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1925 College Football All-America Team

The 1925 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers that chose College Football All-America Teams in 1925.

Walter Camp died in March 1925, marking the end of his "official" All-American selections for Collier's Weekly. The wire services and others moved in to fill the void in 1925, with both the United Press and Associated Press offering their own All-American teams for the first time. The eight selectors recognized by the NCAA as "official" for the 1925 season are (1) the All-America Board (AAB), (2) the Associated Press (AP), (3) Collier's Weekly, with Grantland Rice replacing Camp as the selector, (4) Football World magazine, (5) the International News Service (INS), (6) Liberty magazine, (7) the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), and (8) the United Press (UP).

The only two unanimous All-Americans in 1925 were tackle Ed Weir of Nebraska and halfback Andy Oberlander of Dartmouth. Red Grange of Illinois and Bennie Oosterbaan of Michigan each received first-team designations from seven of the eight official selectors.

Consensus All-Americans edit

1925, the NC recognizes eight All-American teams as "official" designations for purposes of its consensus determinations. The following chart identifies the NCAA-recognized consensus All-Americans and displays which first-team designations they received.

Name Position School Number Official Other
Ed Weir Tackle Nebraska 8/8 AAB, AP, COL, FW, INS, LIB, NEA, UP A&S, BE, HR, NB, RKN, Sun, WC, WE
Andy Oberlander Halfback Dartmouth 8/8 AAB, AP, COL, FW, INS, LIB, NEA, UP A&S, BE, HR, NB, RKN, Sun, SW, WC, WE
Bennie Oosterbaan End Michigan 7/8 AAB, AP, COL, FW, INS, NEA, UP A&S, BE, NB, RKN, Sun, WC, WE
Red Grange Halfback Illinois 7/8 AP, COL, FW, INS, LIB, NEA, UP A&S, BE, HR, NB, RKN, Sun, SW, WC, WE
Carl Diehl Guard Dartmouth 6/8 AAB, AP, COL, FW, INS, UP BE, NB, Sun, SW, WC, WE
Ernie Nevers Fullback Stanford 6/8 AAB, AP, COL, INS, LIB, NEA A&S, BE, NB, WC, WE
George Tully End Dartmouth 5/8 AP, INS, LIB, NEA, UP A&S, BE, NB, Sun, SW, WE
Ed McMillan Center Princeton 5/8 AAB, AP, COL, NEA, UP HR, NB, Sun, WC, WE
Wildcat Wilson Halfback
Quarterback
Washington 5/8 AAB, AP, FW, COL, INS HR, RKN, WC, WE
Ralph Chase Tackle Pittsburgh 4/8 AAB, AP, COL, FW --
Ed Hess Guard Ohio State 4/8 COL, LIB, NEA, UP A&S, BE, HR, NB
Benny Friedman Quarterback Michigan 3/8 AAB, LIB, UP RKN, Sun, SW

Death of Walter Camp and calls to end the All-Americans edit

 
Walter Camp died in March 1925

For more than 25 years before 1925, the selections made by Walter Camp for Collier's Weekly were considered the "official" All-American selections. With the death of Camp in March 1925, the field was open as to which selector's choices would be recognized as the "official" All-Americans.

Some advocated putting an end to the tradition of selecting All-American teams. Edward K. Hall, chairman of the inter-collegiate rules committee, advocated that position at the New York banquet honoring the New York Sun's 1925 All-Americans. Hall said, "I say with all the earnestness that is in me that I hope this is the last dinner to an all-American team that will ever be held in America." Hall argued that such selections place an over-emphasis on the importance of individual players in a team sport. Hall also denounced as a menace the manner in which professional football promoters were luring college players to play professional football for "easy money and quick money."[1]

Proliferation of All-American teams edit

Despite the calls of some for the end to All-American teams, the death of Walter Camp did not bring an end to the tradition. Instead, Camp's death led to a proliferation of yet more experts naming their own All-American teams.

