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1946 Pittsburgh Panthers football team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football season

1946Pittsburgh Panthers football
1946 Pitt football team
ConferenceIndependent
Record3–5–1
Head coach
Home stadiumPitt Stadium
Seasons
← 1945
1947 →
1946 Eastern major college football independents records
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 2Army  901
Rutgers  720
Penn State  620
Boston College  630
Holy Cross  540
NYU  530
Villanova  640
Colgate  440
Syracuse  450
Pittsburgh  351
Temple  242
Merchant Marine  470
Bucknell  360
Lafayette  270
Fordham  070
Rankings fromAP Poll

The1946 Pittsburgh Panthers football team was anAmerican football team that represented theUniversity of Pittsburgh as an independent during the1946 college football season. In their first and only year under head coachWes Fesler, the Panthers compiled a 3–5–1 record and were outscored by 136 to 88. Three of their losses were to teams ranked in the finalAP Poll: No. 1Notre Dame (0–33); No. 5Illinois (7–33); and No. 20Indiana (6–20).[1]

Pitt was ranked at No. 43 in the finalLitkenhous Difference by Score System rankings for 1946.[2]

Schedule

[edit]
DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 21IllinoisL 7–3335,000[3]
September 28West Virginia
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA (rivalry)
W 33–7> 30,000[4]
October 5atNotre DameL 0–3350,368[5]
October 12Temple
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA
T 0–03,000[6]
October 19Marquette
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA
W 7–618,000–20,000[7][8]
October 26Purdue
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA
L 8–1038,000[9]
November 2at No. 20IndianaL 6–2017,000[10]
November 9at No. 12Ohio StateL 13–2074,743[11]
November 23Penn State
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA (rivalry)
W 14–750,000[12]
  • Rankings fromAP Poll released prior to the game

Preseason

[edit]
Coach Fesler and his staff

On January 31, with a three year record of 10–17, Coach Shaughnessy was requested by a faculty committee led by Professor R. A. Sherrill, faculty chairman of athletics, to sever his ties with professional football, and concentrate his efforts on improving the Pitt football program. Earlier, his three assistant coaches had threatened to leave if he was going to be retained. Shaughnessy answered the committee by pointing out the problems with the Pitt football program: inconsistencies in Pitt's football code; a schedule too hard for the material recruited; his staff of assistants were not good teachers and could not carry out assignments they were given. He told theSun-Telegraph: "What I do with my Sundays off is my own business." On February 4, Clark Shaughnessy resigned as Pitt coach and accepted the coaching job at theUniversity of Maryland (replacingPaul Bryant).[13]

The Pittsburgh Panthers, had an 0–17 record against the nine-teamWestern Conference since they de-emphasized the program. However, they still held hope that they would be invited to be the tenth member. On March 12, ChancellorRufus Fitzgerald announced the hiring ofOhio State gradWesley E. Fesler as the 18th head football coach at the University of Pittsburgh. Fesler toldThe Press: "I knew I was being considered but I didn't think anything would be done so soon. Naturally, I'm happy and mighty pleased. I've already picked two of my assistants,Charles Hartwig andMike Milligan."[14] By April 3, Fesler's staff was complete with the addition of Dick Fisher, Lyal Clark andRalph Fife.[15]

On March 20, Coach Fesler welcomed over 100 candidates to his six-week spring practice session. Dr. Ralph Shanor returned from the Navy to his team physician position. Jimmy Dimitroff was appointed student manager and was assisted by Velt Castrodale.[16] By April 10, only forty candidates remained on the squad. The coaches cut 15 deemed as unfit, and the Army drafted starting halfback James Robinson and center Jim Stopford. Starting tackle George Johnson played baseball, and one prospect did not make grades. TheSun-Telegraph reported that: "The abrupt letdown in interest has been caused partly by the dissatisfaction on the part of some players with their jobs at the school and partly by the fact that some candidates realized that they were not of varsity caliber..."[17] "Some players holding janitorial jobs work a shift from 10 p. m. to 1 a. m. because classrooms are not vacant until then. The more disgruntled of this group have petitioned Chancellor Rufus Fitzgerald for relief."[18] On May 2, the spring session ended with the Blues beating the Whites 36–0 in the final scrimmage game.[19]

On August 18, the Panthers opened a three-week fall practice atThe Kiski School inSaltsburg, PA. This was the first time they had practiced off-campus since their days at Camp Hamilton (1913–1936). Among the more than 100 prospects that made the trip were 56 discharged veterans, 65 freshmen, and 20 lettermen (9 of whom played the previous year). 15 more students were in summer school and would join the team upon its return to campus. The squad trained twice a day, were housed in tents and ate at a nearby boys' camp.[20]

Coaching staff

[edit]
1946 Pittsburgh Panthers football staff
Coaching staff Support staff
  • James Hagan - director of athletics
  • Frank Carver – publicity director
  • Dr. Ralph Shanor – team physician
  • Howard Waite – trainer
  • Bill Haines – equipment manager
  • Jim Dimitroff – varsity student manager
  • Velt Castrodale – assistant manager

