1945 College Football All-America Team
1945 College Football All-America Team |
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College Football All-America Team |
1945 college football season |
1943 1944 ← → 1946 1947 |
The 1945 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers that chose College Football All-America Teams in 1945. The nine selectors recognized by the NCAA as "official" for the 1945 season are (1) Collier's Weekly, as selected by Grantland Rice, (2) the Associated Press, (3) the United Press, (4) the All-America Board, (5) the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), (6) the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), (7) the International News Service (INS), (8) Look magazine, (9) the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA) and (10) the Sporting News.
Consensus All-Americans
[edit]For the year 1945, the NCAA recognizes 10 published All-American teams as "official" designations for purposes of its consensus determinations. The following chart identifies the NCAA-recognized consensus All-Americans and displays which first-team designations they received.
Name | Position | School | Number | Official selectors | Other selectors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Glenn Davis | Halfback | Army | 10/10 | AAB, AFCA, AP, COL, FWAA, INS, LK, NEA, SN, UP | CNS, CP, NL, NYS, OF, WC, YA |
Doc Blanchard | Fullback | Army | 10/10 | AAB, AFCA, AP, COL, FWAA, INS, LK, NEA, SN, UP | CNS, CP, NL NYS, OF, WC, YA |
Tex Coulter | Tackle | Army | 9/10 | AAB, AFCA, AP, COL FWAA, INS, NEA, SN, UP | CNS, CP, NL, NYS, OF, WC |
Warren Amling | Guard | Ohio State | 9/10 | AAB, AFCA, AP, COL, FWAA, INS, LK, SN, UP | CNS, CP, NL, NYS, OF, WC |
Herman Wedemeyer | Halfback | St. Mary's (CA) | 9/10 | AAB, AFCA, AP, COL, FWAA, INS, LK, SN, UP | CNS, CP, NL, OF, WC |
John Green | Guard | Army | 7/10 | AAB, AFCA, AP, COL, FWAA, SN, UP | CNS, NYS, OF, WC |
George Savitsky | Tackle | Penn | 7/10 | AAB, AFCA, COL, FWAA, LK, SN, UP | CNS, CP, WC |
Bob Fenimore | Halfback | Oklahoma St. | 7/10 | AAB, AFCA, AP, FWAA, INS, SN, UP | WC |
Dick Duden | End | Navy | 6/10 | AAB, AFCA, AP, COL, FWAA, SN, UP | CNS, CP, NL, NYS, OF WC, YA |
Vaughn Mancha | Center | Alabama | 6/10 | AP, COL, FWAA, INS, SN, UP | CNS, CP, NYS, OF, YA |
Max Morris | End | Northwestern | 3/10 | AAB, AFCA, INS | WC, YA |
Hub Bechtol | End | Texas | 3/10 | AP, COL, LK | CNS |
Bob Ravensberg | End | Indiana | 3/10 | FWAA, LK, SN | CP |
Harry Gilmer[1] | Quarterback | Alabama | 3/10 | COL, LK, SN | CNS, NL, NYS, OF |
All-American selections for 1945
[edit]Ends
[edit]- Dick Duden, Navy (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AFCA; AP-1; COL-1; FWAA-1; INS-2; SN; UP-1; YA; CNS-1; CP-1; NL; NYS; OF-1; WC-1)
- Hub Bechtol, Texas (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1; COL-1; FWAA-2; LK; CNS-1; CP-2)
- Bob Ravensberg, Indiana (UP-2; FWAA-1; SN; CP-1; INS-2; LK; CNS-2)
- Max Morris, Northwestern (AAB; AFCA; AP-2; FWAA-2; INS-1; UP-2; YA; CP-2; WC-1)
- Hank Foldberg, Army (AP-2; INS-1; NEA-1; UP-1; CNS-2; CP-3; NYS; OF-1)
- Henry Walker, Virginia (AP-3)
- Neill Armstrong, Oklahoma A&M (AP-3)
- Paul Walker, Yale (CP-3; NL)
- Richard Pitzer, Army (NEA-1)
Tackles
[edit]- Tex Coulter, Army (AAB; AFCA; AP-1; COL-1; FWAA-1; INS-1; NEA-1; SN; UP-1; CNS-1; CP-1; NL; NYS; OF-1; WC-1)
- George Savitsky, Penn (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AFCA; AP-3; COL-1; FWAA-1; INS-2; LK; SN; UP-1; CNS-1; CP-1; WC-1)
- Albert Nemetz, Army (AP-1; FWAA-2; INS-2; NEA-1; UP-2; YA; NYS; CNS-2)
