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Penn Quakers football

The Penn Quakers football program is the college football team at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. The Penn Quakers have competed in the Ivy League since its inaugural season of 1956, and are a Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Penn has played in 1,413 football games, the most of any school in any division. Penn plays its home games at historic Franklin Field, the oldest football stadium in the nation. All Penn games are broadcast on WNTP or WFIL radio.

Penn Quakers football
First season1876
Head coachRay Priore
7th season, 42–28 (.600)
StadiumFranklin Field
(capacity: 52,593)
Year built1895
Field surfaceSprinTurf
LocationPhiladelphia
NCAA divisionDivision I FCS
ConferenceIvy League
Past conferencesIndependent (1876–1956)
All-time record864–507–42 (.626)
Bowl record0–1–0 (.000)
Claimed national titles7 (1894, 1895, 1897, 1904, 1907, 1908, 1924)[1]
Conference titles18 (1959, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1993, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2016)
RivalriesCornell (rivalry)
Harvard (rivalry)
Princeton (rivalry)
Consensus All-Americans63
Current uniform
ColorsRed and blue[2]
   
Fight songFight on, Pennsylvania!
MascotThe Penn Quaker
Marching bandThe University of Pennsylvania Band
WebsitePennAthletics.com

Overall history edit

 
One of the first teams of the university, 1878.

Penn bills itself as "college football's most historic program".[3] The Quakers have had 63 First Team All-Americans, and the college is the alma mater of John Heisman (the namesake of college football's most famous trophy). The team has won a share of 7 national championships (7th all-time) and competed in the "granddaddy of them all" (The Rose Bowl) in 1917. Penn's total of 837 wins puts them 11th all-time in college football (3rd in the FCS) and their winning percentage of 62.9% is 21st in college football (7th in the FCS). 18 members of the College Football Hall of Fame played at Penn (tied with Alabama for 14th) and 5 members of the College Football Hall of Fame coached at Penn. Penn has had 11 unbeaten seasons. Penn plays at the oldest stadium in college football, Franklin Field, at which they have had a 35-game home winning streak (1896–1899), which is the 15th best in the country, and at which they have had 23 unbeaten home seasons. Penn is one of the few college football teams to have had an exclusive contract with a network for broadcasting all their home games. For the 1950 season, ABC Sports broadcast all of Penn's home games. The only other teams to have had exclusive contracts are Miami and Notre Dame. The Quakers competed as a major independent until 1956, when they accepted the invitation to join the Ivy League. When the Ivy League was reclassified to Division I-AA, today known as FCS, following the 1981 season,[4] Penn moved to Division I-AA play with the rest of the league.

Before the start of the 2020 season, the Ivy League announced that no sports would be played until January 1, 2021, at the earliest, because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The League resumed in September 2021.[5]

NCAA television controversy edit

See: NCAA Football television controversy

In 1951, the NCAA attempted to stop any live broadcast of college football games during the season, which affected Penn due to them being one of only two colleges to enact this practice (the other being Notre Dame). After public outcry, the NCAA restricted the number of games televised for each team. Penn attempted to circumvent the rules through its contract, but they had to back down due to the NCAA's threat of possibly expelling the Quakers from the association.

Ivy League edit

Penn joined the Ivy League in 1956 when it was formed. Penn won its 1st Ivy League Football Championship in 1959. It was not until 1982, 23 years later, that Penn would win its 2nd Ivy League Football Championship. Since that year Penn has become a dominant football power in the Ivy League. They are tied with Dartmouth in winning a record 18 Ivy League Football Championships. Penn, however, is first in outright Ivy League titles (13), and first in undefeated Ivy League titles (8).

