1949 Buffalo Bulls football team

The 1949 Buffalo Bulls football team was an American football team that represented the University of Buffalo as an independent during the 1949 college football season. In its second and final season under head coach Frank Clair, the team compiled a 6–3 record.[1] The team played its home games at Civic Stadium in Buffalo, New York.

1949 Buffalo Bulls football
ConferenceIndependent
1949 record6–3
Head coachFrank Clair (2nd season)
Home stadiumCivic Stadium
1949 Eastern college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
No. 4 Army      9 0 0
Brown      8 1 0
No. 12 Cornell      8 1 0
No. 13 Villanova      8 1 0
Dartmouth      6 2 0
Buffalo      6 3 0
Pittsburgh      6 3 0
Princeton      6 3 0
Fordham      5 3 0
Tufts      5 3 1
Carnegie Tech      5 3 1
Penn State      5 4 0
Temple      5 4 0
Penn      4 4 0
Yale      4 4 0
Boston College      4 4 1
Syracuse      4 5 0
Drexel      3 3 1
Duquesne      3 6 0
Franklin & Marshall      2 5 2
NYU      3 6 0
Columbia      2 7 0
Colgate      1 8 0
Harvard      1 8 0
Rankings from AP Poll

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResult
September 24at ColgateL 0–32
October 1Niagara
W 26–7
October 8RPI
  • Civic Stadium
  • Buffalo, NY
W 26–2
October 15at AlfredAlfred, NYW 32–6
October 22St. Lawrence
  • Civic Stadium
  • Buffalo, NY
L 7–13
October 29Bucknell
  • Civic Stadium
  • Buffalo, NY
L 7–21
November 5Washington & Jefferson
  • Civic Stadium
  • Buffalo, NY
W 26–0
November 12at Rhode IslandW 39–7
November 19at OhioW 20–7
gollark: You should eigenlearn eigenlinear eigenalgebra.
gollark: Did you know? Eigendecomposition is a way to represent a matrix in terms of eigenvectors and eigenvalues.
gollark: Since the entire thing is horrible discrete approximations anyway.
gollark: I basically just have to divide the force by γ³ as long as the box is ticked.
gollark: It turns out that implementing special relativity is very easy (since it's rendered from the reference frame of the ground or something).

References

  1. "Buffalo Football 2018 Information Guide" (PDF). University of Buffalo. 2019. p. 87. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.