1972 Drexel Dragons football team

The 1972 Drexel Dragons football team represented the Drexel University as an independent during the 1972 NCAA College Division football season. Sterling Brown was the team's head coach.

1972 Drexel Dragons football
ConferenceIndependent
1972 record3–6
Head coachSterling Brown (4th season)
Home stadiumDrexel Field
1972 NCAA College Division independents football records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
No. 1 Delaware      10 1 0
No. 5 Tennessee State      11 1 0
Tampa      10 2 0
Hawaii      8 3 0
Indiana State      7 3 0
Northeastern      6 2 0
Bucknell      6 3 0
Eastern Michigan      6 4 0
Milwaukee      6 4 0
Nevada      6 5 0
Central Michigan      5 5 1
Rose-Hulman      5 5 0
Santa Clara      4 4 1
Akron      3 4 2
Drexel      3 6 0
Northeast Louisiana      3 7 0
Portland State      3 8 0
Wayne State (MI)      2 5 1
Northern Michigan      2 8 0
Chattanooga      2 9 0
Southern Illinois      1 8 1
UNLV      1 10 0
Rankings from AP Poll

Schedule

[1]

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendance
September 23at BucknellL 0–445,000
September 30at WagnerL 7–91,500
October 7RPI
  • Drexel Field
  • Philadelphia, PA
L 7–92,000
October 14at USMMAL 6–163,500
October 21at GettysburgL 29–315,000
October 28Fordham
  • Drexel Field
  • Philadelphia, PA
W 15–02,500
November 4at AlbrightW 30–710,000
November 11at LafayetteL 0–165,000
November 18USCGA
  • Drexel Field
  • Philadelphia, PA
W 35–122,000

Roster

1972 Drexel Dragons football team roster
Players Coaches
Offense
Pos.#NameClass
Defense
Pos.#NameClass
Special teams
Pos.#NameClass
Head coach
  • Sterling Brown (East Stroudsburg)
Coordinators/assistant coaches

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • Injured
  • Redshirt
gollark: ax^4 + bx^3 + cx^2 + dx - ax^3 - bx^2 - cx - d
gollark: If you expand/simplify (x-1)(ax^3+bx^2+cx+d) you get, er, a lot of things, hold on.
gollark: This is a way you can do that, though.
gollark: So you can expand out `(x-1)(ax^3+bx^2+cx+d)` and get some kind of quartic thing.
gollark: You know it's equal to x-1 times a cubic of some sort, and you want to know exactly what cubic.

References

  1. "BRIEF SUMMARY OF CUMULATIVE FOOTBALL STATIStICS" (PDF). Philadelphia, PA: NCAA. November 1970. p. 1. Retrieved 29 November 2018.
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