Championships edit

National championships edit

Penn has been named national champions seven times by NCAA major selectors, and claims all seven championships.[6]

The Billingsley Report named the 1907 Quakers national champions under Billingsley's original formula. Updated Billingsley rankings no longer name Penn national champions in 1907, but Penn continues to claim the championship.[7]

Year Selector Coach Record
1894 Parke H. Davis George Woodruff 12–0
1895 Billingsley, Helms Athletic Foundation, Houlgate System, National Championship Foundation, Parke Davis George Woodruff 14–0
1897 Billingsley, Helms Athletic Foundation, Houlgate, National Championship Foundation, Parke Davis George Woodruff 15–0
1904 Helms Athletic Foundation, Houlgate, Parke Davis, National Championship Foundation Carl "Cap" Williams 12–0
1907 Billingsley Report (1995-1999 formula)[6] Carl "Cap" Williams 11–1
1908 Helms Athletic Foundation, Houlgate System, Parke Davis, National Championship Foundation Sol Metzger 11–0–1
1924 Parke Davis Lou Young 9–1–1

Conference championships edit

Penn has won 18 conference championships (all of which in the Ivy League), winning 13 outright and five shared.[8]

Year Conference Coach Overall record Conference record
1959 Ivy League Steve Sebo 7–1–1 6–1
1982 Jerry Berndt 7–3 5–2
1983 Jerry Berndt 6–3–1 5–1–1
1984 Jerry Berndt 8–1 7–0
1985 Jerry Berndt 7–2–1 6–1
1986 Ed Zubrow 10–0 7–0
1988 Ed Zubrow 9–1 6–1
1993 Al Bagnoli 10–0 7–0
1994 Al Bagnoli 9–0 7–0
1998 Al Bagnoli 8–2 6–1
2000 Al Bagnoli 7–3 6–1
2002 Al Bagnoli 9–1 7–0
2003 Al Bagnoli 10–0 7–0
2009 Al Bagnoli 8–2 7–0
2010 Al Bagnoli 9–1 7–0
2012 Al Bagnoli 6–4 6–1
2015 Ray Priore 7–3 6–1
2016 Ray Priore 7–3 6–1

† Co-champions

NCAA records edit

NCAA record for most college football games played – 1,413.
NCAA record for consecutive overtime losses – 3 games[9]

Ivy League records edit

Most outright Ivy League titles – 13 (1959, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1993, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2010, 2012) ;
Highest number of unbeaten Ivy League seasons – 8 (1984, 1986, 1993, 1994, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2010);
Longest Ivy League winning streak – 20 straight games (2001–2004). Penn also holds the next two longest Ivy League win streaks: 18 straight games (2008–2011) and 17 straight games (1992–1995).
Record 18 Ivy League Football Championships. Tied with Dartmouth.

Franklin Field edit

 
Quakers enter Franklin Field in 2019

Penn's home stadium Franklin Field is not only the oldest stadium in football but holds many other records as well. It is the site of the oldest stadium scoreboard (1895), the "original horseshoe" (1903), the first college football radio broadcast (1922 on WIP), the first double-decker football stadium (1925), the largest stadium in the country (1925–1926), the first college football television broadcast (1940 on KYW-TV) and the first FCS stadium to host ESPN's College Gameday (2002).[citation needed]

Penn in the AP Poll edit

[citation needed]

Year Final ranking
1936 10
1940 14
1941 15
1943 20
1945 8
1946 13
1947 7

Bowl games edit

Penn has participated in one bowl game, garnering a record of 0–1.

Season Coach Bowl Opponent Result
1916 Bob Folwell Rose Bowl Oregon L 0–14

Rivalries edit

Cornell edit

 
Penn/Cornell game, 2019

The series with Cornell dates to 1876. Penn leads the series 73–46–5 through the 2017 season.[10]

Harvard edit

The series with Harvard dates to 1881. Harvard leads the series 48–38–2 through the 2017 season.[10]

Princeton edit

The series with Princeton dates to 1876. Princeton leads the series 66–42–1 through the 2017 season.[10]

Individual players edit

Notable Quaker players edit

Individual award winners edit

Penn's total of three major award winners surpasses several BCS programs to this day.

