1911 College Football All-America Team
Official list of the best college football players of 1911
Walter Camp , the only "official" All-America selector in 1911
The 1911 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans for the 1911 college football season . The only selector for the 1911 season who has been recognized as "official" by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is Walter Camp . Many other sports writers, newspapers, coaches and others also selected All-America teams in 1911. Others who selected All-Americans in 1911 include New York sports writer Wilton S. Farnsworth , The New York Globe , Minnesota coach Henry L. Williams , The Christian Science Monitor , former Yale stars Ted Coy and Charles Chadwick , and Baseball Magazine .
Walter Camp's "official" selections
The only individual who has been recognized as an "official" selector by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) for the 1911 season is Walter Camp .[ 1] Accordingly, the NCAA's official listing of "Consensus All-America Selections" mirrors Camp's first-team picks.[ 1] Nine of Camp's first-team All-Americans in 1911 played on teams from the Ivy League . The only players recognized by Camp from outside the Ivy League were Jim Thorpe from the Carlisle School, Leland Devore of Army and Jack Dalton of Navy.[ 2]
The dominance of Ivy League players on Camp's All-America teams led to criticism over the years that his selections were biased against players from the leading Western universities, including Chicago, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Notre Dame.[ 3] [ 4] [ 5]
All-Americans of 1911
Sanford White of Princeton in both baseball and football uniforms.
Ends
Sanford White , Princeton (WC-1; NYG-1; TC-1; WSF-1; HW-1; CC-1; HL; BM; CSM; SPS; COY)
Douglas Bomeisler , Yale (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; WSF-2; CC-1; HL; COY)
Stanfield Wells , Michigan (WC-3 [hb]; NYG-1; HW-1; HL)
Lawrence Dunlap "Bud" Smith, Harvard (WC-2; TC-1; WSF-1; HL; BM; CSM)
Dexter Very , Penn. State (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-2; WSF-3; HL)
Edward J. Daly, Dartmouth (WSF-2; HL)
A. Harry Kallett, Syracuse (WC-3; SPS)
Busty Ashbaugh , Brown (WC-3; WSF-3)
Frederick L. Conklin , Michigan (HL)
Chauncey Oliver, Illinois (HL)
Sampson Burd, Carlisle (HL)
Tackles
Ed Hart , Princeton (WC-1; NYG-1; TC-1; WSF-1; HW-1; CC-1; HL; BM; CSM; SPS; COY)
Leland Devore , Army (WC-1; NYG-1)
Jim Scully, Yale (WC-2; WSF-2; CC-1; BM; SPS)
Jogger Elcock , Dartmouth (WSF-1)
Leonard Frank, Minnesota (TC-1; HW-1)
Robert McGowan Littlejohn , Army (WSF-2)
John Brown , Navy (College Football Hall of Fame), Navy (WC-3; COY)
William Edward Munk, Cornell (WC-2; WSF-3; BM [fb])
Sylvester V. Shonka, Nebraska (HL)
Charles M. Rademacher , Chicago (HL; CSM)
Greig, Swarthmore (HL)
Rudy Probst, Syracuse (HL)
Oliver M. Kratz, Brown (WSF-3)
Guards
Joseph Duff of Princeton.
Bob Fisher , Harvard (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; TC-1; WSF-1; CC-1; BM; CSM; SPS; COY)
Joseph Duff , Princeton (WC-1; TC-1; WSF-1; CC-1; HL; CSM; COY)
Alfred L. Buser , Wisconsin (WC-3 [t]; NYG-1; HL [t])
Charles J. Robinson, Minnesota (HW-1)
Ray Wakeman, Navy (HW-1)
George Howe, Navy (NYG-1)
Horace Scruby, Chicago (WC-2; HL)
Elmer McDevitt , Yale (WC-2; WSF-2)
James "Red" Bebout, Penn State (WSF-2)
Pomeroy T. Francis, Yale (WC-3; BM)
Archibald Vincent Arnold , Army (WC-3; WSF-3; HL; CSM; SPS)
Paul Belting , Illinois (HL)
Ray L. Bennett, Dartmouth (WSF-3)
Centers
Quarterbacks
Art Howe of Yale.
