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George Washington Colonials football

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

College football team
George Washington Colonials football
First season1881
Last season1966; 59 years ago
LocationWashington, D.C., U.S.
ConferenceSouthern Conference
All-time record217–252–37 (.465)
Bowl record1–0 (1.000)
Conference titles
0
RivalriesGeorgetown
Maryland
West Virginia
Virginia Tech
Virginia
ColorsBuff and blue[1]
   

TheGeorge Washington Colonials football team representedGeorge Washington University ofWashington, D.C. incollege football competition from 1881 to 1966.[2] The team's home field in the final six seasons wasDistrict of Columbia Stadium, shared with theWashington Redskins of theNational Football League.

TheColonials were most successful between the 1930s and 1950s, when they regularly played top-level competition. George Washington made onebowl game appearance, at the end of the1956 season at theSun Bowl inEl Paso, Texas; the Colonials shut out hostTexas Western, 13–0, onNew Year's Day.[3][4] The football program was discontinued after the 1966 season due to a number of factors, including the team's lack of an on-campus stadium and football support facilities.[2][5]

History

[edit]

The earliest recorded football games at Columbian University (as the school was known until 1904) were five contests againstGallaudet andEpiscopal High School between 1881 and 1883.[6] On November 8, 1890, football resumed when Columbian defeated a Washington-based club,Kalorama AC, 10–0. The team played off and on until 1920. That season was not a successful one for George Washington, which finished 1–6–1, including a defeat at the hands ofWest Virginia, 81–0, andWest Virginia Wesleyan, 101–7.

GWU v Georgetown game in 1923

H. Watson "Maud" Crum became the head football andbasketball coach in 1924. He was the first to remain in that position with the "Hatchetites" for more than four years.[5]

In 1928, the school's athletic teams were renamed the "Colonials". That year they were routed byPenn State, 50–0. Head coachJames "Possum Jim" Pixlee took over the following season and led GW to a 0–8 record. Pixlee, however, later became George Washington's winningest coach in terms of number of wins (42). In 1930, GW routed theNew York Aggies, 86–0.[5]

In the 1930s and 1940s, GW gained nationwide media attention and scheduled top competition, starting withAlabama in 1932. The Colonials lost, 28–6, but that same year they beatIowa, 21–6, and tiedOklahoma, 7–7. From 1933 to 1935,backAlphonse "Tuffy" Leemans set school records with 1,054 single-season rushing yards, 2,382 career rushing yards, 207 single-season carries, and 490 career carries. After college, he became a two-time All-NFL player for theNew York Giants and was eventually inducted into thePro Football Hall of Fame.[5] From 1938 to 1941,Bill Reinhart, the Colonials' winningest baseball and basketball coach, also coached football. The football team, however, was mediocre under him, and, from 1943 to 1945, was discontinued due toWorld War II.Andy Davis played as GW quarterback from 1948 to 1951, and recorded 3,587 passing yards and 1,416 rushing yards.[5] In 1952, the Colonials defeatedBucknell, 21–7, with the help of a block punt, an interception, and a fumble recovery. The loss was Bucknell's second in their past 20 games.[7]

George Washington was a member of theSouthern Conference for many years. In 1953, head coachEugene "Bo" Sherman was named Southern Conference Coach of the Year andcenter Steve Korcheck was named Southern Conference Player of the Year.[5] In 1956, GW ended the regular season 7–1–1. The lone defeat came againstWest Virginia, when reserve quarterback Alex Szuch's passing led the Mountaineers to victory, 14–0.[8] They heldBoston U to a tie, 20–20.[9] The season's performance resulted in the team being invited to play in the1957 Sun Bowl in El Paso, TX to face the host school,Texas Western (now known as UTEP). The Miners possessed a 9–1 record and were favored by a two-touchdown margin. The 17th-ranked Colonials, however, won, 13–0, to finish their most successful season with an 8–1 record.[5]