Bob Odell1943
Chuck Bednarik1948
Reds Bagnell1950
  • Ivy League Coach of the Year
Jerry Berndt1984
Ray Priore – 2015

College Football Hall of Fame edit

Eighteen former players have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.[11][better source needed]

Quakers in the NFL Draft edit

 
Chuck Bednarik (aka "Concrete Charlie") played gridiron football at the University of Pennsylvania where he was a '60-minute man', excelling as a center on offense and linebacker on defense, was a three-time All-American gridiron football player, and was elected a member of the College Football Hall of Fame, drafted as number 1 pick in 1st round of 1949 NFL Draft by Philadelphia Eagles.

A total of 51 players from Penn have been drafted in the NFL[12] including NFL Hall of Famers Chuck Bednarik (#1 overall pick in 1949) and NFL first-round pick Skip Minisi.

Notable games edit

Penn 30, Navy 0 edit

On October 18, 1986, Penn defeated Navy 30–0 in front of Navy's Homecoming crowd. Penn finished the season undefeated at 10–0, 7–0 in the Ivy League for their 5th straight Ivy League title.[13]

Penn 35, Harvard 25 edit

On November 14, 2015, Penn defeated 12th ranked Harvard 35–25 at Harvard Stadium. This win ended Harvard's 22-game winning streak; their first loss since October 26, 2013.[14] With this win, Penn improved to 6–3, 5–1 in the Ivy League, and with a 34–21 win in their next and final game against Cornell, were able to clinch a share of the Ivy League title along with Harvard and Dartmouth. The title capped a remarkable comeback season for Penn. After back-to-back losing seasons in 2013 and 2014, Penn started the 2015 season at 1–3, including a loss in their Ivy League opener, but rallied with 6 straight wins to end the season.

Penn 27, Harvard 14 edit

On November 11, 2016, Penn defeated 22nd ranked Harvard at Franklin Field. This win ended Harvard's Ivy record 13-game Ivy road game win streak.[15] With this win, Penn improved to 6–3, 5–1 in the Ivy League, and into a three-way tie atop the Ivy League alongside Harvard and Princeton. Penn scored two touchdowns in the game's final 17 seconds, headlined by an 80-yard touchdown drive engineered by quarterback Alek Torgersen and a last second scoop and score by Tayler Hendrickson. A 42–20 victory the next week against Cornell gave Penn a share of the 2016 Ivy League title, making them back-to-back champions for the first time since 2009–2010. A Harvard loss to Yale in "The Game" the next week dropped the Crimson out of title contention.

Penn 23, Harvard 21 edit

On November 13, 1982, Penn defeated Harvard with no time left on the game clock at Franklin Field. This win clinched a share of the Ivy football title for Penn. While Penn led 20–0 with nine minutes to play, Harvard scored three touchdowns in just eight minutes. However the Quarterback Gary Vura, starting at his own 20-yard line with just a minute and 24 seconds left, marched his team down the field, setting up a field goal attempt by kicker Dave Shulman. Shulman's 38-yard attempt was tipped by a Harvard player and went wide left. But Harvard was called for roughing the kicker. Since a game cannot end on a potential decision-changing defensive penalty, Shulman kicked again, this time from the 11-yard line and his 27-yard field goal was good.[16] Although the Quakers did lose the following weekend to Cornell, their victory that day, after three losing seasons of 0–9, 1–9 and 1–9, gave Penn a share of the Ivy title for the first time since 1959, which had been its only Ivy title. It also marked the turning point in Penn's Ivy football play, with the Quakers winning or sharing another 16 Ivy titles during the 35 years since then.

