1961 Columbia Lions football team

The 1961 Columbia Lions football team represented Columbia University in the 1961 NCAA University Division football season as a member of the Ivy League. The Lions were led by fifth-year head coach Aldo Donelli and played their home games at Baker Field. The Lions finished the season 6–3 overall and 6–1 in Ivy League play to win Columbia's first and only Ivy League championship, sharing the title with Harvard.[1]

1961 Columbia Lions football
Ivy League co-champion
ConferenceIvy League
1961 record6–3 (6–1 Ivy)
Head coachAldo Donelli (5th season)
Offensive schemeWing-T
Home stadiumBaker Field
1961 Ivy League football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Columbia + 6 1 0  6 3 0
Harvard + 6 1 0  6 3 0
Dartmouth 5 2 0  6 3 0
Princeton 5 2 0  5 4 0
Yale 3 4 0  4 5 0
Cornell 2 5 0  3 6 0
Penn 1 6 0  2 7 0
Brown 0 7 0  0 9 0
  • + Conference co-champions

Although Columbia had accumulated an Ivy record of 4–10 in the previous two seasons, expectations for the team in 1961 were high; the Columbia Spectator wrote before the season, "[i]f practically no one gets hurt, if a few key sophomores come through, and most important of all, if [Aldo] Donelli's nineteen experienced seniors get fighting mad, then no Ivy League squad will have a chance against the Lions."[2]

The Lions began the season on the road against Ivy League foe Brown, whom they defeated in one of the most lopsided victories in Columbia Lions history,[3] but followed up with a homecoming defeat against Princeton; despite this, Princeton's head coach, Dick Colman, said, "I'll tell you this much–they had the better team."[2] Although the team had led the Tigers 14–0, depth was and remained an issue throughout the season for the Lions; Columbia had only 14 players that consistently played and, as was common in the era, did not have separate offensive and defensive units.[2] The team entered the penultimate week of the season having to defeat Penn to win a share of the conference title. Playing without their captain, Bill Campbell, who had been injured, the Lions defeated the Quakers 37–6. Five members of the team were awarded All-Ivy honors following the season: Bob Asack, Lee Black, Tony Day, Tom Haggerty, and Russ Warren.[3] In 2006, the 1961 Columbia Lions football team became the fourth sports team to be inducted into the Columbia University Athletics Hall of Fame, in recognition of their championship season.[2]

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 30at BrownW 50–09,000[4]
October 7PrincetonL 20–3023,700[5]
October 14at YaleW 11–022,188[6]
October 21at HarvardW 26–1411,000[7]
October 28Lehigh*
  • Baker Field
  • New York, NY
L 7–1410,429[8]
November 4at CornellW 35–78,000[9]
November 11Dartmouth
  • Baker Field
  • New York, NY
W 35–1425,106[10]
November 18Penn
  • Baker Field
  • New York, NY
W 37–617,066[11]
November 25at Rutgers*L 19–3225,500[12]
  • *Non-conference game
  • Homecoming
gollark: How should profile pictures work? Presumably you'd want them globally set, so they'd be fetched from your identity server, but would each server you chat in have to proxy them or something?
gollark: The actual messaging features are in a different spec to their bizarre XML encapsulation formats.
gollark: Indeed. I think we may be slightly reinventing XMPP, but XMPP is beeoid due to it being overly "extensible".
gollark: - better interserver capability than IRC's weird tree thing
gollark: osmarksdecentralizedchatoid™ featuring:- approximately IRCous design instead of the matrix state synchronisation one - channels belong to a particular server which manages history and permissions and such- global accounts looking somewhat like email addresses. Or maybe they're just public keys and people have to something something web of trust the actual name.- end to end encryption option for small private channels

References

  1. "1961 Columbia Lions Stats". Sports Reference. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  2. Pagels, Jim (27 March 2013). "The only 'Columbia': Remembering the Ivy League Champions from 1961". Columbia Spectator. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  3. "1961 Football". Columbia Athletics. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  4. Werden, Lincoln A. (October 1, 1961). "Columbia Wins, 50 to 0; Lions Rout Brown". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  5. Danzig, Allison (October 8, 1961). "Princeton Beats Columbia; Tiger 30-20 Victor". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  6. Sheehan, Joseph M. (October 15, 1961). "Columbia Blanks Yale; Lions Score, 11-0". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  7. Werden, Lincoln A. (October 22, 1961). "Columbia Wins; Lions Score, 26-14". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  8. Teague, Robert L. (October 29, 1961). "Lehigh Tops Columbia; Engineers Rally". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  9. Werden, Lincoln A. (November 5, 1961). "Columbia Downs Cornell; Lions Gain 35-7 Victory". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  10. Danzig, Allison (November 12, 1961). "Columbia Tops Dartmouth, 35-14; Lions Ivy Leaders". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  11. Effrat, Louis (November 19, 1961). "Columbia Wins, Clinches Ivy Title Tie; Lions Crush Penn". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
  12. Sheehan, Joseph M. (November 26, 1961). "Unbeaten Rutgers Trips Columbia in Finale, 32-19; Scarlet in Rally". The New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. S1.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.