1930 college football season

The 1930 college football season saw Notre Dame repeat as national champion under the Dickinson System, and a post-season Rose Bowl matchup between two unbeaten (9–0) teams, Washington State and Alabama, ranked No. 2 and No. 3, respectively. Alabama won the Pasadena contest, 24–0.

Conference and program changes

Conference changes

Membership changes

School1929 Conference1930 Conference
Duke Blue DevilsIndependentSoCon

Program changes

September

September 20 Stanford opened its season against a non-college team, beating the West Coast Army club, 32–0

September 27 Nearly all the big schools scheduled tune-up games against weaker visitors, and all but one shut out the opposition. Michigan opened its season with a doubleheader, beating Denison 33–0 and Eastern Michigan 7–0. Other schools rolled up high scores, as Stanford beat the Olympic Club, 18–0; Army beat Boston University 39–0; Alabama beat Samford, 43–0; USC rolled over UCLA 52–0; Tennessee beat Maryville College 54–0; Dartmouth beat Norwich College 79–0; and Tulane defeated Lafayette College of Louisiana, 84–0. Only Washington State was scored upon, getting a surprise from the Coyotes of College of Idaho, which unleashed a surprise passing attack for two touchdowns (and 12 of 19 completions) in the fourth quarter. WSU won 47–12.[1]

October

October 4 Notre Dame opened its season with a 20–14 win over visiting Southern Methodist. Northwestern beat visiting Tulane, 14–0. Washington State won at California 16–0 and USC beat visiting Oregon State 27–7, while Stanford defeated Santa Clara 20–0. Dartmouth beat Bates 20–0 and Army beat Furman, 54–0. Alabama rolled over visiting Ole Miss, 64–0 and in Danville, Kentucky, Tennessee defeated Centre College 18–0. Michigan and Michigan State played to a scoreless tie.

October 11 Washington State edged visiting USC 7–6. Notre Dame beat Navy 26–2. Northwestern beat Ohio State 19–2, and Michigan narrowly won over Purdue 14–13. Dartmouth crushed visiting Boston University 74–0, and Army beat Swarthmore 39–0. Tennessee beat Ole Miss 27–0. In Birmingham, Alabama shut out Sewanee 25–0, and in Dallas, Tulane beat Texas A&M 19–9. In Minneapolis, Stanford and Minnesota played to a 0–0 tie.

October 18 Alabama and Tennessee, both 3–0–0, and both unscored upon, met at Tuscaloosa in a game that would ultimately determine the fictional championship of the South. Alabama won 18–6. Notre Dame beat Carnegie Tech 21–6. Northwestern won at Illinois 32–0 and Michigan won at Ohio State, 13–0 USC won at Utah State 65–0, Washington State won in Spokane at Gonzaga University, 24–0, and Stanford beat Oregon State 13–7. Dartmouth beat Columbia 52–0 and Army defeated Harvard, 6–0. Tulane defeated Birmingham Southern College 21–0

October 25 Alabama and Vanderbilt, both 4–0–0, met at Birmingham. In another close game, Alabama won 12–7. USC (3–1–0) and Stanford (3–0–1) met in Palo Alto, with the Trojans handing the Indians their first loss of the season, 41–12. Notre Dame won at Pittsburgh 35–19. Washington State beat visiting Montana, 61–0. Northwestern beat Centre College 45–7 and Michigan beat Illinois 15–7.(Dartmouth was scored upon, winning at Harvard 7–2, and Army's streak of shutouts ended with its 7–7 tie at Yale. Tennessee beat visiting North Carolina 9–7, and in Atlanta, Tulane shut out Georgia Tech 28–0.