Roster

[edit]
1946 Pittsburgh Panthers football roster
PlayerPositionGamesWeightHeightClassPrep SchoolHometown
William Abraham (USN)*halfback91855 ft 7 insophomoreJeannette H. S.Jeanette, PA
Jack Banbury (AC)halfback21906 ftseniorSchenley H. S.Pittsburgh, PA
Bernard Barkouskie*guard92005 ft 8 infreshmanWilkes-Barre H. S.Wilkes-Barre, PA
William Bruno (USMC)*fullback91806 ftfreshmanPenn H. S.Verona, PA
Frank Capello (Army)end11806 ftfreshmanElwood City H. S.Elwood City, PA
Louis Cecconi*quarterback91555 ft 6 infreshmanDonora H. S.Donora, PA
Daniel Cerronetackle22456 ft 4 insophomoreBraddock H. S.Braddock, PA
Henry Clougherty (USMC)*center91855 ft 8 injuniorSwissvale H. S.Swissvale, PA
Ralph Coleman (USN)guard52206 ft 1 insophomoreAmbridge H. S.Ambridge, PA
William Coury (AC)*guard71805 ft 9 infreshmanArnold H.S.Arnold, PA
Walter Cummins (Army)*end92006 ft 2 insophomoreGreensburg H. S.Greensburg, PA
Peter Daley (USN)halfback21705 ft 7 insophomoreBrownsville H. S.Brownsville, PA
James DeLong (S)tackle02106 ft 2 infreshmanReading H. S.Reading, PA
Carl DePasqua*quarterback91655 ft 6 infreshmanWilliamsport. H.S.Williamsport, PA
William Dillon (AC)guard01856 ftfreshmanMarianna H. S.Marianna, PA
Charles Dowlerend01956 ft 3 infreshmanBurgettstown H. S.Burgettstown, PA
Jack Durishan (AC)*tackle92206 ft 1 inseniorHazleton H. S.Hazleton, PA
Wilbur Forsythe (S)*tackle62106 ft 3 insophomoreEast Huntingdon H. S.East Huntingdon, PA
Peter Fuderich (USN)halfback31805 ft 6 insophomoreAliquippa H. S.Aliquippa, PA
Romeo Gallifa (USMC)center11906 ftfreshmanDonora H. S.Donora, PA
James Gasper (S)guard01955 ft 9 infreshmanPeabody H. S.Pittsburgh, PA
Gene Gaugler (USMC)fullback32006 ft 2 insophomoreBeaver Falls H. S.Beaver Falls, PA
Matt Gebel (Army)fullback31906 ftseniorEast Pittsburgh H. S.East Pittsburgh, PA
William Goelz (S)end21755 ft 11 insophomoreCrafton H. S.Crafton, PA
John Gregg (AC)end41756 ftjuniorMt. Lebanon H. S.Mt. Lebanon, PA
Sam Haddad (USMC)*center82106 ft 3 infreshmanNew Castle H. S.New Castle, PA
William Hardesty (USN)tackle22206 ft 1 infreshmanLangley H. S.Pittsburgh, PA
Morris Harris (USN)tackle42606 ftfreshmanGlassport H. S.Glassport, PA
James Hayhurstguard01956 ftjuniorEast Fairmont H. S.Fairmont, WV
Robert Humhalfback11805 ft 11 infreshmanColumbiana H. S.Columbiana, OH
George Johnson (Army)guard32406 ft 4 injuniorGerman Twp. H. S.Edenborn, PA
John Kosh (Army)*center92006 ftjuniorDonora H. S.Donora, PA
John LaFrankie (USMC)*halfback61955 ft 11 infreshmanElizabeth H. S.Elizabeth, PA
Lindaro Lauro (AC)*fullback61905 ft 9 insophomoreNew Castle H. S.New Castle, PA
Jack Lavia (S)halfback01705 ft 11 infreshmanSharpsburg H. S.Sharpsburg, PA
Robert Lee (USMC)*halfback61755 ft 9 infreshmanNew Castle H. S.New Castle, PA
George Matich (S)halfback11905 ft 11 infreshmanClairton H. S.Clairton, PA
Glenn McCurdy (USN)guard01905 ft 8 insophomoreEast McKeesport H. S.East Mckeesport, PA
William McPeak (USN)*end91856 ftsophomoreNew Castle H. S.New Castle, PA
Joseph Massey (AC)guard22006 ftfreshmanBeaver Falls H. S.Beaver Falls, PA
William Mihm*end71806 ftsophomoreWestinghouse H. S.Pittsburgh, PA
John Montana (Army)fullback01855 ft 10 injuniorMeadville H. S.Meadville, PA
Jack Pepper (USN)halfback21755 ft 10 infreshmanSchenley H. S.Pittsburgh, PA
Robert Plotz*tackle81856 ftfreshmanMartins Ferry H. S.Martins Ferry, OH
Chester Radnor (USN)halfback21705 ft 8 infreshmanPlymouth H. S.Plymouth, PA
Leonard Radnorcenter41855 ft 10 infreshmanPlymouth H. S.Plymouth, PA
George Ranii*guard72105 ft 11 inseniorAspinwall H. S.Blawnox, PA
Martin Rosepink (S)*tackle82056 ftseniorVerona H. S.Verona, PA
Michael Roussostackle62406 ft 4 injuniorNew Castle H. S.New Castle, PA
John Rozanskitackle01955 ft 10 injuniorPlymouth H. S.Plymouth, PA
Joe Rubinohalfback31705 ft 6 infreshmanDormont H. S.Dormont, PA
William Samerend01906 ft 1 infreshmanDonora H. S.Donora, PA
Clair Saundershalfback01755 ft 10infreshmanNew Brighton H. S.New Brighton, PA
Clement Schneider (USMC)end11956 ft 2 infreshmanCentral Catholic H. S.Pittsburgh, PA
Ralph Shortquarterback41906 ft 1 infreshmanMartins Ferry H. S.Martins Ferry, OH
Leo Skladany*end82006 ftsophomorePlymouth H. S.Plymouth, PA
Jack Smodicquarterback31655 ft 9 insophomoreGerman Twp. H. S.Gates, PA
Michael Sprock (USN)halfback31705 ft 8 insophomoreAmbridge H. S.Ambridge, PA
Earl Sumptercenter11655 ft 10 infreshmanClairton H. S.Clairton, PA
Robert Teitt*fullback41905 ft 8 infreshmanTrafford H. S.Trafford, PA
Fred Thomas (USN)center01856 ftfreshmanTarentum H. S.Tarentum, PA
Charles Underdonkfullback01855 ft 8 infreshmanMoundsville H. S.Moundsville, WVA
Jack Ulam (AC)halfback01705 ft 8 infreshmanMt. Lebanon H. S.Mt. Lebanon, PA
Lee Ward (Army)*center41756 ftfreshmanMt. Lebanon H. S.Mt. Lebanon, PA
Leo Watkins (AC)guard01705 ft 9 infreshmanWestinghouse H. S.Pittsburgh, PA
* Letterman

[21][22]

Game summaries

[edit]

Illinois

[edit]
Week 1: Illinois at Pitt
Team1234Total
• Illinois70131333
Pitt70007
  • Date: September 21, 1946
  • Location:Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 35,000
  • Game weather: sunny
  • Referee: Russell Rupp (Lebanon Valley)
See also:1946 Illinois Fighting Illini football team
Program for September 21 game versus Illinois
Ticket stub for September 21 game versus Illinois