Over the next three years, the Colonials compiled a 6–20 record.Bill Elias served as head coach in 1961 and improved the Colonials to a 5–3 mark from 1–8 the year prior. After the season, however, he left to take over atVirginia, a team that had a 28-game losing streak.[10] From 1962 to 1966,James V. Camp served as head coach, and his teams posted a 22–35 record.[11] Between 1961 and 1963,Dick Drummond rushed for 1,814 yards and was twice named All-Southern Conference.[5]Garry Lyle, one of the last GW players to go on to an NFL career, did not consider the last Colonial teams to have been terrible. He recalled, however, that, "When I was a freshman, we playedArmy and I remember the varsity coming home and half of them worecasts."[12]

The final George Washington football game to date came onThanksgiving Day, November 24, 1966, when the team lost toVillanova, 16–7.[13] It was GW's third loss in a row.[13] GW ended the season with a 4–6 record (conference: 4–3) and Coach Camp was named Southern Conference Coach of the Year.[5] GW President Dr. Lloyd H. Elliott reevaluated GW's football program; he said that GW had lost $254,000 on the football program during the 1966 season.[14] Coach Camp resigned on December 19, 1966, because of the uncertainty of whether GW would retain its football program the following year.[14]

On January 19, 1967, the board of trustees voted to end the football program.[15] GW decided to use the football program's funding to build a new field house for the basketball team.[15] Poor game attendance and the expense of the program contributed to the decision. A former GW player, Harry Ledford, believed that most people were unwilling to commute intoWashington, D.C., which did not havemetrorail at the time, on Friday nights toD.C. Stadium (later RFK), was perceived as an unsafe area. Additionally,Maryland andVirginia were nationally competitive teams that drew potential suburban spectators away from GW.[5]

Bowl games

[edit]
DateCoachBowlOpponentResult
1956Bo ShermanSun BowlTexas WesternW 13–0

References

[edit]
  1. ^The George Washington University Moniker Identity Guidelines(PDF). April 10, 2024. RetrievedJuly 24, 2024.
  2. ^ab"Football reportedly out at GW".Free Lance-Star. Fredericksburg, Virginia. December 21, 1966. p. 21.
  3. ^"GW clips Texans, 13 to 0".Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. Associated Press. January 2, 1957. p. 14.
  4. ^"Colonials win upset win from Sun Bowl".Deseret News. Salt Lake City, Utah. INS. January 2, 1957. p. 3B.
  5. ^abcdefghijWhen we played football: the GW boys of fall, 1890-1966Archived July 27, 2011, at theWayback Machine,The GW Hatchet, August 30, 1999.
  6. ^George Washington Game by Game Results, 1881 to 1884Archived 2010-02-11 at theWayback Machine, College Football Data Warehouse, retrieved March 17, 2009.
  7. ^BUCKNELL TOPPLED BY G. WASHINGTON; Colonials Turn Interception, Blocked Punt and Fumble Into a 21-7 Triumph,The New York Times, November 8, 1952.
  8. ^West Virginia Hands George Washington First Defeat of Season in Football; SZUCH, A RESERVE, ACE IN 14–0 GAME Quarterback's Passes Spark West Virginia's Drives That Beat Colonials,The New York Times, p. 207, November 4, 1956.
  9. ^George Washington Game by Game ResultsArchived 2010-02-11 at theWayback Machine, College Football Data Warehouse, retrieved March 17, 2009.
  10. ^Virginia, Beaten in 28 Straight, Signs Elias as Football Coach; Mentor Shifts From George Washington After Raising Colonials Off Floor,The New York Times, p. 39, January 18, 1961.
  11. ^George Washington Coaching RecordsArchived 2008-05-16 at theWayback Machine, College Football Data Warehouse, retrieved March 17, 2009.
  12. ^Huddling Again At GW; Football Memories Revived at ReunionArchived 2012-10-19 at theWayback Machine,The Washington Post, p. C08, April 9, 1989.
  13. ^abDenlinger, Kenneth. "Villanova Claws GW In Final, 16-7".The Washington Post. November 25, 1966. p. D1.
  14. ^abDenlinger, Kenneth. "GW Decides On Football Path Today".The Washington Post. January 19, 1967. p. G1.
  15. ^abDenlinger, Kenneth. "Within Reach GW Will Put Emphasis on Basketball Recruiters Abound Transfer Rules Waived".The Washington Post. January 20, 1967. p. E1.
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