- Tom Hughes, Purdue (LK; FWAA-2; UP-2; CP-2; OF-1; CNS-2; NL)
- Thomas Dean, Southern Methodist Univ. (AP-2; YA)
- Mike Castronis, Georgia (INS-1)
- Jim Kekeris, Missouri (AP-2; CP-2)
- Clarence Esser, Wisconsin (AP-3)
- Buster McClure, Nevada (CP-3)
- Monte Moncrief, Texas A&M (CP-3)
Guards
[edit]- Warren Amling, Ohio State (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AFCA; AP-1; COL-1; FWAA-1; INS-1; LK; SN; UP-1; CNS-1; CP-1; NL; NYS; OF-1; WC-1)
- John Green, Army (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AFCA; AP-1; COL-1; FWAA-1; SN; UP-1; CNS-1; CP-3; NEA-1; YA; NYS; OF-1; WC-1)
- Al Sparlis, UCLA (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-3; INS-2; LK; CNS-2; CP-1)
- John Mastrangelo, Notre Dame (AP-2; FWAA-2; INS-1; UP-2; YA; CNS-2; CP-2)
- James Carrington, Navy (FWAA-2; INS-2; UP-2)
- Joseph Dickinson, Penn (AP-2; CP-2)
- Jim Lecture, Northwestern (AP-3; CP-3)
- Arthur Gerometta, Army (NEA-1)
- Hills, Georgia Tech (NL)
Centers
[edit]- Vaughn Mancha, Alabama (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1; COL-1; FWAA-1; INS-1; SN; UP-1; YA; CNS-1; CP-1; NYS; OF-1)
- Dick Scott, Navy (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AFCA; AP-2; FWAA-2; INS-2; LK; UP-2; CNS-2; CP-2; NL; WC-1)
- Ralph Jenkins, Clemson (AP-3)
- Harold Watts, Michigan (CP-3)
- Herschel Fuson, Army (NEA-1)
Quarterbacks
[edit]- Harry Gilmer, Alabama (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-2; COL-1; INS-2; LK; UP-2; FWAA-2; SN; UP-2; CNS-1; CP-2; NL; NYS; OF-1 [qb])
- Frank Dancewicz, Notre Dame (AP-2; FWAA-2; UP-2; CNS-2; CP-1)
- Arnold Tucker, Army (College Football Hall of Fame) (CP-3; INS-2; NEA-1)
- Gene Rossides, Columbia (CP-3)
Halfbacks
[edit]- Glenn Davis, Army (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AFCA; AP-1; COL-1; FWAA-1; INS-1; LK; NEA-1; SN; UP-1; YA; CNS-1; CP-1; NL; NYS; OF-1; WC-1)
- Herman Wedemeyer, St. Mary's (Calif.) (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AFCA; AP-1; COL-1; FWAA-1; INS-1; LK; SN; UP-1; CNS-1; CP-1; NL; OF-1; WC-1)
- Bob Fenimore, Oklahoma State (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AFCA; AP-1; FWAA-1; INS-1; SN; UP-1; CP-2; CNS-2; WC-1)
- Jake Leicht, Oregon (YA; NYS)
- George Taliaferro, Indiana (AP-3; INS-2; CP-3; CNS-2)
- Clyde Scott, Navy (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-3; UP-2)
- Stan Kozlowski, Holy Cross (AP-3; CP-2)
- Robert Evans, Penn (AP-3)
- Shorty McWilliams, Army (NEA-1)
Fullbacks
[edit]- Doc Blanchard, Army (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AFCA; AP-1; COL-1; FWAA-1; INS-1; LK; NEA-1; SN; UP-1; YA; CNS-1; CP-1; NL; NYS; OF-1; WC-1)
- Pete Pihos, Indiana (College and Pro Football Hall of Fame) (AP-2; FWAA-2; UP-2; CNS-2; CP-2; YA)
- Ollie Cline, Ohio State (AP-2; FWAA-2)
- Walt Schlinkman, Texas Tech (INS-2)
- Ed Cody, Purdue (CP-3)
Black college All-Americans
[edit]During the 1940s, African-Americans were excluded from many college football programs and played the game at historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs). The major All-America selectors in these years did not include players from HBCUs. However, The Pittsburgh Courier each year selected its own All-America team from players at the HBCUS. The players chosen for 1946 were:
- Clarence Harkings, Langston, end
- Talmadge Owen, Clark, end
- James Moore, Wilberforce, tackle
- Wilfred Rawl, West Virginia State, tackle
- Richard Bolton, Clark, guard
- Willie Moses, Wiley, guard
- Isaiah Wilson, West Virginia State, center
- Leroy Cromartie, Florida A&M, back
