1950 All-Southwest Conference football team
The 1950 All-Southwest Conference football team consists of American football players chosen by various organizations for All-Southwest Conference teams for the 1950 college football season. The selectors for the 1950 season included the Associated Press (AP) and the United Press (UP). Players selected as first-team players by both the AP and UP are designated in bold.
All Southwest selections
Backs
- Larry Isbell, Baylor (AP-1, UP-1 [quarterback])
- Byron Townsend, Texas (AP-1, UP-1 [fullback])
- Bob Smith, Texas A&M (AP-1, UP-1 [fullback])
- Kyle Rote, SMU (AP-1, UP-1 [halfback])
- Gilbert Bartosh, Texas Christian (AP-2)
- Ben Tompkins, Texas (AP-2)
- Bill Tidwell, Texas A&M (AP-2)
- Fred Benners, SMU (AP-2)
Ends
- Harold Riley, Baylor (AP-1, UP-1)
- Andy Hillhouse, Texas A&M (AP-2, UP-1)
- Ben Procter, Texas (AP-1)
- Bill Howton, Rice (AP-2)
Tackles
- Ken Jackson, Texas (AP-1, UP-1)
- Paul Giroski, Rice (AP-1, UP-1)
- Bobby Collier, SMU (AP-2)
- Clarence "Red" Marable, Texas Christian (AP-2)
Guards
- Bud McFadin, Texas (AP-1, UP-1)
- Dave Hanner, Arkansas (AP-1, UP-1)
- Herschel Forester, SMU (AP-2)
- Max Greiner, Texas A&M (AP-2)
Centers
- Dick Hightower, SMU (AP-1, UP-1)
- Leo Stonestreet, Rice (AP-2)
Key
AP = Associated Press, "selected for the Associated Press by the seven coaches"[1]
UP = United Press[2]
Bold = Consensus first-team selection of both the AP and UP
gollark: Ours is shorter but lunch break is shorter too.
gollark: Yes, one from mine too, that's why I mentioned it. Perhaps we secretly all go to the same school and never realized it.
gollark: Ye§.
gollark: Oh no, a video.
gollark: Unfortunately they would also be really quite onerous to actually do, and nobody seems to have thought that optional part-time remote learning would be good.
References
- Howard Ratliff (December 5, 1950). "Longhorns Dominate AP All-Southwest Conference Selections". Lubbock Morning Avalanche. p. H5 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Name All-Southwest Conference Stars". The News-Herald. November 22, 1950 – via Newspapers.com.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.