Sports season
1913 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football season League NCAA Sport College football Duration September 27, 1913 through November 29, 1913 Number of teams 17 Season champions Auburn
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.[1]
Fuzzy Woodruff says the Southern newspapers began to cover football more than the World Series .[1] 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.[n 1] Auburn does not claim the title.
Tennessee won its first SIAA game since 1910. Ole Miss was suspended from SIAA play.
Regular season [ edit ] Index to colors and formatting Non-conference matchup; SIAA member won Non-conference matchup; SIAA member lost Non-conference matchup; tie Conference matchup
SIAA teams in bold .
Week One [ edit ] Week Two [ edit ] Date Visiting team Home team Site Result Attendance Reference October 4 Birmingham Alabama The Quad • Tuscaloosa, AL W 81–0 October 4 Mercer Auburn Drake Field • Auburn, AL AUB 53–0 October 4 Louisville Manual Training School Centre Cheek Field • Danville, KY W 19–0 October 4 Davidson Clemson Bowman Field • Calhoun, SC W 6–3 October 4 Alabama Presbyterian Georgia Sanford Field • Athens, GA W 108–0 October 4 Georgia Tech The Citadel College Park Stadium • Charleston, SC GT 47–0 October 4 Kentucky Illinois Urbana, IL L 21–0 October 4 LSU Louisiana Tech Ruston, LA W 20–2 October 4 Howard Mississippi A&M Hardy Field • Starkville, MS W 66–0 October 4 Chattanooga Sewanee McGee Field • Sewanee, TN W 28–0 October 4 Athens Tennessee Waite Field • Knoxville, TN W 95–0 October 4 Maryville Vanderbilt Dudley Field • Nashville, TN W 59–0 October 6 Florida Southern Florida Fleming Field • Gainesville, FL W 144–0 [4]
Week Three [ edit ] Date Visiting team Home team Site Result Attendance Reference October 8 Ole Miss VMI VMI Parade Ground • Lexington, VA L 14–0 October 10 Mississippi College Mississippi A&M Hardy Field • Starkville, MS MSA&M 14–13 October 11 Clemson Alabama The Quad • Tuscaloosa, AL ALA 20–0 [5] October 11 Florida Auburn Drake Field • Auburn, AL AUB 55–0 [5] October 11 Porter Military The Citadel College Park Stadium • Charleston, SC T 0–0 October 11 North Georgia Georgia Sanford Field • Athens, GA W 51–0 October 11 LSU Louisiana-Lafayette Lafayette, LA W 26–0 October 11 10th District A. C. Mercer Macon, GA W 44–0 October 11 Marion County H. S. Sewanee McGee Field • Sewanee, TN W 88–0 October 11 Jefferson Tulane First Tulane Stadium • New Orleans, LA W 13–0 October 11 Centre Vanderbilt Dudley Field • Nashville, TN VAN 48–0 [5] October 12 Georgia Tech Chattanooga Chattanooga, TN W 71–6
Week Four [ edit ] Date Visiting team Home team Site Result Attendance Reference October 15 Ole Miss Virginia Medical Richmond, VA W 7–6 October 17 Transylvania Mississippi A&M Columbus, MS W 31–0 October 18 Auburn Clemson Bowman Field • Calhoun, SC AUB 20–0 [6] October 18 The Citadel Charleston College Park Stadium • Charleston, SC W 72–0 October 18 Maryville Florida Fleming Field • Gainesville, FL W 39–0 [7] October 18 Georgia Alabama Rickwood Field • Birmingham, AL UGA 20–0 [6] October 18 Mercer Georgia Tech Grant Field • Atlanta, GA GT 33–0 October 18 Ohio Northern Kentucky Lexington, KY W 21–0 October 18 Jefferson LSU State Field • Baton Rouge, LA W 45–6 October 18 Tennessee Sewanee Chattanooga, TN SEW 17–6 [6] October 18 Mississippi College Tulane First Tulane Stadium • New Orleans, LA MSCOLL 32–3 October 18 Henderson-Brown Vanderbilt Dudley Field • Nashville, TN W 33–0
Week Five [ edit ] Date Visiting team Home team Site Result Attendance Reference October 23 Baylor LSU State Field • Baton Rouge, LA W 50–0 October 23 Union (TN) Ole Miss Oxford, MS W 46–0 October 25 Alabama Tulane First Tulane Stadium • New Orleans, LA ALA 26–0 [8] October 25 Mississippi A&M Auburn Rickwood Field • Birmingham, AL AUB 34–0 [8] October 25 K. M. I. Centre Cheek Field • Danville, KY W 44–0 October 25 Georgia Tech Florida Jacksonville, FL GT 13–3 [9] October 25 Cincinnati Kentucky Lexington, KY W 27–7 October 25 Mercer The Citadel College Park Stadium • Charleston, SC T 7–7 October 25 Sewanee Texas Dallas, TX L 13–7 [8] October 25 Virginia Georgia Atlanta, GA L 13–6 [9] October 25 Davidson Tennessee Waite Field • Knoxville, TN W 9–0 October 25 Michigan Vanderbilt Dudley Field • Nashville, TN L 33–2