- Bill Bass, Tennessee A&I, back
- Shelly Ross, Wiley, back
- Bernard Ingraham, Florida A&M, back
Key
[edit]- Bold – Consensus All-American[3]
- -1 – First-team selection
- -2 – Second-team selection
- -3 – Third-team selection
Official selectors
[edit]- AAB = All-America Board[4]
- AFCA = American Football Coaches Association[4]
- AP = Associated Press[5]
- COL = Collier's Weekly as selected by Grantland Rice[6]
- FWAA = Football Writers Association of America[7]
- INS = International News Service, "selected on the basis of ballots and information gathered from International News Service sports writers and football authorities all over the nation"[8]
- LK = Look magazine[9]
- NEA = Newspaper Enterprise Association. In a departure from normal practice, the NEA named the starters from the Army football team, which had won 17 straight games, as its All-American team for 1945I[10]
- SN = Sporting News, selected by a poll of 163 sports writers and sportscasters[11]
- UP = United Press[12]
Other selectors
[edit]- CNS = Consensus All-American team picked based on assigning points to players selected as All-Americans by Oscar Fraley, Christy Walsh, United Press, Look, New York Sun, New York News, International News, Associated Press, Sporting News, and Collier's-Rice[9]
- CP = Central Press Association, selected for the 15th straight year with the aid of the captains of the leading college teams[13]
- NL = Navy Log[14]
- NYS = New York Sun[9]
- OF = Oscar Fraley, United Press sports writer[15]
- WC = Walter Camp Football Foundation[16]
- YA = Yank, the Army Weekly, based on a poll of 25 of the country's most widely known college football coaches[17]
See also
[edit]- 1945 All-Big Six Conference football team
- 1945 All-Big Ten Conference football team
- 1945 All-Pacific Coast Conference football team
- 1945 All-SEC football team
- 1945 All-Southwest Conference football team
References
[edit]- ^ The NCAA does not recognize Gilmer, or any other quarterback, as a consensus All-American for 1945.
- ^ "Pittsburgh Courier's All-America for 1945". The Pittsburgh Courier. December 22, 1945. p. 16 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. p. 8. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
- ^ a b ESPN College Football Encyclopedia. ESPN Books. 2005. p. 1200. ISBN 1401337031.
- ^ "Here's AP All-America". Abilene Reporter-News. December 11, 1945.
- ^ "Army Dominates Colliers' 'All' Team". Dunkirk Evening Observer. December 7, 1945.
- ^ "Blanchard Top Man in Critics' Poll". Los Angeles Times. December 18, 1945.
- ^ Lawton Carver (December 2, 1945). "Warren Amling On INS '45 All-American Football Team". Lima News.
- ^ a b c "Army Wins 4 Posts On Consensus All-America Team". Ogden Standard-Examiner. December 23, 1945.
- ^ "Army's All Star Team is All American For NEA". Chester Times. November 27, 1945.
- ^ "Wedemeyer Also Makes Sporting News Eleven". Oakland Tribune. December 5, 1945.
- ^ Leo H. Peterson (December 5, 1945). "Wedemeyer on United Press All-American". Oakland Tribune.
- ^ Walter Johns (December 5, 1945). "Army Given Three Places on Captains' All-American". The Wisconsin State Journal.
- ^ "All-America Addendum" (PDF). College Football Historical Society Newsletter. May 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 13, 2010. Retrieved March 5, 2010.
- ^ Oscar Fraley (November 7, 1945). "Today's Sports Parade". Middlesboro Daily News.
- ^ "Walter Camp Football Foundation". Archived from the original on March 30, 2009.
- ^ "Yank Magazine Has All-American Team". Morning Herald. Hagerstown, MD. December 21, 1945.