On September 21, the Panthers, led by Wes Fesler, opened their season against the Fighting Illini for the second year in a row. The Illini led the series 3–0, and had out scored the Panthers 95–36.[23] Illinois coachRay Eliot had a veteran squad that was favored to win theWestern Conference title. His analysis: "We are the most overrated team in the United States. There are 20 teams around who can knock us off."[24] The Illini used both rail and air service to get to Pittsburgh. Seven members of the Illini squad arrived by train and the remaining twenty-nine members flew by chartered plane. Starting end Joe Buscemi and reserve halfback Jack Pierce did not make the trip.[25] GuardAlex Agase was a consensus All-American.[26]

Coach Fesler had only three lettermen in his starting lineup – Jack Durishan, Leo Skladany and William McPeak. McPeak and Durishan were named co-captains. The 120 member Pitt Band performed for the first time in three years.[27]

The Panthers extended their winless streak against theWestern Conference to eighteen games by losing to the Illini 33–7. Illinois star running back Buddy Young scored on a 46-yard dash around the left side of the Pitt defense on Illinois's second play from scrimmage. Pitt answered after Louis "Bimbo" Cecconi intercepted a Julius Rykovich pass on the Illini 37-yard line and returned it to the 22. Three plays later Cecconi scored from the 1-yard line, and then he booted the placement to tie the game. The Panthers played the second quarter in Illinois territory but were unable to score. Pitt end Walt Cummins dropped a pass on the 1-yard line; Illini quarterback Tommy Gallagher intercepted a Pete Fuderich pass on the goal line; and Mike Roussos missed a 23-yard field goal. After intermission, Buddy Young, Art Dufelmeier, Paul Patterson and Chick Maggioli each scored a touchdown, and Don Maechtle converted three of five extra points.[28]

Illinois finished the season ranked #5 in the AP poll with an 8–2 record. They won the Western Conference Championship and beatUCLA in the1947 Rose Bowl.[29]

Even though the Panthers lost 2 starters early in the game to injuries (end Leo Skladany and running back Bobby Lee), Coach Fesler was pleased with the overall effort. He told theSun-Telegraph that when the team came in the locker room: "They told me they were sorry they couldn't hold up the whole way and promised to win one for me next week. They have the right spirit."[30]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Illinois was Leo Skladany (left end), Jack Durishan (left tackle), Bernard Barkouskie (left guard), Lee Ward (center), William Coury (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Bill McPeak (right end), Carl DePasqua (quarterback), Robert Lee (left halfback), William Abraham (right halfback) and Lindaro Lauro (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Walt Cummins, John Gregg, William Mihm, Frank Capello, Morris Harris, William Hardesty, Michael Roussos, Dan Cerrone, George Ranii, George Johnson, John Kosh, Earl Sumpter, Henry Clougherty, William Bruno, Louis Cecconi, Peter Fuderich, Michael Sprock, Jack Pepper, Ralph Short and Peter Daley.[3]

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPIllinoisPittsburgh
1254IllinoisBuddy Young 46-yard touchdown run, Don Maechtle kick good70
1422PittsburghLouis Cecconi 1-yard touchdown run, Lou Cecconi kick good77
373IllinoisArt Dufelmeier 37-yard touchdown run, Don Maechtle kick no good (wide)137
3621IllinoisBuddy Young 2-yard touchdown run, Don Maechtle kick good207
4337IllinoisPaul Patterson 22-yard touchdown reception from Tom Stewart, Don Maechtle kick good277
4180IllinoisPunt returned 90 yards for touchdown by Chick Maggioli, Tom Gallagher kick no good (Blocked by Ralph Coleman)337
"TOP" =time of possession. For other American football terms, seeGlossary of American football.337

West Virginia

[edit]
Week 2: West Virginia at Pitt
Team1234Total
West Virginia07007
• Pitt0276033
  • Date: September 28, 1946
  • Location:Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 31,000
  • Game weather: sunny
  • Referee: W. T. Halloran (Providence)
See also:1946 West Virginia Mountaineers football team
Program for September 28 game versus West Virginia
Ticket stub for September 28 game versus West Virginia

The Panthers and Mountaineers met for the 40th time on September 28. The Panthers held a 29–8–1 advantage in the series and had beaten West Virginia 14 straight times.[31]Bill Kern, ex-Panther player and assistant coach, finished his naval tour of duty, and was back as head coach of the Mountaineers. West Virginia opened their season with a 13–7 victory overOtterbein.[32] Prior to his entering the service, Mountaineer halfback Buddy Freeze, played his freshman year at Pitt.[33]

Pitt was a heavy favorite (10–20 points) but two starters were injured. Coach Fesler replaced Leo Skladany with Walt Cummins at left end and Bobby Lee with Bill Bruno at left halfback.[33]

The final score (33–7) was a repeat of the previous week, but this time Pitt was the victor. The opening quarter was scoreless. Five touchdowns were scored in the second period. West Virginia scored first on a 28-yard Russ Combs to Charley Helenski touchdown pass. Charley Becca added the extra point. The Mountaineers were offsides on the ensuing kick-off and had to rekick. Lou “Bimbo” Cecconi fielded the ball on his 3-yard line and raced 97 yards for the touchdown. Ralph Short's placement tied the game. Then the Panther defense forced a punt, and Pitt gained possession on the West Virginia 48-yard line. On first down Pitt quarterback, Carl DePasqua, threw a touchdown pass to Bill Abraham. Cecconi added the extra point and Pitt led 14–7. Next, Panther back, Bill Bruno, intercepted a pass that gave Pitt possession on the Panther 46-yard line. Three plays later Bruno ran 41 yards for the touchdown. Cecconi's placement was blocked, but Pitt led 20–7. An interception by Pitt center Henry Clougherty gave Pitt possession on the West Virginia 21-yard line. On the fifth play Cecconi scored on a 7-yard scamper and then added the extra point to finish the first half scoring at 27–7. Bill Abraham scored Pitt's final touchdown on a 6-yard scoring run in the third period. Cecconi's placement was blocked.[34]

Coach Fesler was delighted but cautious with his praise: "We're still a long way away and our tackling wasn't as good as it should have been. But you have to hand it to the boys for how they refuse to fold up when the opposition jumps off to the lead."[35]