References edit

  1. ^ "2011 Fact Book Penn Football" (PDF). Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  2. ^ "Elements of the Penn Logo". Branding.Web-Resources.UPenn.edu. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  3. ^ "Women's Basketball vs. Brown_Yale – Official Athletics Website". University of Pennsylvania Athletics.
  4. ^ New York Times – 2006-11-17
  5. ^ West, Jenna. "Ivy League to Postpone Fall Athletics, No Date Set for Return". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
  6. ^ a b Cunha, Steve (September 14, 2021). 2021 Penn Football Fact Book (PDF). University of Pennsylvania Office of Athletic Communications. pp. 6, 60–61. (PDF) from the original on March 10, 2022. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  7. ^ "2019 Football Fact Book Champions" (PDF). University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved September 12, 2020.
  8. ^ "2019 Football Fact Book Champions" (PDF). University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved September 12, 2020.
  9. ^ Caldwell, Dave. "Penn Loses in Overtime for 3rd Game in a Row". The New York Times. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  10. ^ a b c "2018 Penn Football Fact Book" (PDF). pennathletics.com. Penn Athletics. p. 140.
  11. ^ See: Penn Quakers#Football.
  12. ^ see
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on March 1, 2014. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
  14. ^ "Penn vs. Harvard – Game Recap – November 14, 2015". ESPN.
  15. ^ Friedman, Dick (November 13, 2016). "Football: Harvard 14, Penn 27". Harvard Magazine.
  16. ^ "Penn Beats Harvard on a Kick". NY Times. November 14, 1982.