Even Ring Lardner jumped into the All-American mix in 1925 offering a satirical All-American team consisting of Red Grange at quarterback with Lardner, his friends and family members (men and women, elderly and children) filling out the remaining spots. Lardner wrote: "As soon as you have Grange and a center to pass him the ball you don't need or want no more football players and can take advantage of the opportunity to fill out other positions with relatives and congenial friends."[2] Frank Getty of the United News Service wrote: “Now that All-American teams, All-Eastern teams, All-Conference teams and All-Colored teams for 1925 have been picked by everyone including the janitor, the janitor’s boy and Natalia Crane it’s about time to admit that it’s a futile practice. At best. No one is qualified to select an All-American team on his own, because no one can watch more than one game each Saturday during the season, nor see more than eight or nine games at the most.”[3]

Rise of the wire service teams edit

One of the major developments in 1925 was the rise of All-American teams selected by wire services based on polls of sports writers and coaches across the country.

In late November 1925, University of Michigan coach Fielding H. Yost publicly advocated a new system. Yost opined that the selection was not a job to be undertaken by any individual or any group of football experts. Yost said: "As Walter Camp has stated to me more than once, during the last five years of his life, this job of selecting an All-American was growing more and more difficult because of the great number of good football men in America."[4]

Both the United Press and Associated Press named All-American teams in 1925. United Press sports editor Henry L. Farrell described the service's purpose in entering the All-American business: "The average season consists of from eight to ten Saturdays and it is a physical impossibility for any one to see more than one game and it is likewise impossible for any human with ordinary vision equipment to see in action all the good teams in the country." For that reason, Farrell announced that he had submitted questionnaires to 75 leading coaches and officials and picked a team based on those results.[5][6]

All-American selections for 1925 edit

Ends edit

 
Bennie Oosterbaan later coached Michigan to a national championship in 1948.

Tackles edit

  • Ed Weir, Nebraska (AAB-1; AP-1; COL-1; FW; INS; LIB; NEA; UP; A&S-1; BE-1; HR; NB-1; RKN; Sun–1; WC; WE–1, BEHR)
  • Ralph E. Chase, Pittsburgh (AAB-1; AP-1; COL-1; FW; BE-2; Sun-2; WE-2, BEHR)
  • Nathan Parker, Dartmouth (AAB-3; AP-2; COL-2; UP; Sun-2; WE-2, BEHR)
  • Harry Hawkins, Michigan (FW [guard]; AAB-3; WE-3, BEHR)
  • Johnny Joss, Yale (LIB; BE-2; NB-2; Sun–1, BEHR)
  • Ed Lindenmeyer, Missouri (AAB-2; AP-2; COL-3; INS; NEA; A&S-1; BE-2; RKN; SW; WE-3, BEHR)
  • Tom Edwards, Michigan (AP-3; COL-2; NB-2; WE–1)
  • Bub Henderson, Chicago (NB-1)
  • Rip Bachor, Detroit (HR)
  • Hector Cyre, Gonzaga (AP-3)
  • Walden Erickson, Washington (COL-3, BEHR)
  • Bud Sprague, Army (AAB-2; SW)
  • Goldy Goldstein, Florida (BEHR)
  • Bob Rives, Vanderbilt (BEHR)
  • John Sargent, California (BEHR)
  • Stonewall McMannon, Notre Dame (BEHR)

Guards edit

Centers edit

  • Ed McMillan, Princeton (AAB-1; AP-1; COL-1; NEA; UP; HR; NB-2; Sun–1; WC; WE-1; WC, BEHR)
  • Robert Brown, Michigan (AP-2; COL-2; INS; LIB; NEA; A&S-1; BE-1; NB-1; Sun-2; SW, BEHR)
  • Tim Lowry, Northwestern (AAB-2; COL-3; FW; BE-2; WE-3, BEHR)
  • Harold Hutchinson (Hutchison), Nebraska (AP-3; WE–2)
  • Jeff Cravath, USC(AAB-3, BEHR)
  • Amos Kent, Sewanee (BEHR)

