1917 Georgia Tech Golden Tornado football team

1917 Georgia Tech Golden Tornado football
National champion (Billingsley, Helms, Houlgate, NCF)
SIAA champion
ConferenceSouthern Intercollegiate Athletic Association
Record9–0 (4–0 SIAA)
Head coach
Offensive schemeJump shift
CaptainWalker Carpenter
Home stadiumGrant Field
Uniform
Seasons
← 1916
1918 →
1917 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
Georgia Tech $ 4 0 0 9 0 0
Auburn 5 1 0 6 2 1
Clemson 5 1 0 6 2 0
Centre 1 0 0 7 1 0
Mississippi A&M 3 1 0 6 1 0
Alabama 3 1 1 5 2 1
Sewanee 4 2 1 5 2 1
Tulane 2 1 0 5 3 0
Vanderbilt 3 2 0 5 3 0
LSU 2 3 0 3 5 0
South Carolina 2 3 0 3 5 0
Wofford 1 2 0 5 4 0
Furman 1 3 0 3 5 0
Florida 1 3 0 2 4 0
Ole Miss 1 4 0 1 4 1
Howard (AL) 0 2 1 3 3 1
The Citadel 0 2 0 3 3 0
Mississippi College 0 4 0 0 5 0
  • $ – Conference champion
  • There were several SIAA schools that did not field a team due to World War I.

The 1917 Georgia Tech Golden Tornado football team[note 1] represented the Georgia Institute of Technology (commonly known as Georgia Tech) in American football during the 1917 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season. The Golden Tornado, coached by John Heisman in his 14th year as head coach, compiled a 9–0 record (4–0 SIAA) and outscored opponents 491 to 17 on the way to its first national championship.[3] Heisman considered the 1917 team his best, and for many years it was considered "the greatest football team the South had ever produced".[4] The team was later named national champion by the Billingsley Report, Helms Athletic Foundation, Houlgate System, and National Championship Foundation.[5]

The backfield of Albert Hill, Everett Strupper, Joe Guyon, and Judy Harlan led the Golden Tornado, and all four rushed for more than 100 yards in a 48–0 victory over Tulane. During the regular season Georgia Tech defeated strong opponents by large margins, and its 41–0 victory over eastern power Penn shocked many. Davidson, with Buck Flowers (a future Tech star), was defeated 32–10. Tech's 83–0 victory over Vanderbilt is the worst loss in Vanderbilt history, and its 63–0 defeat of Washington and Lee was the worst loss in W&L history at the time. Tech finished the season by defeating Auburn 68–7, clinching the conference title. Davidson and Auburn were the only teams to score points against Georgia Tech.

Before the season

[edit]

Because of the American entry into World War I in April, several SIAA schools did not field football teams. However, Georgia Tech had an increasing enrollment and bright prospects for its football team after its undefeated 1916 season.[6] Losses from the previous season's team included guard Bob Lang and fullback Tommy Spence.[7][8][note 2]

Four football players in uniform prepared to run, standing one behind the other
Tech's backfield; left to right: Strupper, Harlan, Guyon, and Hill

In 1917 football used a one-platoon system, in which players played both offense and defense. Fifteen of the 21 players on the 1917 roster were from the state of Georgia,[1] and 10 of its 11 starters came from Georgia high schools.[11] The team's captain was tackle Walker "Big Six" Carpenter.[6] Its renowned backfield consisted of quarterback Al Hill, halfback Everett Strupper, halfback Joe Guyon, and freshman fullback Judy Harlan.[12][note 3]

Coach John Heisman's swift backfield used the pre-snap movement of his "jump shift" offense,[14] and Al Hill led the team in carries.[15] Ev Strupper, arguably the best of the four,[16] was partially deaf;[17] because of his deafness, he called the signals instead of the team's quarterback.[18] When "Strupe" tried out for the team, he noticed that the quarterback shouted the signals every time he was to carry the ball. Realizing that the loud signals would be a tip-off to the opposition, Strupper told Heisman: "Coach, those loud signals are absolutely unnecessary. You see when sickness in my kid days brought on this deafness my folks gave me the best instructors obtainable to teach me lip-reading."[19] Heisman recalled how Strupper overcame his deafness: "He couldn't hear anything but a regular shout. But he could read your lips like a flash. No lad that ever stepped on a football field had keener eyes than Everett had. The enemy found this out the minute he began looking for openings through which to run the ball."[19]

