1952 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team

The 1952 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team represented the University of Minnesota in the 1952 Big Ten Conference football season. In their second year under head coach Wes Fesler, the Golden Gophers compiled a 4–3–2 record and were outscored by their opponents by a combined total of 171 to 131.[1]

1952 Minnesota Golden Gophers football
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
1952 record4–3–2 (3–1–2 Big Ten)
Head coachWes Fesler (2nd season)
MVPPaul Giel
CaptainRichard Anderson
Home stadiumMemorial Stadium
1952 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
No. 11 Wisconsin + 4 1 1  6 3 1
No. 18 Purdue + 4 1 1  4 3 2
No. 17 Ohio State 5 2 0  6 3 0
Michigan 4 2 0  5 4 0
Minnesota 3 1 2  4 3 2
Illinois 2 5 0  4 5 0
Northwestern 2 5 0  2 6 1
Iowa 2 5 0  2 7 0
Indiana 1 5 0  2 7 0
  • + Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

Halfback Paul Giel was named an All-American by the Associated Press, FWAA and Look Magazine. Giel received Chicago Tribune Silver Football, awarded to the most valuable player of the Big Ten. Giel, running back Bob MacNamara and guard Percy Zachary were named All-Big Ten first team. Giel finished third in voting for the Heisman Trophy.[2]

Paul Giel was awarded the Team MVP Award.[3]

Total attendance for the season was 270,292, which averaged to 54,058. The season high for attendance was against rival Iowa.[4]

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendance
September 27at Washington*L 13–1949,000
October 4No. 4 California*L 13–4955,204
October 11Northwestern
  • Memorial Stadium
  • Minneapolis, MN
W 27–2646,732
October 18No. 17 Illinois
  • Memorial Stadium
  • Minneapolis, MN
W 13–754,787
October 25at No. 19 MichiganL 0–2170,858
November 1Iowa
  • Memorial Stadium
  • Minneapolis, MN (rivalry)
W 17–760,376
November 8No. 9 Purdue
  • Memorial Stadium
  • Minneapolis, MN
T 14–1453,193
November 15at Nebraska*W 13–740,000
November 22at No. 13 WisconsinT 21–2152,131
  • *Non-conference game
  • Homecoming
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
gollark: Probably. The main issue I can see is that you would have to rewrite the entire metadata block on changes, because start/end in XTMF are offsets from the metadata region's end.
gollark: I thought about that, but:- strings in a binary format will be about the same length- integers will have some space saving, but I don't think it's very significant- it would, in a custom one, be harder to represent complex objects and stuff, which some extensions may be use- you could get some savings by removing strings like "title" which XTMF repeats a lot, but at the cost of it no longer being self-describing, making extensions harder and making debugging more annoying- I am not convinced that metadata size is a significant issue
gollark: I mean, "XTMF with CBOR/msgpack and compression" was being considered as a hypothetical "XTMF2", but I'd definitely want something, well, self-describing.
gollark: Also also, why a binary format?
gollark: Also, XTMF can do runtime update, you just need to allocate, say, 4KB at the start of the tape, and write metadata to that. The offsets might be fiddly, though.

References

  1. "1952 Minnesota Golden Gophers Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved November 1, 2017.
  2. Keiser, Jeff (2007), 2007 Media Guide (PDF), pp. 179–182
  3. Keiser, Jeff (2007), 2007 Media Guide (PDF), p. 181
  4. Keiser, Jeff (2007), 2007 Media Guide (PDF), p. 160
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