- Source: 1924 college football season
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The 1924 college football season was the year of the Four Horsemen as the Notre Dame team, coached by Knute Rockne, won all of its games, including the Rose Bowl, to be acclaimed as the best team in the nation. Notre Dame and Stanford were both unbeaten at season's end, with the Fighting Irish winning the Rose Bowl contest 27β10. The Penn Quakers were retroactively awarded a national championship by Parke H. Davis.
Red Grange's Illinois team upset Michigan. The Illini were upset by Minnesota, which in turn was upset by Vanderbilt. Fred Russell's Fifty Years of Vanderbilt Football dubs 1924 "the most eventful season in the history of Vanderbilt football." Centre claimed a southern title in its last season of national relevance, upsetting Wallace Wade's first SoCon champion Alabama team. Alabama did not lose another game until 1927.
Conference and program changes
= Conference changes
=Three new conferences began play in 1924:
Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association β active NCAA Division II conference now known as the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association
Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association β conference active through the 1930 season
West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference β NAIA and NCAA Division II conference active through the 2013 season
One conference played its final season in 1924:
California Coast Conference β originally established in 1922
= Membership changes
=September
September 27
California had a 13β7 win over Santa Clara. Dartmouth beat Norwich College 40β0. Southern Methodist University (SMU) beat North Texas 7β0, and Alabama opened with a 55β0 win over Union College of Tennessee.
October
October 4 Missouri opened its season with a 3β0 win at Chicago, the Maroons' only loss of the season. Notre Dame opened its season with a 40β0 win over Lombard College. Stanford beat Occidental College 20β6, and California beat St. Mary's 17β7. Army beat St. Louis 17β0, Yale beat North Carolina 27β0, and Dartmouth beat Montreal's McGill University 52β0. Alabama won at Furman 20β0. SMU beat Trinity College 14β3
October 11
Notre Dame beat Wabash 34β0. Stanford beat the Olympic Club 7β0 and California defeated Pomona College, 28β0. Army beat Detroit's Mercy College, 20β0 and Dartmouth beat Vermont 38β0. In a battle of Bulldogs, Yale beat Georgia 7β6. Missouri defeated Missouri Wesleyan College 14β0 (MWC was closed in 1930). Chicago beat visiting Brown, 19β7. Alabama beat Mississippi College 51β0. In a Friday game, SMU beat Austin College 7β0
October 18 At the Polo Grounds in New York, Notre Dame beat Army 13β7, the Cadets' only loss for the season. In his column the next day, sportswriter Grantland Rice dubbed the Notre Dame backfield (Harry Stuhldreher, Don Miller, Jim Crowley, and Elmer Layden) in his column of October 20, writing "Outlined against a blue-gray October sky, the Four Horsemen rode again. In dramatic lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction and death. These are only aliases. Their real names are: Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Layden. They formed the crest of the South Bend cyclone before which another fighting Army team was swept over the precipice at the Polo Grounds this afternoon as 55,000 spectators peered down upon the bewildering panorama spread out upon the green plain below."
In other games, Yale and Dartmouth played to a 14β14 tie. Stanford defeated Oregon 28β13, while California beat the Olympic Club 9β3. In Birmingham, Alabama beat Sewanee 14β0. SMU beat Texas 10β6. Missouri won at Iowa State 7β0, and Chicago defeated Indiana 23β0.
October 25 Notre Dame beat Princeton 12β0. In Columbus, Chicago and Ohio State played to a 3β3 tie. At Portland, Oregon, Stanford had a more difficult time than expected in defeating Idaho, 3β0, while California beat Washington State 20β7. Army beat Boston University 20β0, Dartmouth beat Harvard 6β0, and Yale defeated Brown 13β3. At Atlanta, Alabama recorded another shutout, beating Georgia Tech 14β0. SMU and Texas A & M played to a 7β7 tie in Dallas. Missouri beat Kansas State 14β7.
November
November 1
California and USC, both unbeaten and untied with records of 5β0β0, met at Berkeley, with California handing the Trojans their first defeat, 7β0.