Joe Guyon, the team's best passer,[20] was a Chippewa Indian who was born on the White Earth Indian Reservation; his brother, Charles "Wahoo" Guyon, was the assistant coach.[21] Guyon had played for Pop Warner at Carlisle, and had to sit out the 1916 season in accordance with conference transfer rules.[22][23] He ran through (and over) opponents, in contrast to Strupper's dodging style.[22] Judy Harlan said about Guyon, "Once in a while the Indian would come out in Joe, such as the nights Heisman gave us a white football and had us working out under the lights. That's when Guyon would give out the blood curdling war whoops."[21]

Schedule

[edit]
DateTimeOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 29FurmanW 25–0[24]
September 29Wake Forest*
  • Grant Field
  • Atlanta, GA
W 33–0[24]
October 6Penn*
  • Grant Field
  • Atlanta, GA
W 41–010,000[25]
October 13Davidson*
  • Grant Field
  • Atlanta, GA
W 32–10[26]
October 20Washington and Lee*
  • Grant Field
  • Atlanta, GA
W 63–0[27]
November 32:30 p.m.Vanderbilt
W 83–0[28]
November 10Tulane
W 48–0[29]
November 17Carlisle*
  • Grant Field
  • Atlanta, GA
W 98–0[30]
November 29Auburn
W 68–720,000[31]
  • *Non-conference game

Game summaries

[edit]

Week 1: Furman and Wake Forest

[edit]
Furman at Georgia Tech
1 234Total
Furman 0 000 0
Ga. Tech 6 1360 25

The Golden Tornado opened its season on September 29 with a doubleheader in three inches of mud.[23]

Furman

[edit]

In the first game Georgia Tech defeated Furman 25–0, playing mainly substitutes.[6] Hay was spread on the field in an attempt to counteract the steady downpour.[23] Tech quarterback Al Hill scored two touchdowns, and Dan Whelchel (called Walthall)[6] scored a third when he recovered a fumble by Theodore Shaver after crossing the goal line.[6] Although Furman's lineup included future South Carolina Hall-of-Famer Speedy Speer, there was little Speer could do to affect the outcome.[32] Tech's starting lineup was Ulrich (left end), Higgins (left tackle), Whelchel (left guard), Johnson (center), Wright (right guard), Doyle (right tackle), Colcord (right end), Hill (quarterback), Smith (left halfback), Shaver (right halfback), and Harlan (fullback).[6][23]

Wake Forest

[edit]
Wake Forest at Georgia Tech
1 234Total
Wake 0 000 0
Ga. Tech 14 1360 33

After the Furman game, the rain subsided and Tech defeated the Wake Forest Baptists 33–0.[6] Ev Strupper and Joe Guyon had sat out the previous game.[22] The first touchdown was on the play after Strupper dashed around end for a 17-yard gain;[6] Guyon's first carry from scrimmage for Tech[22] was a 75-yard run.[6]

Strupper scored the second touchdown on a short drive set up by his 40-yard punt return.[6] Early in the second quarter, Strupper shot through the line for 70 yards and the third touchdown.[6] Tech's fourth touchdown required considerable effort and a methodical drive, ending in a 15-yard dive for a touchdown by Strupper.[6] End runs by Guyon and Simpson's line plunging set up the fifth (and final) touchdown with Guyon's 6-yard run.[6] Strupper ran for 198 yards and three touchdowns on nine carries.[22] Tech's starting lineup was Bell (left end), Fincher (left tackle), Thweatt (left guard), Phillips (center), Dowling (right guard), Rogers (right tackle), Carpenter (right end), Hill (quarterback), Strupper (left halfback), Guyon (right halfback), and Armsley (fullback).[6]

