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1942  Rose Bowl 1942 Rose Bowl
World War II brought many changes to college football

1942 Rose Bowl Game

College Football History

The 1942 Rose Bowl Game was played in Durham North Carolina because it was feared that a game fill with over 90,000 fans might bring Japanese naval aircraft. Duke, the home team, was defeated 20-16 by Oregon State.

The Army Navy game was played in Annapolis for the first time since 1893 because of a ban on running railroad specials. Normal crowds of 100,000 plus were replaced by just 10,000 in Annapolis.

When President Franklin Roosevelt said in a radio broadcast that sporting events were good for everyone’s morale, attendance perked up considerably. Roosevelt as encouraged athletics were healthy and conditioning of young men was encouraged during the early 1940s.

Gas rationing took its toll on transportation to and from sporting events, making it almost impossible for football teams to travel far during these times.

The Yale Princeton football game was played in New York for the first time in almost 60 years. Traveling is said to have caused 21 players of undefeated Ohio State to become ill as they traveled to play Wisconsin, and the Buckeyes lost 17-7 to Wisconsin.

Travel restrictions caused rankings of teams to be uncertain. Near the end of the 1942 season Boston College and Georgia Tech were rated number 1 and number 2. Then unranked Holy Cross crushed Boston College 55-12 and a solid ranked Georgia football team trounced the Ramblin’ Wrecks of Georgia Tech 34-0. Frankie Sinkwich of the Georgia Bulldogs, was chosen College Player of the Year as the winner of the 1942 Heisman Trophy.


College Football 1942 College Football 1942
The Ohio State Buckeyes voted the 1942 National Champions

1942 College Football by footballhistorian.com The one-loss Ohio State Buckeyes coached by second-year Paul Brown rolled through the 1942 Big Ten football season tainted by a loss to the Wisconsin Badgers. However on game-day 21 players on the Ohio State team were sickened and unable to play. Considered a fluke loss the Associated Press (AP) pollsters decided Ohio State was Number One. The Buckeyes were led by Les Horvath, who later was selected the 1944 Heisman Trophy winner. Paul Brown used an offense of 75 percent single wing and 25 percent T-formation. The Georgia Bulldogs coached by Wally Butts defeated Number 2 Georgia Tech 34-0 towards the end of the 1942 season. However Georgia, a solid football team had a 2 loss season. Frank Sinkwich of Georgia won the 1942 Heisman Trophy. Frankie Sinkwich picked up the nickname of Peerless Frank the previous season because he played with a broken jaw in a hard cast. Legendary coach Paul Brown previously quided Severn Academy and Massillon High School in Ohio to championships. After his tenure with Ohio State coach Paul Brown coached the professional Cleveland Browns to several championships. He was the first person to coach his teams to championships at the high school, college and pro level in all of football history.

 


Northern Illinois University - 2000 College Football Preview

Air attack holds key to NIU hopes - Lessons learned from 1983

August 19, 2000 Chicago Tribune Newspaper by Bill Jauss

DeKalb - In the 31 years Northern Illinois has struggled to a 133-202-04 record in Division I football, one season stands out like a shinning beacon. That was 1983, when coach Bill Mallory's Huskies won the Mid-American Conference Championship and beat Cal State-Fullerton in the California Bowl to finish 10-2 and set the standard for future NIU.

It is significant, then, that Joe Novak, the current Huskies coach who was the defensive coordinator on that '83 team, refers to that season when he addresses what appears to be the No. 1 hurdle for his current squad to overcome.

The Huskies, who lost 30 of 33 games in Novak's first three seasons, turned the corner last year. They won four in a row and finished 5-6 overall and 5-3 in the MAC. Academic shortcomings, however, stripped this year's team of William Andrews and Ivory Bryant, tailbacks who rushed for 1,127 and 325 yards, respectively, in 1999.

Thus the huge question mark facing the Huskies is this: Can the passing of Chris Finlen, the receiving of Justin McCareins and Darrell Hill and the blocking of a line led by 6-foot-7 inch, 336-pound tackle Ryan Diem offset the loss of two backs who rushed for 1,452 yards between them?

Novak's answer, shared by his quarterback, his receivers and his offensive lineman, is a resounding yes. "We can offset the loss of the tailbacks," Novak said. "We have to. We did that in 1983. Pete Roth rushed for more than 1,000 yards in '82, but (Mallory) fired him off the team for academic reasons. Darryl Richardson hadn't played a lick, but he rushed for 1,200 yards and helped us make the California Bowl."

"You can deal with the loss of a running back a lot quicker than the loss of a player like Finlen or Diem, a quarterback or an offensive lineman or a defensive back," Novak added. "We have backs with ability. If they don't fumble, we'll be all right."

Thomas Hammock, a 202-pounder from Ft. Wayne, Indiana, will get first crack at tailback. Jon DuQuoin, stands ready. So do three promising freshmen. Novak might move 255-pound St. Rita grad Marion Rucker from fullback to tailback.

Diem, a B-plus student in mechanical engineering, was called "Road Grader" by one NFL scout. The 21-year-old Glenbard North graduate has a 20-inch neck, 32-inch thighs and a 51-inch chest. He owns the school record for his 800-pound bionic squat lift in the weight room.

Up front Diem is joined by three more returning regulars: 300-pound center McAllister Collins from Bloom, 284-pound tackle Tim Vincent from Galena and 280-pound guard Kyle Jakubek from Ottawa.

Northern passing game is potent and, as Finlen pointed out: "we can use it to set up the run. If the defense packs in to stop the run, we'll open them up with passes."

Northern's strength and conditioning coach, John Binkowski, wondered if any other team has two receivers as tall and as swift as the 6-4 Hill, who was clocked in 4.3 seconds for 40 yards, and the 6-3 McCareins, clocked in 4.36.

McCareins, a former Naperville North star, caught 57 passes for 906 yards and 10 touchdowns last year. Hill, from Mt. Carmel, caught 32 for 578 yards and had a 96-yard reception among his six scoring catches.

The strength of the defense lies in the secondary and linebacking corps. Linebackers Kevin Selover, who, like Finlen, is from Rockton Hononegah, and Cameron Saulsby from Orlando are team leaders. Defensive backs Jermaine Hampton, Benji Peacock and Buster Sampson were toughened during 1999 turnaround season.

As the Aug. 31 opening day approaches, Novak is worried about replacing the graduated Kent Backer, who punted and place-kicked last year.

Despite their improvement, the Huskies still weren't in the class with MAC leaders Marshall and Toledo when last season ended. If they close that gap in 2000, the Huskies could rank with their model 1983 team. footballhistorian.com - College Football History

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