Quarterbacks edit

Halfbacks edit

 
Red Grange, "The Galloping Ghost", was named to seven of eight official All-America teams in 1924.
  • Andy Oberlander, Dartmouth (AAB-1; AP-1; COL-1; FW; INS; LIB; NEA; UP; A&S-1; BE-1; HR; NB-1; RKN; Sun–1; SW; WC; WE-1, BEHR)
  • Red Grange, Illinois (AAB-2 [hb]; AP-1 [qb]; COL-1 [qb]; FW; INS; LIB; NEA; UP [hb]; A&S-1; BE-1 [qb]; HR [qb]; NB-1 [qb]; RKN [qb]; Sun-1 [fb]; SW [qb]; WC [qb]; WE–1 [hb], BEHR)
  • Wildcat Wilson, Washington (AAB-1; AP-1; COL-1; FW [hb], INS; BE-2; HR [qb]; RKN [qb]; WC; WE-1 [hb], BEHR)
  • Eddie Tryon, Colgate (AAB-3; AP-2; COL-2; FW; A&S-1; BE-2; NB-2; Sun-1; SW; WE-2, BEHR)
  • Peggy Flournoy, Tulane (AAB-2; AP-2; COL-3; NEA; BE-1; HR [qb]; NB-1; WE–3 [qb], BEHR)
  • Jackson Keefer, Brown (AP-3; COL-3; WE-3)
  • Ralph Baker, Northwestern (NB-2)
  • Al Kreuz, Penn (Sun–2, BEHR)
  • Johnny Mack Brown, Alabama (AP-3, BEHR)
  • Doyle Harmon, Wisconsin (WE–3)
  • Christie Flanagan, Notre Dame (BEHR)
  • Austin "Five Yards" McCarty, Chicago (BEHR)

Fullbacks edit

 
Ernie Nevers of Stanford

Key edit

Bold = Consensus All-Americans[7]

  • -1 – First-team selection
  • -2 – Second-team selection
  • -3 – Third-team selection

Selectors recognized by NCAA edit

Other selectors edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "All-American Team Menaces College Game: So States Chairman of Intercollegiate Rules Committee at Banquet". The Davenport Democrat and Leader. December 7, 1925.
  2. ^ Lardner, Ring W. (November 29, 1925). "Lardner Weekly Letter: Grange and Self on All-American Team". The Zanesville Signal.
  3. ^ Getty, Frank (December 28, 1925). "Picking of Honor Teams Is Futile: Coaches Would Abolish System". Cedar Rapids Republican (United News story).
  4. ^ "'All America' Selection Job For Grid Expert". The Bridgeport Telegram (AP Report). November 24, 1925.
  5. ^ Farrell, Henry L. (December 17, 1925). "All American Teams Become Yearly Custom: Many Good Arguments to Oppose Selection of Honor Elevens". Cedar Rapids Republican.
  6. ^ Farrell, Henry L. (December 18, 1925). "Farrell Tells How He Picked All-Americans". The Fresno Bee.
  7. ^ "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. p. 6. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  8. ^ Farrell, Henry L. (November 28, 1925). "United Press Chooses All-American Team: Undertakes to Name Eleven Best Playes of Season". Tyrone Daily Herald (Pa.).
  9. ^ "Associated Press Announces All-American Teams". Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune. December 14, 1925.