The starting lineup for the game against West Virginia was Walt Cummins (left end), Jack Durishan (left tackle), Bernard Barkouskie (left guard), Lee Ward (center), William Coury (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Bill McPeak (right end), Louis Cecconi (quarterback), William Bruno (left halfback), William Abraham (right halfback)) and Lindaro Lauro (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were John Gregg, William Mihm, Schneider, Morris Harris, Michael Roussos, William Hardesty, Martin Rosepink, Dan Cerrone, Joseph Massey, Henry Clougherty, George Ranii, George Johnson, John Kosh, Ralph Coleman, Sam Haddad, Romeo Gallifa, Carl DePasqua, Peter Fuderich, John LaFrankie, Jack Banbury, Ralph Short, Michael Sprock, Peter Daley, Robert Teitt, Joe Rubino, Eugene Gaugler and Leonard Radnor.[36]

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPWest VirginiaPittsburgh
2850West VirginiaCharley Helenski 28-yard touchdown reception from Russ Combs, Charley Becca kick good70
2197PittsburghKickoff returned 97 yards for touchdown by Lou Cecconi, Ralph Short kick good77
2148PittsburghBill Abraham 48-yard touchdown reception from Carl DePasqua, Lou Cecconi kick good714
2354PittsburghBill Bruno 41-yard touchdown run, Lou Cecconi kick blocked720
2521PittsburghLou Cecconi 7-yard touchdown run, Lou Cecconi kick good727
316PittsburghBill Abraham 6-yard touchdown run, Lou Cecconi kick blocked733
"TOP" =time of possession. For other American football terms, seeGlossary of American football.733

at Notre Dame

[edit]
Week 3: Pitt at Notre Dame
Team1234Total
Pitt00000
• Notre Dame01214733
See also:1946 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team
Program for October 5 game versus Notre Dame
Ticket stub for October 5 game versus Notre Dame

On October 5, the Panthers traveled toSouth Bend to play the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame for the fifteenth time. Notre Dame led the series 8–5–1, and the Irish had outscored the Panthers 138–9 in the previous 3 games. Pitt and the Irish were 2–2 in the four games played at South Bend.[37] Fourth-year coachFrank Leahy's squad was 1–0 on the season, having beaten Illinois 26–6 in their opener.[38] The Irish lineup had 4 All-Americans – quarterbackJohnny Lujack, tackleGeorge Connor, guardJohn Mastrangelo and centerGeorge Strohmeyer.[39]

Since the Panthers had 9 players on the injured list (Lindaro Lauro, Leo Skladany, Jack Smodic, Bob Lee, Mike Roussos, Bill Hardesty, Frank Capello, Romeo Galiffa and John Banbury), Notre Dame was heavily favored to win their home opener.[40]

Notre Dame beat the Panthers 33–0. The Panther offense managed to gain only 42 total yards and 4 first downs. Their defense surrendered 257 yards rushing and 211 through the air. Johnny Lujack threw 2 touchdown passes (one each to Bob Livingstone and Jim Mello). Terry Brennan and Jim Mello each scored two touchdowns. Fred Earley converted three extra points.[41] Notre Dame finished the season ranked number 1 in the AP poll with an 8–0–1 record.[38]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Notre Dame was Walt Cummins (left end), Jack Durishan (left tackle), Bernard Barkouskie (left guard), Lee Ward (center), William Coury (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Bill McPeak (right end), Louis Cecconi (quarterback), William Bruno (left halfback), William Abraham (right halfback) and Eugene Gaugler (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Leo Skladany, William Mihm, John Gregg, Wilbur Forsythe, Morris Harris, Martin Rosepink, John Kosh, George Johnson, George Ranii, Ralph Coleman, Henry Clougherty, Sam Haddad,Leonard Radnor, Carl DePasqua, Ralph Short, Michael Sprock, Peter Fuderich, John LaFrankie, Victor Pepper, Joe Rubino, Chester Radnor, Matthew Gebel and Robert Teitt.[42]

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPPittsburghNotre Dame
2441Notre DameBob Livingstone 24-yard touchdown reception from Johnny Lujack, John Creevey kick no good06
2549Notre DameTerry Brennan 6-yard touchdown run, John Creevey kick no good012
3530Notre DameJim Mello 16-yard touchdown reception from Johnny Lujack, Fred Earley kick good019
3599Notre DameJim Mello 29-yard touchdown run, Fred Earley kick good026
4647Notre DameTerry Brennan 25-yard touchdown run, Fred Earley kick good033
"TOP" =time of possession. For other American football terms, seeGlossary of American football.033

Temple

[edit]
Week 4: Temple at Pitt
Team1234Total
Temple00000
Pitt00000
  • Date: October 12, 1946
  • Location:Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:10 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 2,500
  • Game weather: rain
  • Referee: Joseph H. Williams (Bucknell)
See also:1946 Temple Owls football team
Program for October 12 game versus Temple
Ticket stub for October 12, 1946 game versus Temple

On October 12, in front of 2,500 rain-soaked fans, the Panthers and Temple Owls played for only the fourth time. Pitt led the series 2–1.[43] The Owls had a 0–1–1 record, after tying SMU (7–7) and losing to Georgia (35–7).[44] Since there was a hotel strike in Pittsburgh, second-year coachRay Morrison brought his team to Pittsburgh in special B. & O. Pullman cars that served as their headquarters. Coach Morrison was cautiously optimistic: "We're in good shape physically and our mental attitude is right."[45]

Coach Fesler made four changes to the Pitt starting lineup: Leo Skladany replaced Walt Cummins at left end; Henry Clougherty replaced Lee Ward at center; Carl DePasqua replaced Lou Cecconi at quarterback; and Matt Gebel replaced Gene Gaugler at fullback. Leo Skladany's brother Tommy played halfback for Temple.[46]

An all day rain contributed to a sparse crowd and scoreless tie. Neither team came close to scoring. The Panthers offense drove to the Temple 34-yard line in both the second and third periods. The Owls offense drove to the Panthers 27-yard line in the first quarter and the 40-yard line in the final period. The remainder of the game was a field position battle as the teams combined for 29 punts.[47]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Temple was Leo Skladany (left end), Jack Durishan (left tackle), Bernard Barkouskie (left guard), Henry Clougherty (center), William Coury (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Bill McPeak (right end), Carl DePasqua (quarterback), William Bruno (left halfback), William Abraham (right halfback) and Matt Gebel (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Walt Cummins, Martin Rosepink, Wilbur Forsythe, George Ranii, Frank Kosh, Sam Haddad, Lou Cecconi, Joe Rubino and Robert Teitt.[48]