External links edit

  • Official website  

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The Penn Quakers football program is the college football team at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia The Penn Quakers have competed in the Ivy League since its inaugural season of 1956 and are a Division I Football Championship Subdivision FCS member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Penn has played in 1 413 football games the most of any school in any division Penn plays its home games at historic Franklin Field the oldest football stadium in the nation All Penn games are broadcast on WNTP or WFIL radio Penn Quakers football2023 Penn Quakers football teamFirst season1876Head coachRay Priore 7th season 42 28 600 StadiumFranklin Field capacity 52 593 Year built1895Field surfaceSprinTurfLocationPhiladelphiaNCAA divisionDivision I FCSConferenceIvy LeaguePast conferencesIndependent 1876 1956 All time record864 507 42 626 Bowl record0 1 0 000 Claimed national titles7 1894 1895 1897 1904 1907 1908 1924 1 Conference titles18 1959 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1988 1993 1994 1998 2000 2002 2003 2009 2010 2012 2015 2016 RivalriesCornell rivalry Harvard rivalry Princeton rivalry Consensus All Americans63Current uniformColorsRed and blue 2 Fight songFight on Pennsylvania MascotThe Penn QuakerMarching bandThe University of Pennsylvania BandWebsitePennAthletics com Contents 1 Overall history 1 1 NCAA television controversy 2 Ivy League 3 Championships 3 1 National championships 3 2 Conference championships 4 NCAA records 5 Ivy League records 6 Franklin Field 7 Penn in the AP Poll 8 Bowl games 9 Rivalries 9 1 Cornell 9 2 Harvard 9 3 Princeton 10 Individual players 10 1 Notable Quaker players 10 2 Individual award winners 10 3 College Football Hall of Fame 10 4 Quakers in the NFL Draft 11 Notable games 11 1 Penn 30 Navy 0 11 2 Penn 35 Harvard 25 11 3 Penn 27 Harvard 14 11 4 Penn 23 Harvard 21 12 References 13 External linksOverall history editSee also List of Penn Quakers football seasons nbsp One of the first teams of the university 1878 Penn bills itself as college football s most historic program 3 The Quakers have had 63 First Team All Americans and the college is the alma mater of John Heisman the namesake of college football s most famous trophy The team has won a share of 7 national championships 7th all time and competed in the granddaddy of them all The Rose Bowl in 1917 Penn s total of 837 wins puts them 11th all time in college football 3rd in the FCS and their winning percentage of 62 9 is 21st in college football 7th in the FCS 18 members of the College Football Hall of Fame played at Penn tied with Alabama for 14th and 5 members of the College Football Hall of Fame coached at Penn Penn has had 11 unbeaten seasons Penn plays at the oldest stadium in college football Franklin Field at which they have had a 35 game home winning streak 1896 1899 which is the 15th best in the country and at which they have had 23 unbeaten home seasons Penn is one of the few college football teams to have had an exclusive contract with a network for broadcasting all their home games For the 1950 season ABC Sports broadcast all of Penn s home games The only other teams to have had exclusive contracts are Miami and Notre Dame The Quakers competed as a major independent until 1956 when they accepted the invitation to join the Ivy League When the Ivy League was reclassified to Division I AA today known as FCS following the 1981 season 4 Penn moved to Division I AA play with the rest of the league Before the start of the 2020 season the Ivy League announced that no sports would be played until January 1 2021 at the earliest because of the COVID 19 pandemic The League resumed in September 2021 5 NCAA television controversy edit See NCAA Football television controversyIn 1951 the NCAA attempted to stop any live broadcast of college football games during the season which affected Penn due to them being one of only two colleges to enact this practice the other being Notre Dame After public outcry the NCAA restricted the number of games televised for each team Penn attempted to circumvent the rules through its contract but they had to back down due to the NCAA s threat of possibly expelling the Quakers from the association Ivy League editPenn joined the Ivy League in 1956 when it was formed Penn won its 1st Ivy League Football Championship in 1959 It was not until 1982 23 years later that Penn would win its 2nd Ivy League Football Championship Since that year Penn has become a dominant football power in the Ivy League They are tied with Dartmouth in winning a record 18 Ivy League Football Championships Penn however is first in outright Ivy League titles 13 and first in undefeated Ivy League titles 8 Championships editNational championships edit Penn has been named national champions seven times by NCAA major selectors and claims all seven championships 6 The Billingsley Report named the 1907 Quakers national champions under Billingsley s original formula Updated Billingsley rankings no longer