Week 2: Penn

[edit]
Penn at Georgia Tech
1 234Total
Penn 0 000 0
Ga. Tech 14 6147 41

In the second week of play, Georgia Tech beat Penn 41–0. Bernie McCarty called it "Strupper's finest hour, coming through against powerful Penn in the contest that shocked the East."[35] In comparison, Pop Warner's undefeated Pittsburgh defeated Penn 14–6.[36] Penn was the first northeastern powerhouse to lose to a team from the South.[34][note 4] Both Strupper and Hill rushed for more than 100 yards.[39] Tech outgained Penn 276 yards to 11 at halftime.[39] According to the Florida Times-Union, "The result ... demonstrates that the large Eastern colleges will have to reckon with some of those of Dixieland in future."[40]

Crop of Strupper from newspaper
Everett Strupper

Tech baffled Penn by playing conventionally instead of using its regular shift.[34] On its second play from scrimmage less than two minutes into the game Strupper ran around his end, "winding and twisting out of a mass of Red and Blue players" for a 68-yard touchdown.[34] Walker Carpenter brushed two tacklers out of the way,[34] and Strupped side-stepped Penn safety Joe Berry before running the last 30 yards.[41] Tech "scored again in this period before Pennsylvania had recovered from its bewilderment",[33] a touchdown by Hill.[41] For the last score of the half, Strupper made a short run behind guard.[41]

Penn did not have a first down in the first half, as the Tech defense played well.[34] Hill scored a touchdown in the third quarter on a 27-yard run through the line.[41] Penn's only scoring opportunity was in the third quarter.[33] After another Al Hill touchdown and the kickoff return, Penn worked five complete forward passes in quick succession (one 23 yards) to reach Tech's 6-yard line.[34] The Tech defense responded, and Penn turned the ball over on downs.[34] On first down, Carpenter threw Penn back for a 6-yard loss and a pass was incomplete on second down. On third down, Penn's quarterback dropped back to pass Carpenter and William Higgins tackled him[34] on the 25-yard line.[39] On fourth down, Penn came out in a "freak formation" and its pass was incomplete.[34] In the fourth quarter, Judy Harlan had a 65-yard interception return for a touchdown.[34] Tech's starting lineup was Guill (left end), Whelchel (left tackle), Fincher (left guard), Phillips (center), Dowling (right guard), Thweatt (right tackle), Carpenter (right end), Hill (quarterback), Strupper (left halfback), Guyon (right halfback), and Harlan (fullback).[33]

Week 3: Davidson

[edit]
Davidson at Georgia Tech
1 234Total
Davidson 0 307 10
Ga. Tech 0 61313 32

The Davidson Wildcats, which scored the most points against Tech (10), included future Tech running back Buck Flowers in his freshman year. Unlike Tech's other 1917 opponents,[39] Davidson held its backs to less than 100 yards rushing. Writer Bernie McCarty considered Davidson the second-best southern team that year.[39]

The game's first score came in the second quarter when Davidson's Buck Flowers converted a 28-yard drop kick[43] field goal for a 3–0 lead.[42] Set up by a 27-yard run around end by Davidson fullback R. C. Burns, Al Hill prevented Burns from scoring a touchdown by tackling him from behind.[43] Strupper and Guyon then worked the ball close to the goal; Strupper was forced out of bounds, and Hill scored a touchdown.[43]

Tech led 6–3 when Strupper broke the game open in the second half.[44] After a fumble by Strupper, Hill caught a pass from the 22-yard line and ran in for a touchdown.[43] Strupper made the next touchdown after Tech ran through Davidson's right guard.[43] Strupper then recovered a punt fumbled by Flowers on Davidson's 30-yard line, leading to a score by Hill from 18 yards out on a criss-cross run.[43] Davidson scored its only touchdown on a forward pass. From midfield, quarterback Henry Spann hit end Georgie King on a 50-yard touchdown pass that went 30 yards in the air, catching Tech by surprise.[43] For Tech's last score, Judy Harlan returned an interception 40 yards for a touchdown.[43]