Marquette

[edit]
Week 5: Marquette at Pitt
Team1234Total
Marquette06006
• Pitt00707
  • Date: October 19, 1946
  • Location:Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 20,000
  • Game weather: fair and cool
  • Referee: Lyle Clarno (Bradley)
See also:1946 Marquette Hilltoppers football team
Program for October 19 game versus Marquette
Ticket stub for October 19 game versus Marquette

On October 19, the Panthers played the Marquette Hilltoppers for the first time. CoachFrank Murray's Hilltoppers had a 2–2 record.[49] Marquette was ranked the fifth most effective passing team in the country, having completed 57 of 108 tosses for 721 yards. Due to the continuing hotel strike, the 37 squad members (minus seven injured first stringers) were housed in their Pullman cars.[50]

Injuries again played havoc with Coach Fesler's starting lineup. Linemen Bill Coury and Bob Plotz had sore shoulders and were replaced by Wilbur Forsythe and John Kosh. Fullback Matt Gebel, in the hospital with a head injury, was replaced by freshman Robert Teitt.[51]

Thanks to Lou Cecconi's successful extra point, the Panthers eked out a 7–6 victory. The Hilltoppers completed 5 of 20 passes and had 5 intercepted. Pitt out-gained Marquette 263 to 169, but lost 5 fumbles. Marquette scored in the second period on a 46-yard pass play from Carl Schuette to Bob O'Hagan. George Gallo's placement went wide and Marquette led 6–0 at halftime. In the third period, the Panthers gained possession on the Hilltoppers 48-yard line. A pass play advanced the ball to the 35-yard line. Then, Carl DePasqua completed a pass to Leo Skladaney for the touchdown. Cecconi converted and Pitt led 7–6.[8][52]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Marquette was Leo Skladany (left end), Jack Durishan (left tackle), Bernard Barkouskie (left guard), Henry Clougherty (center), John Kosh (right guard), Wilbur Forsythe (right tackle), Bill McPeak (right end), Carl DePasqua (quarterback), William Bruno (left halfback), William Abraham (right halfback) and Robert Teitt (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Walt Cummins, William Mihm, John Gregg, Mike Roussos, Martin Rosepink, George Ranii, Joseph Massey, Sam Haddad, Jack Smodic, Louis Cecconi, Jack Banbury, Robert Lee, Matt Gebel and Len Radnor.[53]

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPMarquettePittsburgh
2469MarquetteBob O'Hagan 24-yard touchdown reception from Carl Schuette, George Gallo kick no good wide60
3248PittsburghLeo Skladany 35-yard touchdown reception from Carl DePasqua, Louis Cecconi kick good67
"TOP" =time of possession. For other American football terms, seeGlossary of American football.67

Purdue

[edit]
Week 6: Purdue at Pitt
Team1234Total
• Purdue070310
Pitt02068
  • Date: October 26, 1946
  • Location:Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 38,000
  • Game weather: fair and warm
  • Referee: Lloyd Larson (Wisconsin)
See also:1946 Purdue Boilermakers football team
Program for October 26 game versus Purdue
Ticket stub for October 26 game versus Purdue

On October 26, CoachCecil Isbell and his Purdue Boilermakers, with a record of 1–3–1, were Pitt's opponent.[54] Purdue led the series 2–0, and had held the Panthers scoreless in both contests.[55] Purdue guardDick Barwegan received All-America mention, but the two notable members of the squad were future coaching greats,Hank Stram andJohn McKay.

Coach Fesler lost three backfield members of his squad prior to the game, but overall, the Panthers were in their best condition of the season. Fullback Matt Gebel quit due to recurring headaches. Wingbacks Jack Banbury and Mike Sprock were not happy with their progress and turned in their uniforms.[56]

Purdue extended theWestern Conference win streak versus Pitt to 19 games.Hank Stram booted a last second field goal to win the game 10–8. At the end of the scoreless first quarter, the Boilermakers gained possession on downs at the Pitt 43-yard line. Purdue advanced the ball to the 6-yard line at the close of the quarter. On the third play of the second period, Purdue back Bob Pfohl scored on a 1-yard run. Hank Stram added the extra point and Purdue led 7–0. The Panther offense stalled and quarterback Carl DePasqua's punt rolled out of bounds on the Purdue 2-yard line. Pitt end Leo Skladany tackled Purdue quarterback Bob DeMoss in the end zone for a safety. Late in the fourth quarter, the Pitt offense drove 64-yards in 10 plays for the go-ahead touchdown. Bill Bruno went through right tackle from the 4-yard line for the score, but Lou Cecconi was wide on the point after. The Panther defense held and gained possession with little time left on the clock. Halfback Lindaro Lauro fumbled and Purdue recovered on the Pitt 43-yard line. A DeMoss pass to John McKay took the ball to the 10-yard line. Two plays gained 4 yards, then Stram booted a 19-yard field goal as time ran out.[9] Purdue finished their season with a 2–6–1 record.[54]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Purdue was Leo Skladany (left end), Jack Durishan (left tackle), Bernard Barkouskie (left guard), Henry Clougherty (center), John Kosh (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Bill McPeak (right end), Carl DePasqua (quarterback), Robert Lee (left halfback), William Abraham (right halfback) and William Bruno (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Walt Cummins, William Mihm, Wilbur Forsythe, Martin Rosepink, George Ranii, Sam Haddad, Gene Gaugler, Jack Smodic, Louis Cecconi, Bob Hum, John LaFrankie, Len Radnor and Lindara Lauro.[9]

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPPurduePittsburgh
2943PurdueBob Pfohl 1-yard touchdown run, Hank Stram kick good70
21PittsburghBob DeMoss tackled in end zone for a safety by Leo Skladany72
41064PittsburghBill Bruno 4-yard touchdown run, Lou Cecconi kick no good (wide)78
4537Purdue19-yard field goal by Hank Stram108
"TOP" =time of possession. For other American football terms, seeGlossary of American football.108

at Indiana

[edit]
Week 7: Pitt at Indiana
Team1234Total
Pitt60006
• Indiana776020
  • Date: November 2, 1946
  • Location:Memorial Stadium
    Bloomington, IN
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 17,000
  • Game weather: partly cloudy
  • Referee: Jay Berwanger (Chicago)
See also:1946 Indiana Hoosiers football team
Program for November 2 game versus Indiana