name Penn national champions in 1907 but Penn continues to claim the championship 7 Year Selector Coach Record1894 Parke H Davis George Woodruff 12 01895 Billingsley Helms Athletic Foundation Houlgate System National Championship Foundation Parke Davis George Woodruff 14 01897 Billingsley Helms Athletic Foundation Houlgate National Championship Foundation Parke Davis George Woodruff 15 01904 Helms Athletic Foundation Houlgate Parke Davis National Championship Foundation Carl Cap Williams 12 01907 Billingsley Report 1995 1999 formula 6 Carl Cap Williams 11 11908 Helms Athletic Foundation Houlgate System Parke Davis National Championship Foundation Sol Metzger 11 0 11924 Parke Davis Lou Young 9 1 1Conference championships edit Penn has won 18 conference championships all of which in the Ivy League winning 13 outright and five shared 8 Year Conference Coach Overall record Conference record1959 Ivy League Steve Sebo 7 1 1 6 11982 Jerry Berndt 7 3 5 21983 Jerry Berndt 6 3 1 5 1 11984 Jerry Berndt 8 1 7 01985 Jerry Berndt 7 2 1 6 11986 Ed Zubrow 10 0 7 01988 Ed Zubrow 9 1 6 11993 Al Bagnoli 10 0 7 01994 Al Bagnoli 9 0 7 01998 Al Bagnoli 8 2 6 12000 Al Bagnoli 7 3 6 12002 Al Bagnoli 9 1 7 02003 Al Bagnoli 10 0 7 02009 Al Bagnoli 8 2 7 02010 Al Bagnoli 9 1 7 02012 Al Bagnoli 6 4 6 12015 Ray Priore 7 3 6 12016 Ray Priore 7 3 6 1 Co championsNCAA records editNCAA record for most college football games played 1 413 NCAA record for consecutive overtime losses 3 games 9 Ivy League records editMost outright Ivy League titles 13 1959 1984 1985 1986 1993 1994 1998 2000 2002 2003 2009 2010 2012 Highest number of unbeaten Ivy League seasons 8 1984 1986 1993 1994 2002 2003 2009 2010 Longest Ivy League winning streak 20 straight games 2001 2004 Penn also holds the next two longest Ivy League win streaks 18 straight games 2008 2011 and 17 straight games 1992 1995 Record 18 Ivy League Football Championships Tied with Dartmouth Franklin Field edit nbsp Quakers enter Franklin Field in 2019Main article Franklin FieldPenn s home stadium Franklin Field is not only the oldest stadium in football but holds many other records as well It is the site of the oldest stadium scoreboard 1895 the original horseshoe 1903 the first college football radio broadcast 1922 on WIP the first double decker football stadium 1925 the largest stadium in the country 1925 1926 the first college football television broadcast 1940 on KYW TV and the first FCS stadium to host ESPN s College Gameday 2002 citation needed Penn in the AP Poll edit citation needed Year Final ranking1936 101940 141941 151943 201945 81946 131947 7Bowl games editPenn has participated in one bowl game garnering a record of 0 1 Season Coach Bowl Opponent Result1916 Bob Folwell Rose Bowl Oregon L 0 14Rivalries editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2018 Cornell edit nbsp Penn Cornell game 2019The series with Cornell dates to 1876 Penn leads the series 73 46 5 through the 2017 season 10 Harvard edit The series with Harvard dates to 1881 Harvard leads the series 48 38 2 through the 2017 season 10 Princeton edit The series with Princeton dates to 1876 Princeton leads the series 66 42 1 through the 2017 season 10 Individual players editNotable Quaker players edit Reds Bagnell 1950 Maxwell Award winner All American runner up for the Heisman Trophy College Football Hall of Fame Chuck Bednarik namesake of the Chuck Bednarik Award 1948 Maxwell Award winner Pro Football Hall of Fame College Football Hall of Fame Bert Bell former NFL commissioner founder owner amp coach of the Philadelphia Eagles owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers Pro Football Hall of Fame George H Brooke Twice All America College football Hall of Fame Truxton Hare Consensus All American every year he played College Football Hall of Fame winner of silver medal in the hammer throw at the 1900 Summer Olympics Jim Finn 1999 New York Giants starting full back in Super Bowl XLII John Heisman namesake of the Heisman Trophy College Football Hall of Fame Florian Kempf Professional soccer player and NFL kicker for the Houston Oilers and New Orleans Saints Alden Knipe All America led team to 1894 national championship Leroy Mercer All America College Football Hall of Fame Olympic athlete Skip Minisi first round NFL draft pick College Football Hall of Fame Bob Odell 1943 Maxwell Award winner College Football Hall of Fame John H Outland namesake of the Outland Trophy College Football Hall of Fame George Savitsky All American tackle in the 1940s only four year All American of the 20th century in College Football in the College Football Hall of Fame drafted by Philadelphia Eagles Kevin Stefanski Head Coach of the Cleveland Browns Raiam Santos writer digital influencer and brazilian entrepreneurIndividual award winners edit Penn s total of three major award winners surpasses several BCS programs to this day Maxwell AwardBob Odell 1943 Chuck Bednarik 1948 Reds Bagnell 1950Ivy League Coach of the YearJerry Berndt 1984 Ray Priore 2015College Football Hall of Fame edit Eighteen former players