Carpenter cropped from team picture, sitting
Team captain Walker Carpenter

The defense of Walker Carpenter and William Thweatt was the game's highlight.[45] Tech made 16 first downs and Davidson 13.[43] Neither Pup Phillips nor Ham Dowling played in this game,[45] with Bill Fincher replacing Phillips at center.[43] The umpire was Fay Wood, and Boozer Pitts was the head linesman.[43] Davidson captain Georgie King said, "I consider Georgia Tech the best football team I have ever played against or ever expect to play against."[46] Tech's starting lineup was Guill (left end), Whelchel (left tackle), Higgins (left guard), Fincher (center), Rogers (right guard), Thweatt (right tackle), Carpenter (right end), Hill (quarterback), Strupper (left halfback), Guyon (right halfback), and Harlan (fullback).[43]

Week 4: Washington and Lee

[edit]
Washington and Lee at Georgia Tech
1 234Total
W&L 0 000 0
Ga. Tech 7 142814 63

In a 63–0 victory against the Washington and Lee Generals, Tech made 35 first downs to Washington and Lee's five.[47] At the time, it was the Generals' worst loss.[47] According to Judy Harlan, Joe Guyon knocked a Washington and Lee player out of the game by "wearing an old horse collar shaped into a shoulder pad but reinforced with a little steel".[21] The player may have been Turner Bethel, who was knocked out of the game and taken to a local hospital.[47]

"The game was never in doubt after 'Strup' got away for his first long run", a 35-yarder followed a few minutes later by his 16-yard touchdown run.[48] Although Strupper only played in the first half because of a leg injury, he gained 128 yards in addition to scoring the touchdown. Al Hill scored four touchdowns, Guyon three, and Pup Phillips also had one with a 30-yard interception return.[49] Tech's starting lineup was Ulrich (left end), Fincher (left tackle), Whelchel (left guard), Phillips (center), Dowling (right guard), Carpenter (right tackle), Bell (right end), Hill (quarterback), Strupper (left halfback), Guyon (right halfback), and Harlan (fullback).[47]

Week 5: Vanderbilt

[edit]
Vanderbilt at Georgia Tech
1 234Total
Vanderbilt 0 000 0
Ga. Tech 27 142121 83

Tech's 83–0 defeat of the Vanderbilt Commodores was the worst in Vanderbilt history. "It was not until 1917 that a Southern team really avenged long-time torment at McGugin's hands. And it took one of history's top backfields–Joe Guyon, Ev Strupper, Al Hill, and Judy Harlan of Georgia Tech–to do it," writes Edwin Pope.[51] The team was not the Commodores' worst, and had defeated Alabama.

Guyon in his Tech uniform, posing in a running stance with a football
Joe Guyon

Joe Guyon was the game's star; according to Morgan Blake, "Guyon has been great in all games this year. But Saturday he was the superman".[49] Guyon ran nine times for 124 yards, with kick returns for 95 yards and 80 yards passing.[49] He scored on 48- and one-yard runs, had a 75-yard kick return to set up a touchdown, and threw a pass to Shorty Guill for a score.[52] Ev Strupper ran for four touchdowns and 147 yards in 14 carries, returning five punts for 111 yards.[52] Al Hill ran 169 yards in 25 carries, scoring three touchdowns,[52] and Judy Harlan carried 15 times for 132 yards and two touchdowns.[52]

Vanderbilt captain Alf Adams praised the Tech team: "Tech's magnificent machine won easily over Vanderbilt. It was simply the matter of a splendid eleven winning over an unseasoned, inexperienced team. Tech played hard, clean football, and we were somewhat surprised to meet such a fair, aggressive team, after the reports we had heard. I think that Vanderbilt could have broken that Tech shift if we had had last year's eleven. Being outweighed, Vanderbilt could not check the heavy forwards, or open up the line. Thereby hangs the tale."[50] Tech's starting lineup was Guill (left end), Fincher (left tackle), Whelchel (left guard), Phillips (center), Dowling (right guard), Carpenter (right tackle), Bell (right end), Hill (quarterback), Strupper (left halfback), Guyon (right halfback), and Harlan (fullback).[50]