Notre Dame beat visiting Georgia Tech 34β3
Stanford beat Santa Clara 20β0 and California beat visiting USC 7β0
Army and Yale played to a 7β7 tie. Dartmouth defeated Brown 10β3.
SMU stayed unbeaten with a 6β0 win at TCU. Missouri suffered its first defeat, a 14β6 loss at Nebraska. Chicago beat Purdue 19β6.
Alabama registered its 8th shutout in a 61β0 win over Ole Miss at Montgomery. To that point, the Crimson Tide had outscored its opposition 215β0.
November 8 Notre Dame won at Wisconsin 38β3
In a game at Berkeley, Stanford beat Utah 30β0, while in Seattle, California was tied by Washington.
Army beat visiting Florida 14β7, Dartmouth beat Boston University 38β0, and Yale beat Maryland 47β0
SMU was tied at Arkansas 14β14.
Alabama gave up its first points in a 42β7 win over visiting Kentucky. Missouri won at Oklahoma 10β0.
Chicago and Illinois played to a 21β21 tie.
November 15 Notre Dame beat Nebraska 34β6
Stanford beat Montana 41β3 and California beat Nevada 27β0
Army and Columbia played to a 14β14 tie, and Yale beat Princeton 10β0. In New York, Dartmouth closed its season unbeaten with a 27β14 win over Cornell.
Alabama was defeated by Centre College, 17β0, in a game at Birmingham.
SMU and Baylor played to a 7β7 tie in Dallas. Missouri beat Washington University in St. Louis 35β0. Chicago beat Northwestern 3β0.
November 22 In Chicago, Notre Dame beat Northwestern 13β6
Stanford (7β0β0) and California (7β0β1) were both unbeaten going into the final game of the season, played at Berkeley. The teams played to a 20β20 tie, with Stanford getting the bid to the Rose Bowl; California hosted a postseason game against Penn for New Year's Day
Yale closed its season unbeaten with a 19β6 win over Harvard. Chicago and Wisconsin played to a scoreless tie.
On Thanksgiving Day, November 27 Alabama beat Georgia 33β0 in Birmingham. Missouri beat Kansas 14β0, and received an invitation to play USC at the Los Angeles Christmas Festival (where it would lose, 20β7)
Notre Dame closed its season in Pittsburgh on Friday, November 28, with a 40β19 win over Carnegie Tech.
In the ArmyβNavy Game, held in Baltimore, Army won 12β0
On November 29 SMU and Oklahoma State played to a 13β13 tie, giving the Mustangs a season record of 5 wins, no losses and four ties.
Rose Bowl
Notre Dame had the Four Horsemen; Stanford had Ernie Nevers. Neither team had lost a game in 1924 and they met in Pasadena before a crowd of 52,000. The Stanford Indians took a 3β0 lead in the first quarter after Murray Cuddeback's field goal. In the second quarter, Elmer Layden ran for one touchdown, then scored another after picking off an Ernie Nevers pass and returning the interception to give the Irish a 13β3 lead at halftime. Stanford closed the gap to 13β10 in the third quarter with a pass from Ed Walker to Ted Shipkey, but lineman Ed Hunsinger scooped up a fumble from an attempted Stanford punt return to give Notre Dame its third touchdown. In the last quarter, Stanford was stopped eight inches from the goal line. Layden picked off another Nevers pass and returned it 70 yards for the final score, with Notre Dame winning 27β10.
Other bowls
Dixie Classic
Los Angeles Christmas Festival
Conference standings
Rankings listed below under the Dickinson System were not made during the 1924 season, but retroactively on October 16, 1925 when Frank G. Dickinson ranked 11 teams according to his mathematical formula, with Notre Dame having the best score, followed by California, Yale, Illinois and Stanford in the top five teams.
= Major conference standings
== Independents
== Minor conferences
== Minor conference standings
=Awards and honors
= All-Americans
=The consensus All-America team included:
Statistical leaders
Player scoring most points: Heinie Benkert, Rutgers, 100 (16 touchdowns and four extra points)
Total offense leader: Red Grange, Illinois, 1176