have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame 11 better source needed Quakers in the NFL Draft edit Main article List of Penn Quakers in the NFL Draft nbsp Chuck Bednarik aka Concrete Charlie played gridiron football at the University of Pennsylvania where he was a 60 minute man excelling as a center on offense and linebacker on defense was a three time All American gridiron football player and was elected a member of the College Football Hall of Fame drafted as number 1 pick in 1st round of 1949 NFL Draft by Philadelphia Eagles A total of 51 players from Penn have been drafted in the NFL 12 including NFL Hall of Famers Chuck Bednarik 1 overall pick in 1949 and NFL first round pick Skip Minisi Notable games editPenn 30 Navy 0 edit On October 18 1986 Penn defeated Navy 30 0 in front of Navy s Homecoming crowd Penn finished the season undefeated at 10 0 7 0 in the Ivy League for their 5th straight Ivy League title 13 Penn 35 Harvard 25 edit On November 14 2015 Penn defeated 12th ranked Harvard 35 25 at Harvard Stadium This win ended Harvard s 22 game winning streak their first loss since October 26 2013 14 With this win Penn improved to 6 3 5 1 in the Ivy League and with a 34 21 win in their next and final game against Cornell were able to clinch a share of the Ivy League title along with Harvard and Dartmouth The title capped a remarkable comeback season for Penn After back to back losing seasons in 2013 and 2014 Penn started the 2015 season at 1 3 including a loss in their Ivy League opener but rallied with 6 straight wins to end the season Penn 27 Harvard 14 edit On November 11 2016 Penn defeated 22nd ranked Harvard at Franklin Field This win ended Harvard s Ivy record 13 game Ivy road game win streak 15 With this win Penn improved to 6 3 5 1 in the Ivy League and into a three way tie atop the Ivy League alongside Harvard and Princeton Penn scored two touchdowns in the game s final 17 seconds headlined by an 80 yard touchdown drive engineered by quarterback Alek Torgersen and a last second scoop and score by Tayler Hendrickson A 42 20 victory the next week against Cornell gave Penn a share of the 2016 Ivy League title making them back to back champions for the first time since 2009 2010 A Harvard loss to Yale in The Game the next week dropped the Crimson out of title contention Penn 23 Harvard 21 edit On November 13 1982 Penn defeated Harvard with no time left on the game clock at Franklin Field This win clinched a share of the Ivy football title for Penn While Penn led 20 0 with nine minutes to play Harvard scored three touchdowns in just eight minutes However the Quarterback Gary Vura starting at his own 20 yard line with just a minute and 24 seconds left marched his team down the field setting up a field goal attempt by kicker Dave Shulman Shulman s 38 yard attempt was tipped by a Harvard player and went wide left But Harvard was called for roughing the kicker Since a game cannot end on a potential decision changing defensive penalty Shulman kicked again this time from the 11 yard line and his 27 yard field goal was good 16 Although the Quakers did lose the following weekend to Cornell their victory that day after three losing seasons of 0 9 1 9 and 1 9 gave Penn a share of the Ivy title for the first time since 1959 which had been its only Ivy title It also marked the turning point in Penn s Ivy football play with the Quakers winning or sharing another 16 Ivy titles during the 35 years since then References edit 2011 Fact Book Penn Football PDF Retrieved October 18 2011 Elements of the Penn Logo Branding Web Resources UPenn edu Retrieved November 14 2022 Women s Basketball vs Brown Yale Official Athletics Website University of Pennsylvania Athletics New York Times 2006 11 17 West Jenna Ivy League to Postpone Fall Athletics No Date Set for Return Sports Illustrated Retrieved July 8 2020 a b Cunha Steve September 14 2021 2021 Penn Football Fact Book PDF University of Pennsylvania Office of Athletic Communications pp 6 60 61 Archived PDF from the original on March 10 2022 Retrieved March 10 2022 2019 Football Fact Book Champions PDF University of Pennsylvania Retrieved September 12 2020 2019 Football Fact Book Champions PDF University of Pennsylvania Retrieved September 12 2020 Caldwell Dave Penn Loses in Overtime for 3rd Game in a Row The New York Times Retrieved September 16 2011 a b c 2018 Penn Football Fact Book PDF pennathletics com Penn Athletics p 140 See Penn Quakers Football see Main article List of Penn Quakers in the NFL Draft 1986 Navy Midshipmen Football Statistics and Results Totalfootballstats com Archived from the original on March 1 2014 Retrieved October 7 2014 Penn vs Harvard Game Recap November 14 2015 ESPN Friedman Dick November 13 2016 Football Harvard 14 Penn 27 Harvard Magazine Penn Beats Harvard on a Kick NY Times November 14 1982 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Penn Quakers football Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Penn Quakers football amp oldid 1181666409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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