  10. ^ "Syracuse Draws Blank as Rice Names Official All-American Eleven". Syracuse Herald. December 15, 1925.
  11. ^ Tad Jones; Knute Rockne; Glenn Warner (December 4, 1925). "Red Grange Placed on Second All-American Team: Coaches Keep Star Off First: Rockne, Jones and Warner Claim He Has Two Main Weak Points; Friedman Is Captain; Two Michigan Men Honored; Pacific Coast Stars in the Backfield". The Davenport Democrat.
  12. ^ Tad Jones; Knute Rockne; Glenn Warner (December 5, 1925). "All-American Stars Are Named". Spokane Daily Chronicle. p. 11. Retrieved September 10, 2023 – via newspapers.com.
  13. ^ a b c d ESPN College Football Encyclopedia. ESPN Books. 2005. p. 1157. ISBN 1401337031.
  14. ^ "Coaches To Pick All Star Eleven: Jim Thorpe Canvasses Athletic Heads". Cedar Rapids Republican. December 4, 1925.
  15. ^ "Here's An All-American Picked By New York Sun Favors Eastern Players". Hamilton Evening Journal. November 28, 1925.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on December 18, 2007. Retrieved January 13, 2008.
  17. ^ "Westerners Lead On All-American: Chicago Critic Picks Team With Strong Aerial Attack". The Galveston Daily News. December 20, 1925.
  18. ^ "Seven Westerners Given Places on Eckersall's All-American Eleven: Grange Named As Leader of Mythical Team". Davenport Democrat And Leader. December 20, 1925.
  19. ^ Evans, Billy (December 5, 1925). "Here's Billy Evans' All-Americans". The Fitchburg Sentinel.
  20. ^ Brown, Norman E. (December 7, 1925). "Here Are Brown's All-American Selections: All Sections of Country On Writer's All-American". Galveston County Daily News.
  21. ^ Brown, Norman E. (December 7, 1925). "Here Are Brown's All-American Selections: Michigan Draws Two Positions; Pacific Coast and South Land". San Mateo Times.
  22. ^ Brown, Norman E. (December 4, 1925). "Norman E. Brown's All-American Eleven: Has Line Power of A Dreadnaught: Dazzling Aerial Attack of Bombing Fleet". Oil City Derrick.
  23. ^ Brown, Norman E. (December 13, 1925). "Norman E. Brown's All-American Eleven: Has Line Power of A Dreadnaught: Dazzling Aerial Attack of Bombing Fleet". The Morning News Review (S.C.).
  24. ^ a b c (PDF). College Football Historical Society Newsletter. November 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 10, 2010. Retrieved March 5, 2010.
  25. ^ "Billy Evans' Honor Roll". The Anniston Star. December 15, 1925. p. 10. Retrieved July 23, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.  