Week 6: at Tulane

[edit]
Georgia Tech at Tulane
1 234Total
Ga. Tech 14 2167 48
Tulane 0 000 0

Tech played coach Clark Shaughnessy's Tulane Olive and Blue for its only road game, winning 48–0. Against a solid foe with a 5–3 record, all four Tech backs ran over 100 yards.[52] According to the Times-Picayune, "Strupper, Guyon, Hill, and Harlan form a backfield with no superiors and few equals in football history".[52] Joe Guyon threw two touchdowns and ran for one, passing 91 yards and running 112:[52] "Guyon's passing was so accurate it suggest possibilities yet undeveloped in the Tech offense".[52] Al Hill ran for 140 yards on 24 carries, including a 48-yard touchdown.[52] Ev Strupper scored twice (one on a 33-yard pass from Guyon)[52] and ran for 118 yards; Harlan ran for 111.[52] Missing an extra point in the third quarter, Bill Fincher ended his streak at 31.[53] The game was called with six minutes left because of darkness.[52] Tech's starting lineup was Guill (left end), Fincher (left tackle), Whelchel (left guard), Phillips (center), Thweatt (right guard), Carpenter (right tackle), Bell (right end), Hill (quarterback), Strupper (left halfback), Guyon (right halfback), and Harlan (fullback).[53]

Week 7: Carlisle

[edit]
Carlisle at Georgia Tech
1 234Total
Carlisle 0 000 0
Ga. Tech 28 282814 98

In a 98–0 win against the Carlisle Indians, Strupper's performance was praised. Morgan Blake of the Atlanta Journal wrote, "Everett Strupper played like a veritable demon. At one time four Carlisle men pounced on him from all directions, and yet through some superhuman witchery he broke loose and dashed 10 yards further. On another occasion he attempted a wide end run, found that he was completely blocked, then suddenly whirled and ran the other way, gaining something like 25 yards before he was downed."[55]

Hill in letterman's jacket, hands on hips
Quarterback Al Hill

Hill and Strupper each scored five touchdowns;[55] Shorty Guill had two touchdowns and 108 yards rushing.[55] Billy Sunday wrote, "That jump shift is about the slickest offense I ever saw."[55] One of Strupper's touchdowns was a 32-yard fumble return.[55] This was Carlisle's last season before the school closed.[56] Guyon asked to be substituted midway through the game against his former school, perhaps for sentimental reasons.[55] Tech's starting lineup was Fincher (left end), Higgins (left tackle), Whelchel (left guard), Phillips (center), Dowling (right guard), Carpenter (right tackle), Bell (right end), Hill (quarterback), Strupper (left halfback), Guyon (right halfback), and Guill (fullback).[54]

Week 8: Auburn

[edit]
Auburn at Georgia Tech
1 234Total
Auburn 0 007 7
Ga. Tech 20 132114 68

In the season's final game, Tech defeated the Auburn Tigers 68–7. Coach Mike Donahue's Tigers had lost only to Davidson in an upset,[58][59] and held undefeated Big Ten champion Ohio State to a scoreless tie less than a week before the Tech game.[60] Ohio State, led by Chic Harley, had been favored 4 or 5 to 1.[61] Coach Heisman (who previously coached at Auburn) and his players were at the game, rooting for the Tigers.[62]

In the game with Auburn, Tech piled up 472 yards on the ground in 84 rushes and 145 yards in the air.[55] Guyon scored four touchdowns,[55] and Strupper had a 65-yard touchdown run. According to the Atlanta Journal,

It was not the length of the run that featured it was the brilliance of it. After getting through the first line, Stroop was tackled squarely by two secondary men, and yet he squirmed and jerked loosed from them, only to face the safety man and another Tiger, coming at him from different angles. Without checking his speed Everett knifed the two men completely, running between them and dashing on to a touchdown.[55]