November

November 1 Dartmouth (5–0–0) and (3–1–1) Yale (3–1–1) played to a 0–0 tie in New Haven. Notre Dame beat Indiana 27–0 and Northwestern won at Minnesota 27–6 USC beat Denver, 33–13. Army defeated visiting North Dakota 33–6. In Portland, Washington State defeated Oregon State 14–7. Alabama won at Kentucky, 19–0, Tennessee beat Clemson 27–0 and Tulane beat Mississippi State 53–0

November 8 Notre Dame beat Pennsylvania 60–20. Washington State won at Idaho 33–7. Northwestern won at Indiana 25–0 and Michigan won at Harvard 6–3. Army defeated Illinois at Yankee Stadium, 13–0. USC beat California 74–0 and Stanford beat Washington 25–7 Alabama won at Florida, 20–0, Tulane beat Auburn 21–0, and Allegheny College did what no other team had done that season, scoring two touchdowns against Dartmouth; the Big Green won 43–14 to stay unbeaten. Tennessee shut out Carson-Newman College 34–0

November 15 Tennessee and Vanderbilt University, both 6–1–0, met at Nashville, with Tennessee winning 13–0. Notre Dame defeated Drake University 28–7. In Seattle, Washington State won another close one, beating Washington 3–0. Alabama beat LSU in a game at Montgomery, Alabama, 33–0, while Tulane (6–1–0) and Georgia (6–0–1) met at New Orleans, with Tulane handing the Bulldogs their first loss, 25–0 Northwestern beat Wisconsin 20–7 and Michigan beat Minnesota 7–0 USC defeated visiting Hawaii 52–0, while Stanford beat Caltech, 57–7 Dartmouth won at Cornell 19–13. Army beat Kentucky Wesleyan 47–2

November 22 Notre Dame and Northwestern, both unbeaten (7–0–0) met at Evanston, with the Fighting Irish winning 14–0. Michigan beat Chicago 16–0 Stanford won at California 41–0. Army defeated Ursinus College 18–0.

November 27, Thanksgiving Day, Alabama (8–0–0) met Georgia (6–1–1) in Birmingham. The Crimson Tide extended its unbeaten streak, 13–0, to close the regular season unbeaten. The champion of the South also earned a Rose Bowl invitation to face Washington State. USC beat Washington 32–0. Tennessee defeated Kentucky 8–0 and Tulane won over LSU, 12–7.

November 29 (8–0–0) Notre Dame and (8–0–1) Army met at Chicago, with the Irish narrowly winning 7–6. In Philadelphia, Washington State beat Villanova, 13–0, to close its season 9–0–0. (8–1–1)Stanford hosted (7–0–1) Dartmouth and won 14–7

December

Although the Rose Bowl was the lone postseason game, and other bowl games were still four years in the future, several big contests were played after most colleges had completed their seasons.

December 6 In Los Angeles, a crowd of 90,000 turned out at the Coliseum as Notre Dame (9–0–0) visited USC (8–1–0). While some predicted a Trojans win, or at least a close game, "Rockne's Ramblers" scored six minutes into the game and never looked back. Paul O'Connor, a third string player earlier in the season, had 11 carries for 142 yards, and one touchdown. The Irish closed their season with a decisive 27–0 victory [2] and with another victory over a tough opponent, finished first in the Dickinson ratings. Nobody realized at the time that Knute Rockne had coached his final game. Rockne was killed in a plane crash on March 31, 1931. At Jacksonville, Tennessee defeated Florida 13–6.

December 13 In the Army–Navy Game, played in New York, Army won 6–0 to close its season at 9–1–1.

1931 Rose Bowl

The Rose Bowl stadium's capacity had been increased to 81,000, but only 65,000 spectators turned out to watch an East-West matchup between two unbeaten (9–0–0), but out-of-state teams, the Washington State Cougars and the Alabama Crimson Tide. It was the Cougars who were decked out in crimson, however, in what reports of the day described as "a bizarre touch". Besides solid red jerseys, pants and socks, the WSU players had bright red leather helmets and shoes.

