1890 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team

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The 1890 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team represented the University of Minnesota in the 1890 college football season. It was the only season under head coach Tom Eck and featured the historic first meeting between Minnesota and Wisconsin, the most-played rivalry at the top level of NCAA college football.[1] The two teams have played each other every year since then except for 1906. That game was canceled by President Theodore Roosevelt who had decided to "cool off heated college football rivalries because of injuries and deaths on the field."[2]: 249  The game was a decisive 63-0 Minnesota win.

Coach Eck started holding signal drills before each game and established a training table. This is considered to be the start of "scientific football" at Minnesota.[2]: 311  He also acted as the team's trainer.

The week before that game, Minnesota took on Grinnell in Minneapolis, the first out-of-state opponent in Minnesota football history. The game was a hard fought 18-13 Minnesota victory.[3]: 18 

The Ariel declared this team to be the "champions of the northwest".[3]: 19 

Schedule

October 27at HamlineSt. Paul, MNW 44–0 November 3at ShattuckFaribault, MNW 58–0 November 5Ex-CollegiatesMinneapolis, MNT 0–0 November 8Iowa CollegeMinneapolis, MNW 18–13 November 15WisconsinMinneapolis, MN (Rivalry)W 63–0 November 19Ex-CollegiatesMinneapolis, MNL 11–14 November 29Ex-CollegiatesMinneapolis, MNW 14–6

Template:CFB Schedule End

Roster

Horace R. Robinson (captain), William C. Leary, George K. Belden, J.A. Harris, S.S. Start, Grant B. Rossman, Eugene L. Patterson, William C. Muir, George C. Sikes, Alf F. Pillsbury, Harry E. White, Charles E. Guthrie, James E. Madigan, David R. Burbank, Everhard P. Harding; Trainer Tom Eck.[3]: 33 

References

  1. ^ "Official 2006 NCAA Divisions I-A and I-AA Football Records Book" (PDF). pp. 110–111. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-10. Retrieved 2007-08-05.
  2. ^ a b University of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics (2004). Jeff Keiser; Shane Sanderfeld (eds.). Minnesota Football 2004 Media Guide. University of Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletics Communications.
  3. ^ a b c The General Alumni Association (1928). Martin Newell (ed.). The History of Minnesota Football. The General Alumni Association of the University of Minnesota.