to update it.
gollark: Time to save that on my notes thing somewhere and maybe pay attention to it eventually!
gollark: Is there a list of these "good" engineering YouTubers somewhere? I forgot the ones people were talking about earlier and I'm interested in new stuff to watch.
gollark: I totally would, assuming you count occasionally alt-tabbing to it sitting through it.
gollark: > imagine what styro could do with the budget of him or the hacksmithIn the longish run, advancing technology should have a similar effect to higher budgets.

References

  1. "1936 Chicago Maroons Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved December 8, 2015.
  2. "University of Chicago Football Media Guide". University of Chicago. 2016. p. 22. Retrieved November 10, 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.