Freddie Sington, Bama's star tackle/linebacker, was pitted against WSU's Turk Edwards, and blocked WSU's only chance to score. In addition, Sington blocked for the rushing of Johnny Campbell, "The Mississippi Rabbit", who ran 42 yards for one of Alabama's three touchdowns in the second quarter. After a 21–0 halftime lead, Alabama went on to a 24–0 win.[3]

Conference standings

Major conference standings

1930 Big Six Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Kansas $ 4 1 0  6 2 0
Oklahoma 3 1 1  4 3 1
Kansas State 3 2 0  5 3 0
Nebraska 2 2 1  4 3 2
Missouri 1 2 2  2 5 2
Iowa State 0 5 0  0 9 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
No. 5 Michigan + 5 0 0  8 0 1
No. 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
1930 Middle Three Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Lafayette $ 2 0 0  5 3 1
Rutgers 1 1 0  4 5 0
Lehigh 0 2 0  4 5 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Missouri Valley Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Drake + 3 0 0  5 4 0
Oklahoma A&M + 2 0 0  7 2 1
Washington University 2 2 0  4 2 2
Grinnell 1 2 0  5 4 0
Creighton 0 4 0  1 7 0
  • + Conference co-champions
1930 Pacific Coast Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Washington State $ 6 0 0  9 1 0
USC 5 1 0  8 2 0
Stanford 4 1 0  9 1 1
Oregon 3 1 0  7 2 0
Washington 3 4 0  5 4 0
Oregon State 2 3 0  7 3 0
Montana 1 3 0  5 3 0
California 1 4 0  4 5 0
UCLA 1 4 0  3 5 0
Idaho 0 5 0  4 7 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Rocky Mountain Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Utah $ 7 0 0  8 0 0
Colorado 5 1 1  6 1 1
BYU 4 1 1  5 2 4
Denver 4 3 0  5 4 0
Colorado Agricultural 3 3 1  3 5 1
Montana State 1 1 0  6 3 0
Colorado Teachers 2 2 3  2 2 3
Utah State 3 4 1  3 5 1
Colorado College 2 4 2  2 4 2
Wyoming 1 5 1  2 5 1
Colorado Mines 1 4 0  1 5 0
Western State (CO) 0 5 0  0 6 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Southern Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Alabama + 8 0 0  10 0 0
Tulane + 5 0 0  8 1 0
Tennessee 6 1 0  9 1 0
Duke 4 1 1  8 1 2
Vanderbilt 5 2 0  8 2 0
Maryland 4 2 0  7 5 0
Florida 4 2 1  6 3 1
North Carolina 4 2 2  5 3 2
Clemson 3 2 0  8 2 0
Georgia 3 2 1  7 2 1
Kentucky 4 3 0  5 3 0
South Carolina 4 3 0  6 4 0
VPI 2 3 1  5 3 1
Mississippi A&M 2 3 0  2 7 0
Georgia Tech 2 4 1  2 6 1
LSU 2 4 0  2 6 1
Virginia 2 5 0  4 6 0
Sewanee 1 4 0  3 6 1
NC State 1 5 0  2 8 0
Ole Miss 1 5 0  3 5 1
Auburn 1 6 0  3 7 0
Washington and Lee 0 4 1  3 6 1
VMI 0 5 0  3 6 0
  • + Conference co-champions
1930 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Presbyterian $ 6 0 0  9 1 0
Centre 5 0 0  7 3 0
Spring Hill 4 0 0  6 2 0
Loyola (LA) 2 0 0  9 1 0
Centenary 2 0 0  8 1 1
Western Kentucky 6 1 0  8 1 1
Louisiana Normal 4 1 0  7 2 0
Mississippi College 4 1 0  7 2 0
The Citadel 3 1 1  4 5 2
Kentucky Wesleyan 2 1 1  2 4 3
Chattanooga 3 2 1  5 3 2
Mercer 3 2 0  5 5 0
Millsaps 3 3 0  6 3 0
Louisville 2 2 0  5 3 0
Birmingham–Southern 3 3 0  5 4 0
Stetson 3 3 0  5 3 0
Howard (AL) 2 3 0  5 5 0
Miami (FL) 2 3 1  3 4 1
Southwestern (TN) 1 2 0  6 3 0
Erskine 1 2 1  2 5 1
Louisiana Tech 2 5 0  3 6 0
Georgetown (KY) 1 3 0  2 7 0
Wofford 1 3 0  2 9 0
Union (TN) 1 4 0  1 5 2
Transylvania 1 4 1  1 5 2
Louisiana College 1 5 0  2 6 0
SW Louisiana 1 5 0  2 8 0
Rollins 0 0 2  2 1 3
Newberry 0 2 1  0 5 3
Florida Southern 0 4 1  0 6 1
Eastern Kentucky 0 4 0  1 7 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Southwest Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Texas $ 4 1 0  8 1 1
Baylor 3 1 1  6 3 1
TCU 4 2 0  9 2 1
SMU 2 2 1  6 3 1
Arkansas 2 2 0  3 6 0
Rice 2 4 0  8 4 0
Texas A&M 0 5 0  2 7 0
  • $ Conference champion