1925, college, football, america, team, 1925, college, football, america, team, composed, college, football, players, were, selected, americans, various, organizations, writers, that, chose, college, football, america, teams, 1925, walter, camp, died, march, 1. The 1925 College Football All America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All Americans by various organizations and writers that chose College Football All America Teams in 1925 Walter Camp died in March 1925 marking the end of his official All American selections for Collier s Weekly The wire services and others moved in to fill the void in 1925 with both the United Press and Associated Press offering their own All American teams for the first time The eight selectors recognized by the NCAA as official for the 1925 season are 1 the All America Board AAB 2 the Associated Press AP 3 Collier s Weekly with Grantland Rice replacing Camp as the selector 4 Football World magazine 5 the International News Service INS 6 Liberty magazine 7 the Newspaper Enterprise Association NEA and 8 the United Press UP The only two unanimous All Americans in 1925 were tackle Ed Weir of Nebraska and halfback Andy Oberlander of Dartmouth Red Grange of Illinois and Bennie Oosterbaan of Michigan each received first team designations from seven of the eight official selectors Contents 1 Consensus All Americans 2 Death of Walter Camp and calls to end the All Americans 3 Proliferation of All American teams 4 Rise of the wire service teams 5 All American selections for 1925 5 1 Ends 5 2 Tackles 5 3 Guards 5 4 Centers 5 5 Quarterbacks 5 6 Halfbacks 5 7 Fullbacks 6 Key 6 1 Selectors recognized by NCAA 6 2 Other selectors 7 See also 8 ReferencesConsensus All Americans edit1925 the NC recognizes eight All American teams as official designations for purposes of its consensus determinations The following chart identifies the NCAA recognized consensus All Americans and displays which first team designations they received Name Position School Number Official Other Ed Weir Tackle Nebraska 8 8 AAB AP COL FW INS LIB NEA UP A amp S BE HR NB RKN Sun WC WE Andy Oberlander Halfback Dartmouth 8 8 AAB AP COL FW INS LIB NEA UP A amp S BE HR NB RKN Sun SW WC WE Bennie Oosterbaan End Michigan 7 8 AAB AP COL FW INS NEA UP A amp S BE NB RKN Sun WC WE Red Grange Halfback Illinois 7 8 AP COL FW INS LIB NEA UP A amp S BE HR NB RKN Sun SW WC WE Carl Diehl Guard Dartmouth 6 8 AAB AP COL FW INS UP BE NB Sun SW WC WE Ernie Nevers Fullback Stanford 6 8 AAB AP COL INS LIB NEA A amp S BE NB WC WE George Tully End Dartmouth 5 8 AP INS LIB NEA UP A amp S BE NB Sun SW WE Ed McMillan Center Princeton 5 8 AAB AP COL NEA UP HR NB Sun WC WE Wildcat Wilson HalfbackQuarterback Washington 5 8 AAB AP FW COL INS HR RKN WC WE Ralph Chase Tackle Pittsburgh 4 8 AAB AP COL FW Ed Hess Guard Ohio State 4 8 COL LIB NEA UP A amp S BE HR NB Benny Friedman Quarterback Michigan 3 8 AAB LIB UP RKN Sun SWDeath of Walter Camp and calls to end the All Americans edit nbsp Walter Camp died in March 1925 For more than 25 years before 1925 the selections made by Walter Camp for Collier s Weekly were considered the official All American selections With the death of Camp in March 1925 the field was open as to which selector s choices would be recognized as the official All Americans Some advocated putting an end to the tradition of selecting All American teams Edward K Hall chairman of the inter collegiate rules committee advocated that position at the New York banquet honoring the New York Sun s 1925 All Americans Hall said I say with all the earnestness that is in me that I hope this is the last dinner to an all American team that will ever be held in America Hall argued that such selections place an over emphasis on the importance of individual players in a team sport Hall also denounced as a menace the manner in which professional football promoters were luring college players to play professional football for easy money and quick money 1 