In the second quarter, Auburn's Moon Ducote broke through the line toward the goal with blocking by Pete Bonner and William Donahue.[note 5] After Guyon dove at Ducote and missed, Guyon gave chase and tackled him at the 26-yard line.[57] For Auburn's only score Ducote circled around end for 17 yards and lateraled to Donahue, who ran down the sideline for a six-yard touchdown.[62] Guyon was the star of the game,[64] accounting for four touchdowns and having his best day passing.[55] Strupper had touchdown runs of 62 and 50 yards.[55] Auburn was considered a strong team, despite the lopsided score; Ducote and Bonner were the only non-Tech, unanimous All-Southern selections.[65] Tech's starting lineup was Fincher (left end), Higgins (left tackle), Mathes (left guard), Phillips (center), Dowling (right guard), Carpenter (right tackle), Bell (right end), Hill (quarterback), Strupper (left halfback), Guyon (right halfback), and Guill (fullback).[57]

After the season

[edit]

Awards and honors

[edit]
Fincher having kicked the ball, his leg in the air, as another is on the ground who was holding.
Bill Fincher place kicking

The Golden Tornado led the nation in scoring, with 491 points.[66] Quarterback Al Hill led the nation in touchdowns with 23,[67] and tackle Bill Fincher kicked 49 extra points.[22]

A number of Georgia Tech players received post-season honors. Walker Carpenter, Everett Strupper, and Joe Guyon were All-America selections, with Carpenter and Strupper the first two players from the Deep South selected for a first-team.[21] In addition to Carpenter, Strupper, and Guyon, Bill Fincher, Pup Phillips, Si Bell, Shorty Guill, and Al Hill were selected to the All-Southern Team by sportswriters.[65][68] Phillips also received the Hal Nowell trophy for the most efficient play during the season.[69]

Plaque at Georgia Tech honoring their National Championship season

National champions

[edit]

On December 8, the Golden Tornado celebrated its national-championship season at a team dinner at the Druid Hills Golf Club in Atlanta.[70] Each member was presented with a gold football inscribed with the words "National Champions".[70][71] Clarke Mathes, William Thweatt, Dan Whelchel, Theodore Shaver, and William Higgins had already enlisted in the U. S. Marines for the First World War;[70] a week later, Si Bell, Jim Fellers, Pup Phillips, and Charles Johnson also left for the Marines.[70]

Heisman challenged Pop Warner's Pittsburgh team to a postseason game to determine a national champion, but since they did not play until the following season,[note 6] Tech was named national champion.[70] Although the Golden Tornado was invited to play the 4–3 Oregon team in the Rose Bowl, by then many players had joined the war effort.[73]

Legacy

[edit]

"I consider the 1917 Tech team the best football I have ever coached", Heisman said. "It's the best team I have seen in my long career as a coach. I was lucky in having under me a team whose members possessed much natural ability and who played the game intelligently. I have never seen a team that, as a whole, was so fast in the composite."[73] For many years, it was considered "the greatest football team the South had ever produced".[4] According to a contemporary New York Sun account, "Georgia Tech looms up as one of the truly great teams of all time."[62]

Personnel

[edit]

Depth chart

[edit]

The following chart provides a visual depiction of Tech's lineup during the 1917 season with games started at the position reflected in parentheses. The chart mimics the offense after the jump shift has taken place.

LE
Shorty Guill (5)
Bill Fincher (2)
Ray Ulrich (2)
Si Bell (1)
 
LT LG C RG RT
Bill Fincher (4) Dan Whelchel (5) Pup Phillips (7) Ham Dowling (6) Walker Carpenter (5)
William Higgins (3) Bill Fincher (1) Bill Fincher (1) J. R. Rogers (1) William Thweatt (2)
Dan Whelchel (2) William Higgins (1) Charles Johnson (1) William Thweatt (1) J. R. Rogers (1)
Clarke Mathes (1)
William Thweatt (1)
RE
Si Bell (5)
Walker Carpenter (3)
Alton Concord (1)
 
 
QB
Al Hill (9)
 
RHB
Joe Guyon (8)
Theodore Shaver (1)
FB
Judy Harlan (6)
Shorty Guill (2)
Armsley (1)
LHB
Everett Strupper (8)
Wally Smith (1)
W. Simpson (0)