Independents

1930 Eastern college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Colgate      9 1 0
Fordham      8 1 0
Army      9 1 1
Dartmouth      7 1 1
NYU      7 3 0
Cornell      6 2 0
Pittsburgh      6 2 1
Tufts      5 2 0
Temple      7 3 0
Bucknell      6 3 0
Carnegie Tech      6 3 0
Duquesne      6 3 0
Syracuse      5 2 2
Yale      5 2 2
Brown      6 3 1
Drexel      6 3 1
Franklin & Marshall      5 3 1
Columbia      5 4 0
Penn      5 4 0
Boston College      5 5 0
Villanova      5 5 0
Penn State      3 4 2
Harvard      3 4 1
Princeton      1 5 1
Massachusetts      1 8 0
1930 Midwestern college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Notre Dame      10 0 0
Marquette      8 0 1
Haskell      9 1 0
Michigan State      5 1 2
DePaul      4 2 1
Detroit      5 3 2
Kent State      3 3 1
Saint Louis      3 3 2
John Carroll      3 5 2
Loyola (IL)      2 6 0
1930 Southern college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Western Maryland      9 0 1
Texas Mines      7 1 1
Appalachian State      8 2 1
William & Mary      7 2 1
William & Mary Norfolk      3 1 0
Delaware      6 3 1
Wake Forest      5 3 1
Davidson      6 4 0
Navy      6 5 0
West Virginia      5 5 0
George Washington      4 4 1
Georgetown      5 5 0
South Georgia Teachers      3 4 2
Richmond      2 4 2
Texas Tech      3 6 0
Jefferson      1 3 0
Catholic University      1 8 0
1930 Western college football independents records
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Saint Mary's      8 1 0
Arizona      6 1 1
Santa Barbara State      6 1 1
Hawaii      5 2 0
Columbia (OR)      4 2 0
San Francisco      6 3 0
New Mexico A&M      5 3 0
Santa Clara      5 3 1
New Mexico      4 5 0
Loyola (CA)      2 3 1
Arizona State      3 5 1
Gonzaga      1 7 1
Humboldt State      0 6 0

Minor conferences

Conference Champion(s) Record
Big Four Conference Tulsa 3–0
Central Intercollegiate Athletics Association Morgan College 6–1
Central Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Washburn 6–0
Far Western Conference Fresno State Normal 5–0
Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Iowa Wesleyan
William Penn
4–0–1
5–0–3
Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference St. Mary's (KS) 5–0
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association Alma
Kalamazoo
4–1
Midwest Collegiate Athletic Conference Coe 2–0–2
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Saint Olaf
Saint Thomas (MN)
5–0
4–0
Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association Northeast Missouri State Teachers 3–0
Nebraska College Athletic Conference Cotner College
Nebraska Intercollegiate Athletic Association Nebraska State Teachers
North Central Intercollegiate Athletic Conference North Dakota 4–0
Ohio Athletic Conference Muskingum 3–0–1
Oklahoma Collegiate Athletic Conference East Central State Normal 4–0
Pacific Northwest Conference Whitman 4–0–1
South Dakota Intercollegiate Conference Black Hills Teachers
Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Cal Tech 4–0
Southwestern Athletic Conference Wiley (TX) 4–0
Texas Collegiate Athletic Conference Howard Payne 4–0–1
Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association Sam Houston State Teachers 5–0
Tri-Normal League Unknown
Wisconsin State Teachers College Conference Milwaukee State Teachers 4–0