Proliferation of All American teams editDespite the calls of some for the end to All American teams the death of Walter Camp did not bring an end to the tradition Instead Camp s death led to a proliferation of yet more experts naming their own All American teams Even Ring Lardner jumped into the All American mix in 1925 offering a satirical All American team consisting of Red Grange at quarterback with Lardner his friends and family members men and women elderly and children filling out the remaining spots Lardner wrote As soon as you have Grange and a center to pass him the ball you don t need or want no more football players and can take advantage of the opportunity to fill out other positions with relatives and congenial friends 2 Frank Getty of the United News Service wrote Now that All American teams All Eastern teams All Conference teams and All Colored teams for 1925 have been picked by everyone including the janitor the janitor s boy and Natalia Crane it s about time to admit that it s a futile practice At best No one is qualified to select an All American team on his own because no one can watch more than one game each Saturday during the season nor see more than eight or nine games at the most 3 Rise of the wire service teams editOne of the major developments in 1925 was the rise of All American teams selected by wire services based on polls of sports writers and coaches across the country In late November 1925 University of Michigan coach Fielding H Yost publicly advocated a new system Yost opined that the selection was not a job to be undertaken by any individual or any group of football experts Yost said As Walter Camp has stated to me more than once during the last five years of his life this job of selecting an All American was growing more and more difficult because of the great number of good football men in America 4 Both the United Press and Associated Press named All American teams in 1925 United Press sports editor Henry L Farrell described the service s purpose in entering the All American business The average season consists of from eight to ten Saturdays and it is a physical impossibility for any one to see more than one game and it is likewise impossible for any human with ordinary vision equipment to see in action all the good teams in the country For that reason Farrell announced that he had submitted questionnaires to 75 leading coaches and officials and picked a team based on those results 5 6 All American selections for 1925 editEnds edit nbsp Bennie Oosterbaan later coached Michigan to a national championship in 1948 Bennie Oosterbaan Michigan AAB 1 AP 1 COL 1 FW INS NEA UP A amp S 1 BE 1 NB 1 RKN Sun 1 WC WE 1 BEHR George Tully Dartmouth AP 1 COL 3 INS LIB NEA UP A amp S 1 BE 1 NB 1 Sun 1 SW WE 2 BEHR George Thayer Pennsylvania AP 2 COL 1 WE 3 RKN Sun 2 BEHR Charles F Born Army AAB 1 AP 2 BE 2 Sun 2 WC Dick Romey Iowa COL 2 LIB Ted Sloane Drake AAB 2 FW WE 3 BEHR LaVern Dilweg Marquette WE 1 Cookie Cunningham Ohio State HR Henry Baxter Army HR Chuck Kassel Illinois AAB 3 COL 2 BE 2 WE 2 BEHR Ted Shipkey Stanford AAB 2 NB 2 SW BEHR Vic Hanson Syracuse AP 3 J G Lowe Tennessee AP 3 BEHR Carl Bacchus Missouri COL 3 Edwards Washington amp Jefferson NB 2 Ray Wagner Columbia AAB 3 Gus Merkle Georgia Tech BEHR Hobbs Adams USC BEHR Tackles edit Ed Weir Nebraska AAB 1 AP 1 COL 1 FW INS LIB NEA UP A amp S 1 BE 1 HR NB 1 RKN Sun 1 WC WE 1 BEHR Ralph E Chase Pittsburgh AAB 1 AP 1 COL 1 FW BE 2 Sun 2 WE 2 BEHR Nathan Parker Dartmouth AAB 3 AP 2 COL 2 UP Sun 2 WE 2 BEHR Harry Hawkins Michigan FW guard AAB 3 WE 3 BEHR Johnny Joss Yale LIB BE 2 NB 2 Sun 1 BEHR Ed Lindenmeyer Missouri AAB 2 AP 2 COL 3 INS NEA A amp S 1 BE 2 RKN SW WE 3 BEHR Tom Edwards Michigan AP 3 COL 2 NB 2 WE 1 Bub Henderson Chicago NB 1 Rip Bachor Detroit HR Hector Cyre Gonzaga AP 3 Walden Erickson Washington COL 3 BEHR Bud Sprague Army AAB 2 SW Goldy Goldstein Florida BEHR Bob Rives Vanderbilt BEHR John Sargent California BEHR Stonewall McMannon