On November 2, the defendingWestern Conference Indiana Hoosiers hosted the Panthers. The Hoosiers led the series 3–0, and had outscored the Panthers 85–7.[23] CoachBo McMillin's, Hoosiers were ranked #20 in AP poll with a 3–3 record.[57] FullbackPete Pihos, quarterbackBen Raimondi and centerJohn Cannady received All-American mention.[58] McMillin told his squad: "the Panthers are 'corn-cob rough' and predicted the Hoosiers 'will be ripe for a pickin' unless we're ready to play our best football."[59]

The Panther traveling squad rode the train toIndianapolis; ate breakfast at the Claypool Hotel; chartered a bus for the final 55 miles toBloomington; and headquartered at the Graham Hotel. Coach Fesler used the same lineup that started against Purdue to play the favored Hoosiers.[60]

The Panthers scored first, but the Hoosiers came from behind and kept theWestern Conference win streak over Pitt alive with a 20 to 6 victory. In the opening period, Carl DePasqua threw a 24-yard touchdown pass to Bill McPeak to cap a 7-play, 69-yard drive. Lou Cecconi's placement sailed wide. The Hoosiers answered with a 5-play, 56-yard drive of their own. Hoosier fullback Pete Pihos ran in from the two-yard line, and Charley Armstrong added the point after to give Indiana the lead. Indiana added another touchdown before halftime on a Mel Groomes 2-yard run inside tackle. Armstrong added the point after and Indiana led 14–6. The final score came in the third quarter on a 68-yard punt return by Bob Cowan. The Panthers managed to play the final period in Indiana territory, but were unable to capitalize due to fumbles and penalties.[10][61]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Indiana was Leo Skladany (left end), Jack Durishan (left tackle), Bernard Barkouskie (left guard), Henry Clougherty (center), William Coury (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Bill McPeak (right end), Carl DePasqua (quarterback), Robert Lee (left halfback), William Abraham (right halfback) and William Bruno (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Walt Cummins, William Mihm, William Goelz, Martin Rosepink, Mike Roussos, Morris Harris, John Kosh, Ralph Coleman, Sam Haddad, Jack Smodic, Louis Cecconi, John LaFrankie, Lindara Lauro and Ralph Short.[10]

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPPittsburghIndiana
1769PittsburghWilliam McPeak 24-yard touchdown reception from Carl DePasqua, Lou Cecconi kick no good (wide)60
1556IndianaPete Pihos 2-yard touchdown run, Charley Armstrong kick good67
2540IndianaMel Groomes 2-yard touchdown run, Charley Armstrong kick good614
3168IndianaPunt returned 68 yards for touchdown by Bob Cowan, kick no good620
"TOP" =time of possession. For other American football terms, seeGlossary of American football.620

at Ohio State

[edit]
Week 8: Pitt at Ohio State
Team1234Total
Pitt070613
• Ohio State077620
  • Date: November 9, 1946
  • Location:Ohio Stadium
    Columbus, OH
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 74,743
  • Game weather: fair and cool
  • Referee: David Noble (Nebraska)
See also:1946 Ohio State Buckeyes football team
Program for November 9 game versus Ohio State
Ticket stub for November 9 game versus Ohio State

On November 9, the Panthers played Ohio State. Coach Wes Fesler's alma mater was their last Western Conference opponent for the season. The Buckeyes led the series 7–2–1, and had won the past 6 in a row.[37] First-year Coach Paul Bixler's Buckeyes were ranked #12 with a 3–1–2 record.[62] The Buckeye line was anchored byWarren Amling, consensus All-American tackle.[63] CoachPaul Bixler was concerned with Pitt's 5–4–2 defensive alignment: "That unorthodox defense 'Fes' has been throwing at his opponents is bound to cause us plenty of trouble."[64]

Harry Keck of theSun-Telegraph reported that Pitt Coach Fesler would be next in line for the Ohio State head coaching position if anything happened to Bixler. Fesler was a 3-time All-American football star, and also played baseball and basketball for the Buckeyes. Coach Fesler used the same starting lineup as the previous week for his homecoming game.[65]

For the second straight game the Panthers scored first but could not hold on, and were defeated 20–13 by the Buckeyes. After a scoreless first quarter, Ohio State back Alex Verdova fumbled a Carl DePasqua punt and Pitt guard Bernie Barkouskie recovered on the Buckeye 19-yard line. On first down, Lou Cecconi threw a touchdown pass to Bill McPeak and Bill Coury added the extra point for a 7–0 lead. Ohio State answered with a 6-play, 60-yard drive, capped by a 4-yard touchdown pass from George Spencer to Cecil Souders. Max Schnittker's extra point tied the score. In the third period, Spencer threw a 54-yard touchdown pass to Robert Brugge and Schnittker's placement was good to give the Buckeyes the lead. In the final quarter, the Panthers offense went on an 11-play, 68-yard drive. Lou Cecconi scored on a quarterback sneak from the 2-yard line. The center snap on the extra point was fumbled and Pitt trailed by 1. The Panthers defense then gave up another touchdown pass from Spencer to Brugge, which iced the game for the Buckeyes. The Panthers were now 0–21 against the Western Conference since Sutherland was forced to resign.[66]

The starting lineup for Pitt against Ohio State was Leo Skladany (left end), Jack Durishan (left tackle), Bernard Barkouskie (left guard), Henry Clougherty (center), John Kosh (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Bill McPeak (right end), Carl DePasqua (quarterback), Robert Lee (left halfback), William Abraham (right halfback) and William Bruno (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Walt Cummins, William Mihm, Martin Rosepink, Wilbur Forsythe, William Coury, Ralph Coleman, Sam Haddad, Lee Ward, Louis Cecconi, John LaFrankie, Lindara Lauro and George Matich.[67]

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPPittsburghOhio State
2119PittsburghWilliam McPeak 19-yard touchdown reception from Lou Cecconi, Bill Coury kick good70
2660Ohio StateCecil Souders 4-yard touchdown reception from George Spencer, Max Schnittker kick good77
3368Ohio StateRobert Brugge 54-yard touchdown reception from George Spencer, Max Schnittker kick good714
41168PittsburghLou Cecconi 2-yard touchdown run, Bill Coury kick no good (fumbled center snap)1314
4458Ohio StateRobert Brugge 8-yard touchdown reception from George Spencer, Max Schnittker kick no good1320
"TOP" =time of possession. For other American football terms, seeGlossary of American football.1320