Minor conference standings

1930 Big Four Conference (Oklahoma) football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Tulsa $ 3 0 0  7 2 0
Oklahoma City 2 1 0  9 1 0
Phillips 1 2 0  6 3 0
Oklahoma Baptist 0 3 0  4 5 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Buckeye Athletic Association football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Ohio $ 4 0 0  8 0 1
Ohio Wesleyan 3 1 0  5 4 0
Cincinnati 2 2 0  5 4 0
Miami (OH) 1 3 0  4 4 1
Denison 0 4 0  2 7 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Central Intercollegiate Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Washburn $ 6 0 0  7 2 0
Wichita 4 1 1  6 3 1
Emporia Teachers 2 1 3  4 2 3
Pittsburg State 3 3 0  5 3 0
Hays Teachers 1 4 1  2 5 2
Southwestern (KS) 1 4 1  2 5 1
College of Emporia 0 4 2  0 7 2
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Far Western Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Fresno State $ 5 0 0  8 0 0
Nevada 2 1 0  2 4 2
Pacific (CA) 2 2 0  3 6 0
San Jose State 1 2 1  2 3 3
Cal Aggies 0 3 1  0 7 1
Chico State 0 2 0  3 4 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Southern Illinois + 5 0 0  9 0 0
Millikin + 4 0 0  5 2 0
Mount Morris + 3 0 0  9 0 0
Eastern Illinois 5 1 1  6 1 1
Northern Illinois State 4 1 1  6 2 1
Knox (IL) 4 1 0  5 2 1
Monmouth (IL) 5 2 0  5 4 0
Lake Forest 2 1 0  5 1 1
Illinois Wesleyan 4 2 0  6 2 0
Elmhurst 3 2 0  6 2 0
Augustana (IL) 3 2 0  4 3 0
North Central 2 2 1  6 2 1
Bradley 2 2 1  4 3 1
Carthage 3 3 0  3 4 1
Western Illinois 3 4 0  4 4 0
Shurtleff 2 3 0  6 4 0
St. Viator 3 5 0  3 6 0
Eureka 2 6 0  2 6 0
Illinois State 1 7 0  1 7 0
Wheaton (IL) 0 4 0  2 6 0
McKendree 0 5 0  3 6 0
Illinois College 0 7 0  0 8 0
  • + Conference co-champions
1930 Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
St. Mary's (KS) $ 5 0 0  6 3 0
Baker 4 1 0  5 4 0
Kansas Wesleyan 2 2 1  4 3 2
Bethany (KS) 2 2 1  3 4 2
Ottawa 0 4 0  1 6 0
McPherson 0 4 0  1 7 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Michigan Collegiate Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Michigan State Normal $ 3 0 0  6 1 0
Western State (MI) 2 1 0  5 1 1
Central State (MI) 1 2 0  6 2 0
Detroit City College 0 3 0  0 9 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Alma + 4 1 0  5 3 0
Kalamazoo + 4 1 0  5 3 0
Hillsdale 3 2 0  5 3 0
Albion 3 2 0  4 4 0
Olivet 1 4 0  3 4 1
Hope 0 5 0  0 6 0
  • + Conference co-champions
1930 Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
St. Olaf + 5 0 0  8 0 0
St. Thomas (MN) + 4 0 0  6 2 0
Gustavus Adolphus 3 2 0  6 2 0
Macalester 3 2 0  5 2 0
Concordia (MN) 2 2 0  4 3 1
Saint John's (MN) 0 3 1  1 4 1
Hamline 0 4 1  0 6 1
Augsburg 0 4 0  1 4 1
  • + Conference co-champions
1930 Missouri College Athletic Union football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Central Methodist $ 6 0 0  9 0 0
Missouri Mines 3 0 0  5 1 1
William Jewell 2 2 0  2 5 1
Missouri Valley 2 3 0  4 4 1
Westminster (MO) 2 3 0  4 5 0
Drury 1 4 0  1 7 0
Culver–Stockton 0 1 1  4 2 1
Tarkio 0 3 1  1 5 3
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Missouri Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Kirksville State $ 3 0 0  5 5 0
NW Missouri State 3 1 0  4 5 1
SW Missouri State 2 2 0  4 5 0
SE Missouri State 0 2 0  1 6 1
Central Missouri State 0 3 0  4 4 1
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Nebraska College Athletic Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Cotner $ 5 1 0  6 1 1
Nebraska Wesleyan 4 1 0  6 3 0
Doane 3 2 0  4 3 0
Hastings 3 2 0  3 4 1
York (NE) 1 2 1  3 3 2
Midland 2 4 0  2 5 1
Grand Island 1 3 1  1 4 2
Nebraska Central 0 4 0  0 6 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Nebraska Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Kearney State $ 3 0 0  7 0 1
Peru State 2 0 1  4 2 1
Chadron State 1 2 0  5 2 0
Wayne State 1 2 1  5 3 1
Omaha 0 3 0  3 4 2
  • $ Conference champion
