1903–04 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team
Appearance
1903–04 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball | |
---|---|
Conference | Independent |
Record | 5–8 |
Head coach |
|
Captain | Harry Allen |
Home arena | Snow Hall |
The 1903–04 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team represented the University of Kansas in its sixth season of collegiate basketball. The head coach was James Naismith, the inventor of the game, who served his 6th year. The Jayhawks finished the season 5–8.
Roster
[edit]- Ira Adams
- Harry Allen
- Frank Barlow
- Andrew Brown
- Arthur Cook
- John Fleischman
- Adessie Griggs
- Albert Hicks
- James McCauley
- Manley Michaelson
- William Piatt
- Arthur Pooler
- Richard Priest
Schedule
[edit]Date time, TV |
Opponent | Result | Record | Site city, state | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dec. 10, 1903* |
Olathe YMCA | W 35–10 | 1–0 |
Lawrence, Kansas | |||||||
Dec. 12, 1903* |
William Jewell | W 27–10 | 2–0 |
Lawrence, Kansas | |||||||
Jan. 8, 1904* |
Kansas State School for the Deaf | W 35–10 | 3–0 |
Lawrence, Kansas | |||||||
Jan. 14, 1904* |
Topeka YMCA | W 25–22 | 4–0 |
Lawrence, Kansas | |||||||
Jan. 21, 1904* |
Haskell | L 12–28 | 4–1 |
Lawrence, Kansas | |||||||
Jan. 22, 1904* |
at Topeka YMCA | L 16–18 | 4–2 |
Topeka, Kansas | |||||||
Feb. 17, 1904* |
at William Jewell | L 7–27 | 4–3 |
Liberty, Missouri | |||||||
Feb. 18, 1904* |
at Kansas City AC | L 10–27 | 4–4 |
Kansas City, Missouri | |||||||
Feb. 22, 1904* |
at Haskell | L 18–36 | 4–5 |
Lawrence, Kansas | |||||||
Mar. 7, 1904* |
Ottawa (KS) | L 21–25 | 4–6 |
Lawrence, Kansas | |||||||
Mar. 14, 1904* |
at Ottawa | L 16–26 | 4–7 |
Ottawa, Kansas | |||||||
Mar. 15, 1904* |
at Newton AC | W 18–10 | 5–7 |
Newton, Kansas | |||||||
Mar. 16, 1904* |
at Emporia Teachers College | L 13–25 | 5–8 |
Emporia, Kansas | |||||||
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in Central Standard Time. |
References
[edit]- ^ 2014-15 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball media guide. Retrieved 2015-May-22.
- ^ cdieckmann. "Kansas Basketball Record Book" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on May 23, 2011. Retrieved May 14, 2009.