Notre Dame BEHR Guards edit Carl Diehl Dartmouth AAB 1 AP 1 COL 1 FW INS UP BE 2 NB 1 Sun 1 SW WC WE 1 BEHR Ed Hess Ohio State AAB 2 AP 2 COL 1 LIB NEA UP A amp S 1 BE 1 NB 1 HR WE 2 BEHR Herbert Sturhahn Yale AAB 1 AP 1 COL 3 RKN center Sun 1 WC WE 1 BEHR Brice Taylor USC FW SW BEHR Dana Carey California AAB 2 AP 3 COL 2 LIB NB 2 Emerson Carey Cornell A amp S 1 Ed McMillan Princeton BE 1 Walter Mahan West Virginia AP 3 AAB 3 WE 3 BE 2 BEHR Bill Buckler Alabama AP 2 WE 3 BEHR Kilgore Harvard Sun 2 NB 2 Len Walsh Minnesota WE 2 August William Lentz Jr Navy Sun 2 Walt Godwin Georgia Tech COL 2 RKN BEHR Ray J Stipek Wisconsin COL 3 Zeke Wissinger Pittsburgh AAB 3 Merwin Mitterwallner Illinois HR Ernest Schmidt Army RKN Bernie Shively Illinois BEHR Fred H Swan Stanford BEHR Egbert Brix Washington BEHR Clipper Smith Notre Dame BEHR Centers edit Ed McMillan Princeton AAB 1 AP 1 COL 1 NEA UP HR NB 2 Sun 1 WC WE 1 WC BEHR Robert Brown Michigan AP 2 COL 2 INS LIB NEA A amp S 1 BE 1 NB 1 Sun 2 SW BEHR Tim Lowry Northwestern AAB 2 COL 3 FW BE 2 WE 3 BEHR Harold Hutchinson Hutchison Nebraska AP 3 WE 2 Jeff Cravath USC AAB 3 BEHR Amos Kent Sewanee BEHR Quarterbacks edit Benny Friedman Michigan AAB 1 AP 2 COL 2 LIB UP BE 2 RKN Sun 1 SW WE 2 BEHR George Pease Columbia Sun 2 Kenny Hyde Colorado Aggies AP 3 Lester Lautenschlaeger College Football Hall of Fame Tulane COL 3 Morley Drury U S C AAB 3 BEHR as hb George Guttormsen Washington BEHR Bill Kelly Montana BEHR Edgar C Jones Florida BEHR Earl Graham Fordham BEHR Halfbacks edit nbsp Red Grange The Galloping Ghost was named to seven of eight official All America teams in 1924 Andy Oberlander Dartmouth AAB 1 AP 1 COL 1 FW INS LIB NEA UP A amp S 1 BE 1 HR NB 1 RKN Sun 1 SW WC WE 1 BEHR Red Grange Illinois AAB 2 hb AP 1 qb COL 1 qb FW INS LIB NEA UP hb A amp S 1 BE 1 qb HR qb NB 1 qb RKN qb Sun 1 fb SW qb WC qb WE 1 hb BEHR Wildcat Wilson Washington AAB 1 AP 1 COL 1 FW hb INS BE 2 HR qb RKN qb WC WE 1 hb BEHR Eddie Tryon Colgate AAB 3 AP 2 COL 2 FW A amp S 1 BE 2 NB 2 Sun 1 SW WE 2 BEHR Peggy Flournoy Tulane AAB 2 AP 2 COL 3 NEA BE 1 HR qb NB 1 WE 3 qb BEHR Jackson Keefer Brown AP 3 COL 3 WE 3 Ralph Baker Northwestern NB 2 Al Kreuz Penn Sun 2 BEHR Johnny Mack Brown Alabama AP 3 BEHR Doyle Harmon Wisconsin WE 3 Christie Flanagan Notre Dame BEHR Austin Five Yards McCarty Chicago BEHR Fullbacks edit nbsp Ernie Nevers of Stanford Ernie Nevers Stanford AAB 1 AP 1 COL 1 INS LIB NEA A amp S 1 BE 1 NB 1 WC WE 1 BEHR Jacob Slagle Princeton AAB 2 qb AP 2 COL 2 hb UP BE 2 Sun 2 hb WE 2 hb BEHR Allison Pooley Hubert College Football Hall of Fame Alabama COL 2 AAB 2 hb WE 2 NB 2 qb BEHR qb Tony Plansky Georgetown AAB 3 as hb COL 3 Sun 2 BEHR Elmer Tesreau Washington AP 3 AAB 3 BEHR Bo Molenda Michigan NB 2 Rex Enright Notre Dame WE 3 Herb Joesting Minnesota BEHR Loren L Lewis Northwestern BEHR Doug Wycoff Georgia Tech BEHR Windy White VMI BEHR Andy Gustafson Pitt BEHR Key editBold Consensus All Americans 7 1 First team selection 2 Second team selection 3 Third team selection Selectors recognized by NCAA edit UP United Press based on interviews and questionnaires submitted to 75 coaches and officials 8 AP Associated Press teams from country wide opinions 9 COL Collier s Weekly as selected by Grantland Rice 10 AAB The All America Board the Christy Walsh Syndicate asked an Inter Sectional Board of Football Coaches made up of Tad Jones of Yale Knute Rockne of Notre Dame and Glenn Pop Warner of Stanford to deliberate and select an All American team 11 12 FW Football Writers Association of America 13 INS International News Service 13 LIB Liberty magazine 13 NEA Newspaper Enterprise Association 13 Other selectors edit A amp S Athlete and Sportsman magazine selections made based on the votes of 228 leading football coaches as canvassed by Jim Thorpe Charles Paddock and James Fetzer 14 Sun New York Sun 15 WC Walter Camp Football Foundation 16 WE selected by Walter Eckersall football critic of the Chicago Tribune 17 18 