Varsity letterwinners

[edit]

Line

[edit]
Player Position Games
started
Hometown Prep school Height Weight Age
Si Bell End 6 Orchard Hill, Georgia 6'1" 179 22
Walker Carpenter Tackle 8 Newnan, Georgia 6'2" 184 23
Alton Colcord End 1 Atlanta, Georgia 5'7" 151 20
Ham Dowling Guard 6 Savannah, Georgia University of Florida 5'7" 172 21
Bill Fincher Tackle, End 8 Spring Place, Georgia Tech High School 6'0" 188 20
Shorty Guill End, fullback 7 Sparta, Georgia 5'6" 161 20
William Higgins Tackle 4 Roswell, New Mexico 5'9" 182 19
Charles Johnson Guard 1 Atlanta, Georgia 6'0" 184 20
Clarke Mathes Guard 1 Jonesboro, Georgia 6'1" 186 20
Pup Phillips Center 7 Carnesville, Georgia 6'0" 182 21
J. R. Rogers Tackle 2 Memphis, Tennessee 5'10" 180 20
William Thweatt Guard 3 Pope, Mississippi 6'4" 187 22
Ray Ulrich End 2 Chicago, Illinois 6'1" 180 19
Dan Whelchel Guard 7 Ashburn, Georgia 6'1" 198 21

Backfield

[edit]
Player Position Games
started
Hometown Prep school Height Weight Age
Joe Guyon Halfback 8 Magdalena, New Mexico Carlisle Indian Industrial School 5'11" 190 23
Judy Harlan Fullback 6 Ottumwa, Iowa Tech High School 5'11" 178 19
Al Hill Quarterback 9 Washington, Georgia Washington High School 5'7" 164 20
Everett Strupper Halfback 8 Columbus, Georgia Riverside Military Academy 5'9" 156 20

[11][69][74]

Substitutes

[edit]
Player Position Games
started
Hometown Prep school Height Weight Age
Armsley Fullback 1
Theodore Shaver Halfback 1 Dayton, Georgia 6'0" 167 21
W. Simpson Halfback Atlanta, Georgia 5'8" 171 21
Wally Smith Halfback 1 Atlanta, Georgia 5'6" 154 20

[75]

Stats and scoring leaders

[edit]

The following is an incomplete list of statistics and scores, largely dependent on newspaper summaries.

Player Touchdowns Extra points Points Rushing
Yards
Carries
Albert Hill 22 1 133 669 125
Everett Strupper 20 0 120 1,150 102
Joe Guyon 15 8 98 618 84
Bill Fincher 0 49 49 0 0
Judy Harlan 5 0 30 341 59
Shorty Guill 4 1 25 108 12
Wally Smith 2 0 12 0 0
Pup Phillips 1 0 6 0 0
Dan Whelchel 2 0 12 0 0
Si Bell 1 0 6 0 0
TOTAL 72 59 491 2,886 379

[14][67]

Assistant coach John Tally Johnston

Coaching staff

[edit]
  • John Heisman, coach
  • Charles Guyon, assistant coach
  • John Tally Johnston, assistant coach
  • W. T. Collins, manager

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Although Georgia Tech's teams are officially known as the "Yellow Jackets", northern writers called the team the "Golden Tornado" in 1917; the name was commonly used until 1928 and for many years afterwards as an alternate nickname.[1] It may have been coined by Morgan Blake.[2]
  2. ^ Spence was a casualty of the war.[9] He is the namesake of Spence Air Base.[10]
  3. ^ Said by some Tech sources to have been called the "Four Horsemen" years before the 1924 Notre Dame backfield commonly known as the Four Horsemen.[13]
  4. ^ In 1906, Carlisle lost to Vanderbilt 4–0 in Nashville. However, though it played a major schedule,[37] Carlisle as an institution was seen as somewhere between a prep school and a major college.[38]
  5. ^ Coach Donahue said that Ducote was "undoubtedly the best ever."[63]
  6. ^ In 1918, Pittsburgh beat Tech 32–0.[72]

Endnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Van Brimmer & Rice 2011, p. 147
  2. ^ "Golden Tornadoes". Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  3. ^ "2017 Georgia Tech Football Information Guide" (PDF). Georgia Tech. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 11, 2018. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
  4. ^ a b Umphlett 1992, p. 141
  5. ^ 2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records (PDF). The National Collegiate Athletic Association. p. 111. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Jackets Win Double Bill" (PDF). The Technique. October 2, 1917. p. 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 30, 2014.
  7. ^ Heisman & Schlabach 2012, p. 144
  8. ^ Lynn Hogan (1973). "They Walked Away Into Legend..." Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine. 51 (4): 15–19. Archived from the original on March 19, 2016.
  9. ^ Wiley Lee Umphlett (1992). Creating the Big Game: John W. Heisman and the Invention of American Football. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 141. ISBN 9780313284045.
  10. ^ "Spence Air Base". Archived from the original on March 3, 2016.
  11. ^ a b Morgan Blake (December 9, 1917). "Comparative Scores Prove Superiority of Champions". The Courier-Journal. p. 53. Archived from the original on January 26, 2016. Retrieved January 18, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  12. ^ Van Brimmer 2006, p. 7
  13. ^ e. g. Edwards, Pat (September 29, 1995). "Ramblin's". The Technique. Archived from the original on October 10, 2014.
  14. ^ a b McCarty 1988a, p. 2
  15. ^ McCarty 1988a, pp. 1–3
  16. ^ e. g. Bill Ritt (December 4, 1931). "Great Grid Teams of the Past". San Bernardino County Sun. p. 18. Archived from the original on January 26, 2016. Retrieved January 16, 2015 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  17. ^ "Everett Strupper, Tech Immortal, Passes Suddenly". Georgia Tech Alumni Magazine. 28 (4). 1950. Archived from the original on March 16, 2016.
  18. ^ "Ex-Tech Great Dies Suddenly: Everett Strupper, Member of Unbeaten Teams, Passes in Atlanta". The Anniston Star (AP wire story). February 5, 1950.
  19. ^ a b John Heisman (November 9, 1923). "Heisman Tells Inside Story of Strupper's Play". Atlanta Constitution.
  20. ^ McCarty 1988a, pp. 3–5
  21. ^ a b c d Umphlett 1992, p. 142
  22. ^ a b c d e f McCarty 1988a, p. 3
  23. ^ a b c d e "Football Season In Atlanta Opens With Two Games". The Atlanta Constitution. September 30, 1917. p. 1. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved August 4, 2015 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
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  32. ^ "'Speedy' Speer Named To Hall". Spartanburg Herald-Journal. May 4, 1974.
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  36. ^ "1917 Pittsburgh Panthers". databaseFootball.com. Archived from the original on November 30, 2015.
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  38. ^ cf. "Merit Rewarded". The Carlisle Arrow: 7. September 22, 1916.
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  45. ^ a b "Davidson Downed With Difficulty". The Technique. Vol. 7, no. 3. October 16, 1917. p. 3.
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  51. ^ Edwin Pope (1956). Football's Greatest Coaches. p. 344.
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  63. ^ see Gridiron Gasps, The Tuscaloosa News, January 10, 1933.
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  65. ^ a b Spalding Football Guide. 1918.
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  68. ^ "Six Yellow Jackets Are On All-Southern Team". The Washington Times. December 10, 1917. Archived from the original on January 22, 2015.
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  71. ^ Jemison, Dick (December 9, 1917). "Everett Strupper Elected To Lead 1918 Tech Eleven". The Atlanta Constitution. Retrieved February 21, 2023. To each member of the team was presented from admiring alumni gold footballs with the inscription, "National Champions."
  72. ^ Powers, Francis J. (1969). Life Story of Glen S. (Pop) Warner, Gridiron's Greatest Strategist. Chicago, IL: The Athletic Institute, p. 42
  73. ^ a b Van Brimmer & Rice 2011, p. 148
  74. ^ Garrett 2011, p. 709
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References

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