Penn State

[edit]
Week 9: Penn State at Pitt
Team1234Total
Purdue00077
• Pitt070714
  • Date: November 23, 1946
  • Location:Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 50,000
  • Game weather: cloudy and cold
  • Referee: Harry Dayhoff (Bucknell)
See also:1946 Penn State Nittany Lions football team
Program for November 23 game versus Penn State
Ticket stub for November 23 game versus Penn State

On November 23, Pitt's final game of the season was againstBob Higgins' Penn State Lions who sported a 6–1 record.[68] Pitt led the series 26–17–2, and was on a 2-game win streak over the Lions.[69] The Lions led the nation in defense by giving up only 139.6 yards per game. Coach Higgins' roster had 15 veterans of previous Pitt versus Penn State games.[70] Due to the ongoing hotel strike, the Lions stayed inLigonier, PA until Saturday morning. The Pitt band members each volunteered to house a Penn State band member, so the Nittanies would have their own band in attendance.[71]

Three Panther linemen were playing their final game for Pitt. Tackles Jack Durishan and Martin Rosepink plus guard George Ranii were on track to graduate.[70] Coach Fesler started Ranii at right guard in place of Bernie Barkouskie.[70]

The Panthers scored first and held off the Staters to win 14–7, and make it three in a row over their in-state rival. In the second quarter, the Panthers managed a 6-play, 66-yard drive with Bill Abraham scoring from the 2-yard line. Bill Coury was good on the placement and Pitt led 7–0 at halftime. After a scoreless third period, the Panthers advanced 78 yards in 9 plays early in the final quarter. Lou Cecconi completed a 12-yard touchdown pass to Leo Skladany and Coury's extra point upped Pitt's lead to 14–0. The Lions scored after a late 9-play, 60-yard drive that ended with a Bob Weltzel 6-yard run. Ed Czekaj's placement was good. Pitt was deep in Penn State territory when the game ended. The Pitt offense gained 294 yards against the #1 ranked State defense, and the Pitt defense stopped the Lions twice inside the Panther 5-yard line.[12]

The starting lineup for the game against Penn State was Leo Skladany (left end), Jack Durishan (left tackle), George Ranii (left guard), Henry Clougherty (center), John Kosh (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Bill McPeak (right end), Carl DePasqua (quarterback), Robert Lee (left halfback), William Abraham (right halfback) and William Bruno (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Walt Cummins, William Goelz, Martin Rosepink, Wilbur Forsythe, Mike Roussos, Bernie Barkouskie, William Coury, Ralph Coleman, Sam Haddad, Louis Cecconi, John LaFrankie and Lindara Lauro.[12]

Scoring summary
QuarterTimeDriveTeamScoring informationScore
PlaysYardsTOPPenn StatePittsburgh
2666PittsburghBill Abraham 2-yard touchdown run, Bill Coury kick good07
4978PittsburghLeo Skladany 12-yard touchdown reception from Lou Cecconi, Bill Coury kick good014
4960Penn StateBob Weltzel 6-yard touchdown run, Ed Czekaj kick good714
"TOP" =time of possession. For other American football terms, seeGlossary of American football.714}

Individual scoring summary

[edit]
1946 Pittsburgh Panthers scoring summary
PlayerTouchdownsExtra pointsField goalsSafetyPoints
Louis Cecconi440028
Bill Abraham300018
Leo Skladany200114
William Bruno200012
William McPeak200012
William Coury03006
Ralph Short01001
Totals1380188