BE Billy Evans 19 NB Norman E Brown 20 21 22 23 HR Herbert Reed 24 RKN Knute Rockne 24 SW Sam Willaman 24 BEHR Billy Evans s National Honor Roll 25 See also edit1925 All Big Ten Conference football team 1925 All Missouri Valley Conference football team 1925 All Pacific Coast football team 1925 All Southern college football team 1925 All Southwest Conference football team 1925 All Eastern football team 1925 All Western college football teamReferences edit All American Team Menaces College Game So States Chairman of Intercollegiate Rules Committee at Banquet The Davenport Democrat and Leader December 7 1925 Lardner Ring W November 29 1925 Lardner Weekly Letter Grange and Self on All American Team The Zanesville Signal Getty Frank December 28 1925 Picking of Honor Teams Is Futile Coaches Would Abolish System Cedar Rapids Republican United News story All America Selection Job For Grid Expert The Bridgeport Telegram AP Report November 24 1925 Farrell Henry L December 17 1925 All American Teams Become Yearly Custom Many Good Arguments to Oppose Selection of Honor Elevens Cedar Rapids Republican Farrell Henry L December 18 1925 Farrell Tells How He Picked All Americans The Fresno Bee Football Award Winners PDF National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA 2016 p 6 Retrieved October 21 2017 Farrell Henry L November 28 1925 United Press Chooses All American Team Undertakes to Name Eleven Best Playes of Season Tyrone Daily Herald Pa Associated Press Announces All American Teams Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune December 14 1925 Syracuse Draws Blank as Rice Names Official All American Eleven Syracuse Herald December 15 1925 Tad Jones Knute Rockne Glenn Warner December 4 1925 Red Grange Placed on Second All American Team Coaches Keep Star Off First Rockne Jones and Warner Claim He Has Two Main Weak Points Friedman Is Captain Two Michigan Men Honored Pacific Coast Stars in the Backfield The Davenport Democrat Tad Jones Knute Rockne Glenn Warner December 5 1925 All American Stars Are Named Spokane Daily Chronicle p 11 Retrieved September 10 2023 via newspapers com a b c d ESPN College Football Encyclopedia ESPN Books 2005 p 1157 ISBN 1401337031 Coaches To Pick All Star Eleven Jim Thorpe Canvasses Athletic Heads Cedar Rapids Republican December 4 1925 Here s An All American Picked By New York Sun Favors Eastern Players Hamilton Evening Journal November 28 1925 Walter Camp Football Foundation Archived from the original on December 18 2007 Retrieved January 13 2008 Westerners Lead On All American Chicago Critic Picks Team With Strong Aerial Attack The Galveston Daily News December 20 1925 Seven Westerners Given Places on Eckersall s All American Eleven Grange Named As Leader of Mythical Team Davenport Democrat And Leader December 20 1925 Evans Billy December 5 1925 Here s Billy Evans All Americans The Fitchburg Sentinel Brown Norman E December 7 1925 Here Are Brown s All American Selections All Sections of Country On Writer s All American Galveston County Daily News Brown Norman E December 7 1925 Here Are Brown s All American Selections Michigan Draws Two Positions Pacific Coast and South Land San Mateo Times Brown Norman E December 4 1925 Norman E Brown s All American Eleven Has Line Power of A Dreadnaught Dazzling Aerial Attack of Bombing Fleet Oil City Derrick Brown Norman E December 13 1925 Norman E Brown s All American Eleven Has Line Power of A Dreadnaught Dazzling Aerial Attack of Bombing Fleet The Morning News Review S C a b c All America Addendum PDF College Football Historical Society Newsletter November 2008 Archived from the original PDF on June 10 2010 Retrieved March 5 2010 Billy Evans Honor Roll The Anniston Star December 15 1925 p 10 Retrieved July 23 2015 via Newspapers com nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1925 College Football All America Team amp oldid 1205058183, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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