Plainfield Teacher's College

Plainfield Teacher's College was an imaginary college, created as a hoax, that fooled the New York Times sports department[1] and college football fans across the country.

The pride of Plainfield

In 1941, stockbroker Morris Newburger and radio sales executive Alexander "Bink" Dannenbaum concocted the idea of a mythical college football team. Using the name Jerry Croyden, Newburger phoned the New York papers and Dannenbaum phoned the Philadelphia papers with fantastic stories of Plainfield's lopsided victories over several (equally nonexistent) schools, beginning in late October. For the first two weeks, the scores and the opponents in the New York and Philadelphia papers did not match but by the third week, they were better organized.

When the newspapers started printing the scores week after week, Newburger and Dannenbaum invented other details, including a sophomore running back named Johnny "The Celestial Comet" Chung, whose amazing abilities on the gridiron was chalked up to the rice he ate on the bench between quarters. Hop-Along Hobelitz was named as Plainfield's coach. There was even speculation that Plainfield might secure a bid to a small-college bowl game; in fact, Newburger had already planned for the team to "play" in the non-existent "Blackboard Bowl" in Atlantic City at season's end.

After several weeks of Plainfield victories (padded by "wins" Newburger made up after the fact), Red Smith from the Philadelphia Record (who by this time was also reporting the fake scores) decided to actually go to Plainfield, New Jersey, to try to find the college -- and, of course, there wasn't one. (At the time, New Jersey had real teacher colleges in Jersey City, Newark, Paterson, Montclair, Glassboro, and Trenton, none of them fielding football teams as the student bodies were largely female.)

Finally, Newburger and Dannenbaum had to confess, and "Jerry Croyden" wrote his final press release, stating that Plainfield had cancelled its remaining schedule as Chung and several other players were declared ineligible after flunking exams. The Tribune took it in good humor, reporting the hoax; columnist Franklin Pierce Adams even wrote a song for Plainfield, to the tune of Cornell's "Far Above Cayuga's Waters": "Far above New Jersey's swamplands / Plainfield Teacher's spires! / Mark a phony, ghostly college / That got on the wires...!"

1941 "season"

All games and opponents are fictitious.

Week Day Date Opponent Result
1 Benson Institute W
2 Scott W
3 Chesterton W
4 Fox W
5 Saturday October 25, 1941 Winona W 27-3
6 Saturday November 1, 1941 Randolph Tech W 35-0
7 Saturday November 8, 1941 Ingersoll W 13-0
8 Saturday November 15, 1941 Appalachian Normal cancelled
9 Saturday November 22, 1941 Harmony Teachers cancelled
10 Blackboard Bowl at Atlantic City cancelled
gollark: There's that neat oracle thing which predicts your next choice of two options in a ridiculously simple way.
gollark: * 158 responses
gollark: People are apparently *really awful* at random numbers, and in the 200ish responses there is a significant peak around 7 somehow.
gollark: This actually reminds me of my friend's ongoing thing where they put "DM me a random integer between 0 and 10" in their Discord status, and collated the responses.
gollark: Have you *asked* people this? That seems like a weird response.

See also

References

  1. Christine, Bill (January 15, 2016). "The Greatest Hoax in Sports Agate History (Yes, The Times Fell for It, Too)". The New York Times. Retrieved January 15, 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.