1930 New England Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
New Hampshire $ 2 0 0  5 2 1
Maine 2 1 0  3 4 0
Rhode Island State 0 1 1  5 2 1
Connecticut 0 2 1  1 5 1
  • $ Conference champion
  • Dubious – Discuss
1930 North Central Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
North Dakota $ 4 0 0  9 1 0
North Dakota Agricultural 3 1 0  7 2 0
Morningside 2 2 0  7 2 0
South Dakota State 1 3 0  2 6 1
South Dakota 0 4 0  1 5 2
  • $ Conference champion
1930 North State Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Catawba $ 5 0 0  8 0 1
Elon 4 1 0  6 3 0
Guilford 2 2 0  4 5 1
High Point 1 2 1  2 6 2
Lenoir–Rhyne 1 3 1  3 6 1
Atlantic Christian 0 5 0  1 7 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Northwest Ohio League football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Findlay $ 3 0 1  4 2 1
Bowling Green 2 0 2  6 0 2
Defiance 2 2 0  3 4 0
Toledo 1 2 1  2 5 1
Bluffton 0 4 0  0 7 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Ohio Athletic Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Muskingum $ 3 0 1  6 1 1
Akron 5 1 0  7 1 0
Wooster 4 1 1  5 3 1
Xavier 2 1 0  6 4 0
Otterbein 3 2 0  4 3 1
Case 3 3 0  5 4 0
Mount Union 3 3 0  4 5 1
Marietta 2 2 0  3 5 0
Oberlin 2 4 0  2 6 0
Western Reserve 1 3 0  1 7 0
Ohio Northern 1 4 0  3 5 0
Baldwin–Wallace 1 5 0  1 6 0
Kenyon 0 4 1  1 6 1
Hiram 0 5 0  0 8 0
Heidelberg * 2 0 0  8 0 0
Dayton * 2 0 0  4 3 2
Capital * 4 0 1  5 1 1
  • $ Conference champion
  • * – did not compete for championship
1930 Oklahoma Collegiate Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
East Central $ 4 0 0  8 1 0
Central State (OK) 4 1 0  6 3 0
SE Oklahoma State 3 1 0  6 2 1
NW Oklahoma State 1 3 1  5 3 1
Northeastern State 1 4 0  4 5 0
SW Oklahoma State 0 4 1  2 5 1
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Smoky Mountain Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Maryville $ 2 0 0  5 4 0
Lincoln Memorial 2 0 0  4 6 0
King 3 1 0  6 2 1
Carson–Newman 3 2 0  5 4 0
Milligan 1 2 1  4 4 1
Tusculum 1 3 1  2 5 1
East Tennessee Teachers 0 4 0  0 7 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 South Dakota Intercollegiate Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Yankton $ 4 0 1  6 0 2
Northern State 4 1 0  5 1 1
Southern Normal 4 1 1  ? ? ?
Dakota Wesleyan 3 1 0  6 3 0
Spearfish 3 2 0  5 3 0
Eastern Normal 2 2 1  2 2 2
Augustana (SD) 2 3 0  2 7 0
South Dakota Mines 2 4 0  3 5 0
Huron 1 6 0  1 7 0
Sioux Falls 0 5 1  0 6 1
  • $ Conference champion
  • Sioux Falls and Spearfish played twice. The second game was not counted in the conference standings.
1930 Southern California Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Caltech $ 4 0 0  5 3 1
Whittier 4 1 0  5 3 1
San Diego State 3 3 0  5 4 0
Occidental 2 3 0  4 4 0
Redlands 2 3 0  3 5 0
Pomona 2 3 0  2 5 0
La Verne 0 4 0  0 6 1
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Southwestern Athletic Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Wiley $         
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Texas Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Howard Payne $ 4 0 1  7 2 2
Southwestern (TX) 3 1 1  3 4 4
Simmons (TX) 1 1 3  5 1 4
Austin 2 2 1  3 5 1
St. Edward's 0 3 2  1 4 2
Trinity (TX) 1 4 0  2 6 0
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Texas Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Sam Houston State $ 5 0 0  9 1 0
West Texas State 4 0 1  6 3 1
North Texas State Teachers 4 1 0  5 4 1
Southwest Texas State 3 1 2  5 1 3
McMurry 3 2 1  3 4 2
Daniel Baker 2 2 2  2 7 2
Texas A&I 1 2 1  3 3 3
Abilene Christian 1 3 1  2 7 1
East Texas State 1 4 0  2 7 0
Sul Ross 0 3 0  1 7 0
Stephen F. Austin 0 6 0  1 7 1
  • $ Conference champion
1930 Tri-State Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L T  W L T
Geneva $ 3 0 0  9 1 0
Thiel 2 1 0  3 6 0
Waynesburg 1 1 0  2 7 0
Westminster (PA) 1 2 0  4 5 0
Bethany (WV) 0 3 0  0 8 0
  • $ Conference champion

