- Source: 1913 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season
- 1913 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season
- Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association
- Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
- 1913 college football season
- Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
- 1910 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season
- Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association
- South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic Association
- 1914 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season
- 1911 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season
The 1913 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season was the college football games played by the member schools of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association as part of the 1913 college football season. The season began on September 27. Conference play began that day with Alabama hosting Howard.
Teams other than Vanderbilt had a chance to win a title, and newspapers covered football more than the World Series for the first time.
Fuzzy Woodruff says the Southern newspapers began to cover football more than the World Series. The Auburn Tigers won the conference, posting an undefeated, 8–0 record. Auburn captain Kirk Newell was later a hero of World War I. The 1913 Tigers were retroactively recognized as a national champion by the Billingsley Report's alternative calculation which considers teams' margin of victory. Auburn does not claim the title.
Tennessee won its first SIAA game since 1910. Ole Miss was suspended from SIAA play.
Regular season
SIAA teams in bold.
= Week One
== Week Two
== Week Three
== Week Four
== Week Five
== Week Six
== Week Seven
== Week Eight
== Week Nine
== Week Ten
=Awards and honors
= All-Americans
=HB - Bob McWhorter, Georgia (PHD-1)
= All-Southern team
=The composite All-Southern team formed by the selection of 18 sporting writers culled by the Atlanta Constitution included:
Notes
References
Woodruff, Fuzzy (1928). A History of Southern Football 1890–1928. Vol. 1.