Art Howe , Yale (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; NYG-1; WSF-1; HW-1; CC-1; HL; COY)
Earl Sprackling , Brown (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-2; WSF-2; HL; BM)
John "Keckie" Moll, Wisconsin (HL; CSM; SPS) [ 6] [ 7]
Ralph Capron , Minnesota (WC-3; TC-1; HL)
Thomas Andrew Gill , Indiana (HL) [ 8]
Ray Morrison , Vanderbilt (College Football Hall of Fame) (HL; COY [hb])
Preston Doane Fogg, Syracuse (HL)
Shorty Miller , Penn State (College Football Hall of Fame) (WSF-3)
Halfbacks
Percy Wendell , Harvard (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; NYG-1 [fb]; TC-1; WSF-1; HW-1; CC-1; HL; BM; CSM; SPS [fb]; COY [fb])
Jim Thorpe , Carlisle (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; WSF-2; CC-1; HL; BM; CSM; SPS)
Reuben Martin Rosenwald, Minnesota (WC-2; NYG-1; HW-1; HL)
Walter C. Camp, Jr., Yale (WC-2; WSF-2; HL)
Dave Morey , Dartmouth (WC-2)
Talbot Pendleton , Princeton (WSF-3)
Robert Hogsett , Dartmouth (WSF-3)
James B. Craig , Michigan (HL)
Clark Sauer, Chicago (HL)
Elmer Oliphant , Purdue (HL)
Johnny Spiegel , Lafayette (HL)
Harry Costello , Georgetown (HL)
Fullbacks
Jack Dalton , Navy (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; NYG-1 [hb]; TC-1 [hb]; WSF-1 [hb]; CC-1; HL; SPS [hb]; COY [hb])
F. LeRoy Mercer , Penn (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-3 [hb]; TC-1; WSF-1; HL; CSM)
Jesse Philbin, Yale (WSF-1)
Winthrop J. Snow, Dartmouth (WSF-2)
Ted Hudson, Trinity (WC-3, WSF-3)
Stancil "Possum" Powell, Carlisle (HL)
Wallace De Witt, Princeton (HL)
Key
NCAA recognized selectors for 1911
Other selectors
Bold = Consensus All-American[ 1]
1 – First-team selection
2 – Second-team selection
3 – Third-team selection
See also
References
^ a b c "Football Award Winners" (PDF) . National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. p. 6. Retrieved October 21, 2017 .
^ a b "Walter Camp Picks All-American Team: Unquestioned Football Authority of Country Selects Best Men". The Lexington Herald . December 10, 1911.
^ "All-American Teams of East Are Jokes: Critics Who Never Saw Western Teams Play to Name Best in Country -- Forget About Michigan, Minnesota and Illinois". The Mansfield News . December 8, 1910.
^ Ross Tenney (December 31, 1922). "Much Dissatisfaction Over Camp's All-American Team: Football Dean Is Accused of Favoring East; Walter Camp Soundly Scored For 'Poorest Teams Ever Foisted Upon Public' ". The Des Moines Capital .
^ "Westerners Missed By Walter Camp: Football Wizard Puts Indian on 'All-American.' ". The Decatur Review . December 7, 1911. p. 5.
^ " "Keckie" Moll Is Taken By Death: Former Star Wisconsin Quarterback Succumbs to Attack of Typhoid Fever" . Detroit Free Press . December 26, 1912. p. 8.[dead link ]
^ "Keckie Moll Dies: Coached Purdue And Was Great Quarterback Last Year" . The Baltimore Sun . December 26, 1912. p. 8. Archived from the original on February 16, 2013.
^ "Thomas Andrew "Andy" Gill" . Indiana Football Hall of Fame.
^ "Three Westernes on All-American Eleven". Sandusky Star Journal. December 2, 1911.
^ "Three Westerners On This Team" . The Toledo News-Bee . December 2, 1911.
^ "Pick Syracusans for Honor List: Representative Coaches Select Orange Captain-Elect and Retiring Captain". Syracuse Herald . December 11, 1911.
^ Tommy Clark (December 8, 1911). "All American Football Team For 1911". The Altoona Mirror . p. 18.
^ "Latest Sporting News All-American Football Team Selected by W. S. Farnsworth". Fort Worth Star-Telegram . December 10, 1911.
^ "Dr. Williams' Choice: Minnesota University Coach's Idea of All-American Football Team". The Montgomery Advertiser . December 4, 1911.
^ "Dr. Williams PIcks An All-American Team" . The Gazette Times . December 4, 1911.
^ "Chadwick's All-American Football Team Lined up for Action: Four Players Selected from Yale". Fort Worth Star-Telegram . December 11, 1911.
^ "The All-America Football Eleven: The Stars of the Gridiron for 1911" (PDF) . Baseball Magazine . 1912. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 10, 2010.
^ a b Spalding's Official Football Guide , 1912, p. 19.
^ "Dopesters Pick American Teams: Ted Coy Makes Known His Choice of Team, But Camp Has Yet to Name One". The Syracuse Herald . December 4, 1911. p. 12.