Week Six [ edit ] Date Visiting team Home team Site Result Attendance Reference October 30 Clemson South Carolina Columbia, SC W 32–0 November 1 Alabama Mississippi College Jackson, MS ALA 21–7 November 1 LSU Auburn Mobile, AL AUB 7–0 [10] November 1 Sewanee Georgia Tech Grant Field • Atlanta, GA GT 33–0 [10] November 1 North Carolina Georgia Sanford Field • Athens, GA W 19–6 [10] November 1 Earlham College Kentucky Lexington, KY W 28–0 November 1 Alabama Presbyterian Mercer Macon, GA W 33–0 November 1 Louisiana Tech Ole Miss Oxford, MS W 26–0 November 1 Mississippi A&M Texas A&M College Station, TX W 6–0 [11] November 1 Chattanooga Tennessee Waite Field • Knoxville, TN W 21–0 November 1 Saint Louis Tulane First Tulane Stadium • New Orleans, LA W 12–6 November 1 Vanderbilt Virginia Lambeth Field • Charlottesville, VA L 34–0
Week Seven [ edit ] Date Visiting team Home team Site Result Attendance Reference November 6 Clemson Georgia Augusta, GA UGA 18–15 November 7 Ole Miss Hendrix Conway, AR L 8–6 November 8 Auburn Georgia Tech Grant Field • Atlanta, GA AUB 20–0 [11] November 8 Centre Chattanooga Chattanooga, TN L 27–18 November 8 Clemson The Citadel College Park Stadium • Charleston, SC CLEM 7–3 November 8 Florida South Carolina Columbia, SC L 13–0 [12] November 8 Wilmington Kentucky Lexington, KY W 33–0 November 8 Arkansas LSU Fair Grounds Field • Shreveport, LA W 12–7 November 8 Stetson Mercer Macon, GA L 13–6 November 8 Mississippi A&M Tulane First Tulane Stadium • New Orleans, LA MSA&M 32–0 [12] November 8 Tennessee Vanderbilt Dudley Field • Nashville, TN VAN 7–6 [11] November 9 Sewanee Alabama Rickwood Field • Birmingham, AL SEW 10–7
Week Eight [ edit ] Week Nine [ edit ] Week Ten [ edit ] Date Visiting team Home team Site Result Attendance Reference November 26 The Citadel South Carolina Columbia, SC L 42–13 November 27 Arkansas Tulane First Tulane Stadium • New Orleans, LA L 14–0 November 27 Mercer Florida Fleming Field • Gainesville, FL FLA 24–0 [15] November 27 Centre Transylvania Lexington, KY L 6–0 November 27 Clemson Georgia Tech Grant Field • Atlanta, GA GT 34–0 [16] November 27 Tennessee Kentucky Lexington, KY TENN 13–7 November 27 Ole Miss Southern Miss Hattiesburg, MS W 13–7 November 27 Mississippi A&M Alabama Rickwood Field • Birmingham, AL MSA&M 7–0 [16] November 27 LSU Texas A&M Houston, TX T 7–7 November 29 Ole Miss Ouachita Arkadelphia, AR T 0–0
Awards and honors [ edit ] All-Americans [ edit ] All-Southern team [ edit ] The composite All-Southern team formed by the selection of 18 sporting writers culled by the Atlanta Constitution included:[17]
Position Name First-team selectors Team QB David Paddock C, ZC, SP Georgia HB Bob McWhorter C, ZC, SP Georgia HB Kirk Newell C, ZC, SP Auburn FB Red Harris C, ZC Auburn E Enoch Brown C, ZC, SP Vanderbilt T Tom Brown C, ZC, SP Vanderbilt G Big Thigpen C, ZC, SP Auburn C Boozer Pitts C, ZC, SP Auburn G R. N. MacCallum C Sewanee T Paul Turner C, ZC, SP Georgia E Robbie Robinson C, ZC, SP Auburn
^ Under Billingsley's primary methodology, Chicago was recognized as the national champion.[2] [3] References [ edit ] ^ a b Woodruff 1928 , p. 276 ^ National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) (2015). "National Poll Rankings" (PDF) . NCAA Division I Football Records . NCAA. p. 108. Retrieved January 4, 2016 . ^ "Billingsley's National Champions by Year" . College Football Research Center. 2008. Archived from the original on October 11, 2002. Retrieved January 11, 2017 . ^ Robbie Andreu. "No. 74 FLORIDA 144, FLORIDA SOUTHERN 0" . ^ a b c Woodruff 1928 , p. 277 ^ a b c Woodruff 1928 , p. 278 ^ "Florida 39, Maryville 0" . The Atlanta Constitution . October 19, 1913. p. 10. Retrieved July 22, 2016 – via Newspapers.com . ^ a b c Woodruff 1928 , p. 280 ^ a b Woodruff 1928 , p. 279 ^ a b c Woodruff 1928 , p. 281 ^ a b c Woodruff 1928 , p. 282 ^ a b c d Woodruff 1928 , p. 283 ^ "Florida 18, Citadel 13" . The Atlanta Constitution . November 16, 1913. p. 10. Retrieved July 22, 2016 – via Newspapers.com . ^ a b c Woodruff 1928 , p. 285 ^ "Florida 24, Mercer 0" . The Atlanta Constitution . November 28, 1913. p. 9. Retrieved July 22, 2016 – via Newspapers.com . ^ a b Woodruff 1928 , p. 286 ^ "Composite All-Southern Eleven Chosen By Eighteen Dopesters" . Atlanta Constitution . December 2, 1913. p. 8. Retrieved March 3, 2015 – via Newspapers.com . Woodruff, Fuzzy (1928). A History of Southern Football 1890–1928 . Vol. 1.
Championships & awards Seasons