1930 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team

1930 Minnesota Golden Gophers football
Conference Big Ten Conference
1930 record 3–4–1 (1–3 Big Ten)
Head coach Fritz Crisler (1st season)
MVP Clarence Munn
Captain Win Brockmeyer
Home stadium Memorial Stadium
1930 Big Ten football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
#5 Michigan + 5 0 0  8 0 1
#4 Northwestern + 5 0 0  7 1 0
Purdue 4 2 0  6 2 0
Wisconsin 2 2 1  6 2 1
Ohio State 2 2 1  5 2 1
Minnesota 1 3 0  3 4 1
Indiana 1 3 0  2 5 1
Illinois 1 4 0  3 5 0
Iowa 0 1 0  4 4 0
Chicago 0 4 0  2 5 2
  • + Conference co-champions
Rankings from Dickinson System

The 1930 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team represented the University of Minnesota in the 1930 college football season. In their first year under head coach Fritz Crisler, the Golden Gophers compiled a 3–4–1 record, shut out four opponents (including a scoreless tie with Stanford), and outscored all opponents by a combined score of 126 to 81. Out of 126 points scored by the Golden Gophers, most were scored in two games against schools from South Dakota who the Golden Gophers defeated by a combined score of 107 to 0.[1]

Guard Clarence Munn was selected as the team's Most Valuable Player.[2] Munn was also selected by the United Press as a first-team player on the 1930 All-Big Ten Conference football team.[3]

Total attendance for the season was 167,728, which averaged to 27,955.[4] The season high for attendance was against Northwestern.[4]

Schedule

Date Opponent Site Result Attendance
September 27 South Dakota State* Memorial StadiumMinneapolis, MN W 48–0   20,000
October 4 Vanderbilt* Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN L 7–33   20,000
October 11 Stanford* Memorial Stadiumw • Minneapolis, MN T 0–0   45,000
October 18 Indiana Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN W 6–0   20,000
November 1 Northwestern Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN L 6–27   54,000
November 8 South Dakota* Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN W 59–0   20,000
November 15 at Michigan Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI (Little Brown Jug) L 0–7   54,944
November 22 at Wisconsin Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI (Rivalry) L 0–14   32,000
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming.

Game summaries

Michigan

1 2 3 4 Total
Gophers 0 0 0 0 0
Wolverines 7 0 0 0 7

In the seventh week of the season, Minnesota played Michigan in the annual competition for the Little Brown Jug. The game marked the first appearance by Fritz Crisler as a head coach at Michigan Stadium. Crisler was in his first year as head coach at Minnesota; he took over as Michigan's head coach eight years later. Michigan won the game 7 to 0. The game's only score came in the first quarter on a 45-yard punt return by Michigan's left halfback, Jack Wheeler. The return was off of a punt by Minnesota's All-American Biggie Munn. A newspaper account of the game described Wheeler's run as follows:

"Wheeler's run will go down as one of Michigan's, classics. He got the ball after a low, twisting kick by Munn had traveled to the Minnesota 45-yard line. Wheeler gathered it in and charged. He hit two Minnesota tacklers and knifed his way between them. He staggered a yard or two from the impact and sidestepped another Gopher tackler. Morrison came across like a charging bull to take another from Wheeler's path. He waved away, and slid yards across the goal line on his dive for a touchdown."[5]

Despite the lack of scoring, the Associated Press reported that the game was "a desperately-fought breath-taking football battle."[5]

References

  1. "1930 Minnesota Golden Gophers Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved November 1, 2017.
  2. Keiser, Jeff (2007), 2007 Media Guide (PDF), p. 181
  3. "United Press Names Big Ten All Stars: Wildcats Lead With Four Men on Honor Team; Harry Newman Called Best Quarterback in Conference Since Friedman". Decatur Herald. November 24, 1930. p. 3.
  4. 1 2 Keiser, Jeff (2007), 2007 Media Guide (PDF), p. 160
  5. 1 2 W.G. Stevenson (1930-11-16). "Michigan Beats Gophers, 7-0; Still In Big Ten Race; 45-Yard Run By Wheeler Lone Score". Capital Times (AP story).
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