Dickinson System

The AP sportswriters' poll would not begin continuously until 1936.[4] (although, the first time was a one instance publishing in 1934[5]) Frank G. Dickinson, an economics professor at the University of Illinois, had invented the Dickinson System to rank colleges based upon their records and the strength of their opposition.

The system was originally designed to rank teams in the Big Nine (later the Big Ten) conference. Chicago clothing manufacturer Jack Rissman then persuaded Dickinson to rank the nation's teams under the system, and awarded the Rissman Trophy to the winning university.[6]

The system awarded 30 points for a win over a "strong team", and 20 for a win over a "weak team". Losses were awarded points (15 for loss to a strong team, 10 for loss to a weak team). Ties were treated as half a win and half a loss (22.5 for a tie with a strong team, 15 for a tie with a weak team). An average was then derived by dividing the points by games played.[7]

Final Dickinson rankings

Notre Dame, Washington State and Alabama, all unbeaten and untied, were ranked first, second and third by Dickinson, with the Irish getting the higher rating based on their opposition.[8]

Rank Team Record Rating
1 Notre Dame 10–0 25.13
2 Washington State 9–0 20.44
3 Alabama 9–0 20.18
4 Northwestern Wildcats 7–1 18.63
5 Michigan 8–0–1 18.34
6 USC 8–2 17.98
7 Stanford 9–1–1 17.92
8 Dartmouth 7–1–1 17.11
9 Army 9–1–1 16.66
10 Tennessee 9–1 16.15
11 Tulane 8–1 16.05

See also

References

  1. "Little Idaho College Makes Good Showing," The Independent (Helena, Mont.), Sept. 28, 1930, p9
  2. "Notre Dame Upsets U.S.C., Wins 27 to 0," Oakland Tribune December 7, 1930, p1
  3. "SINGTON STARS IN ALABAMA'S 24–0 TRIUMPH," Oakland Tribune, January 2, 1931, p1
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-04-17. Retrieved 2009-01-06.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-02-13. Retrieved 2009-12-29.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. Herschel Nissenson Tales From College Football's Sidelines (Sports Publishing LLC, 2001), p93.
  7. "The Dickinson system awards 30 points for a victory over a strong team, and 20 for victory over a weak team. Defeats count half as much as victories, and ties are consideredas games half won and half lost. Dividing this total by the number of games played gives the final rating, "ILLINOIS BEST FOOTBALL TEAM OF YEAR," The Syracuse Herald, Dec. 4, 1927, p23
  8. "Notre Dame's Easy Win Over S.C. Gives Irish National Title," The Lima (O.) News, December 7, 1930, p23
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