References

[edit]
  1. ^"1946 Pittsburgh Panthers Schedule and Results".SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. May 20, 2022.
  2. ^Dr. E. E. Litkenhous (December 15, 1946)."Rice Rated Fifth Best, Tennessee 12th by Lit".The Knoxville News-Sentinel. p. B4 – viaNewspapers.com.
  3. ^abJack Henry (September 22, 1946)."Pitt Overpowered Illinois, 33-7: Victors Held To 7-7 Score In First Half; Gave 'Em a Scare!".Pittsburgh Sunday Sun-Telegraph. p. II-7 – viaNewspapers.com.
  4. ^Chester L. Smith (September 29, 1946)."Pitt Wallops West Virginia, 33-7: Panthers Score Four Times in 2nd Quarter; Cecconi Runs 98 Yards".The Pittsburgh Press. p. 8 – viaNewspapers.com.
  5. ^Jim Costin (October 6, 1946)."N.D. Is Unimpressive in Trampling Pitt 33-0: Running Game Is Throttled by Young Rivals; Irish Forced to Take to Air to Win in Home Opener".The South Bend Tribune. p. III-1 – viaNewspapers.com.
  6. ^Lewis, Allen (October 13, 1946)."Temple Holds Pitt to 0-0".The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Pa. p. S1 – viaNewspapers.com.
  7. ^Chester L. Smith (October 20, 1946)."Cecconi's Kick Beats Marquette, 7-6: Skladany Makes Pitt Score on DePasqua's Pass in Third Period".The Pittsburgh Press. p. 18 – viaNewspapers.com.
  8. ^abHenry, Jack (October 20, 1946)."Both Touchdowns Made On Passes".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. Section II-6. RetrievedOctober 26, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  9. ^abcHarry Keck (October 27, 1946)."Purdue's Last Second Field Goal Beats Pitt, 10-8: Game Is Decided As Clock Runs Out".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. pp. II-4, II-7. RetrievedApril 29, 2022 – viaNewspapers.com.
  10. ^abcHarold Harrison (November 3, 1946)."Indiana Beats Pitt: Ben Raimondi's Passes Enable Hoosiers To Win From Pittsburgh, 20-6".The Indianapolis Star. pp. 41, 42 – viaNewspapers.com.
  11. ^Ben Garlikov (November 10, 1946)."Spencer Passes Ohio State To 20-13 Victory: Hurls Three Touchdown Aerials For Touchdowns; Pitt Scores First In Thrilling Game".Dayton Daily News. p. II-1, II-5 – viaNewspapers.com.
  12. ^abcChester L. Smith (November 24, 1946)."Panthers Hand Lions 14-7 Defeat: 50,000 See Abraham, Skladany Score for Pitt Win in Finale; Triumph Gives Panthers Three Victories, Five Losses and One Tie for Season".The Pittsburgh Press. p. 23 – viaNewspapers.com.
  13. ^Keck, Harry (February 5, 1946)."'Lots Wrong at Pitt'--Shaughnessy".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 20. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  14. ^Biederman, Les (March 13, 1946)."Fesler Happy to Join Pitt".The Pittsburgh Press. p. 26. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  15. ^Henry, Jack (April 3, 1946)."Pitt Adds Fisher to Grid Staff".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 19. RetrievedSeptember 20, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  16. ^Henry, Jack (March 21, 1946)."Big Grid Squad Out at Pitt".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 20. RetrievedSeptember 20, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  17. ^Henry, Jack (April 10, 1946)."Pitt Squad Drops to 40".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 20. RetrievedSeptember 20, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  18. ^Henry, Jack (April 11, 1946)."Fesler 'Selling' Pitt to Scholastic Stars".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 20. RetrievedSeptember 20, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  19. ^"Kalmanir Stars in Pitt Squad Game".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. May 3, 1946. p. 25. RetrievedSeptember 20, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  20. ^Landucci, Fred (August 18, 1946)."Pitt to Open Football Drills At Kiski Tomorrow".The Pittsburgh Press. p. 25. RetrievedSeptember 20, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  21. ^"Pitt Football Roster 1946 (Alphabetical)".Pitt vs.Illinois Souvenir Program. University of Pittsburgh Athletic Department: 1. September 21, 1946.
  22. ^"Football Lettermen".2008 Pitt Football Media Guide. University of Pittsburgh. pp. 178–182. RetrievedAugust 11, 2023.
  23. ^ab"Record Book Pitt Football 2005". University of Pittsburgh. 2005. p. 154. RetrievedSeptember 26, 2023.
  24. ^Henry, Jack (September 21, 1946)."Wes Fesler Makes Bow as Coach".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 9. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  25. ^"Illini Depart For Pittsburgh".Chicago Tribune. September 20, 1946. p. 31. RetrievedOctober 11, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  26. ^ESPN College Football Encyclopedia. ESPN Books. 2005. p. 1204.ISBN 1401337031.
  27. ^"Pitt Opposes Illinois Before Crowd of 30,000".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. September 21, 1946. p. 13. RetrievedOctober 11, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  28. ^Henry, Jack (September 22, 1946)."Illinois' Late Drive Defeats Pitt, 33–7".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. II-8. RetrievedOctober 16, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  29. ^"1946 Illinois Fighting Illini Schedule and Results".SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. RetrievedOctober 16, 2023.
  30. ^Keck, Harry (September 22, 1946)."Pitt Hopes of Upset Go Out With Gen. Lee".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. II-7. RetrievedOctober 16, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  31. ^"Record Book Pitt Football 2005". University of Pittsburgh. 2005. p. 160. RetrievedOctober 17, 2023.
  32. ^"1946 West Virginia Mountaineers Schedule and Results".SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. RetrievedOctober 17, 2023.
  33. ^abHenry, Jack (September 28, 1946)."Panthers Rule Choice to Win".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 9. RetrievedOctober 17, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  34. ^Keck, Harry (September 29, 1946)."Pitt Wallops W.Va.; 97-yard Run Feature".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. I-10. RetrievedOctober 17, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  35. ^Henry, Jack (September 29, 1946)."Wes Fesler Pays Off in Silver Dollars".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. I-9. RetrievedOctober 18, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  36. ^"Same Old Story".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. September 29, 1946. p. I-9. RetrievedOctober 17, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  37. ^ab"Record Book Pitt Football 2005". University of Pittsburgh. 2005. p. 156. RetrievedOctober 17, 2023.
  38. ^ab"1946 Notre Dame Fighting Irish Schedule and Results".SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. RetrievedOctober 17, 2023.
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  40. ^Costin, Jim (October 5, 1946)."Irish Favored to Win Easily Against Pitt".The South Bend Tribune. p. 1. RetrievedOctober 18, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  41. ^Costin, Jim (October 6, 1946)."Notre Dame is Unimpressive While Trampling Over Pittsburgh By 33–0".The South Bend Tribune. p. Section III-3. RetrievedOctober 20, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
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  46. ^Henry, Jack (October 11, 1946)."Pitt, Tech Elevens In Home Games".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 32. RetrievedOctober 24, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
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  51. ^Henry, Jack (October 19, 1946)."Teitt To Start".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 9. RetrievedOctober 26, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
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  53. ^"Grand Comeback!".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. October 20, 1946. p. Section II-6. RetrievedOctober 26, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
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  58. ^"All-Americans".The Hoosier Huddle. RetrievedNovember 3, 2023.
  59. ^"Armstrong Moves Up at I.U.; Ciolli Returns to Practice".The Indianapolis Star. October 31, 1946. p. 17. RetrievedNovember 6, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  60. ^Henry, Jack (November 1, 1946)."Panthers Drill at Indiana".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 32. RetrievedNovember 6, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  61. ^Henry, Jack (November 3, 1946)."Fumbles Halt Threat At Finish".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. Section II-6. RetrievedNovember 6, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  62. ^"1946 Ohio State Buckeyes Schedule and Results".SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. RetrievedNovember 6, 2023.
  63. ^"Ohio State All-Americans".OSU vs UM. The Ohio State University Library. RetrievedNovember 6, 2023.
  64. ^Stull, Don (November 9, 1946)."Dad's Day For Bucks; Panthers Meet Ohio".The Cincinnati Enquirer. p. 12. RetrievedNovember 6, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  65. ^Keck, Harry (November 9, 1946)."Sports".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 9. RetrievedNovember 6, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  66. ^Keck, Harry (November 10, 1946)."Pitt Extends Bucks Before Bowing, 20–13".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. Section II-9. RetrievedNovember 7, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  67. ^"A Game Stand".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. November 10, 1946. p. Section II-7. RetrievedNovember 8, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  68. ^"1946 Penn State Nittany Lions Schedule and Results".SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. RetrievedNovember 8, 2023.
  69. ^"Record Book Pitt Football 2005". University of Pittsburgh. 2005. p. 157. RetrievedOctober 17, 2023.
  70. ^abcHenry, Jack (November 21, 1946)."Three Pitt Seniors Bow Out Saturday".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 28. RetrievedNovember 8, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
  71. ^"Pitt Band Aids State Musicians".Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. November 22, 1946. p. 37. RetrievedNovember 8, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.
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