Football Days eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 400 pages of information about Football Days.

Football Days eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 400 pages of information about Football Days.

Carl Flanders was a big factor in the Yale rush line.  Foster Sanford considers him one of the greatest offensive centers that ever played.  He was six feet three and one-fourth inches tall and weighed 202 pounds.

In 1906 Flanders coached the Indian team at Carlisle.  Let us see some of the interesting things that characterize the Indian players, through Flanders’ experience.

The nicknames with which the Indians labelled each other were mostly those of animals or a weapon of defense.  Mount Pleasant and Libby always called each other Knife.  Bill Gardner was crowned Chicken Legs, Charles, one of the halfbacks, and a regular little tiger, was called Bird Legs.  Other names fastened to the different players were Whale Bone, Shoe String, Tommyhawk and Wolf.

The Indians always played cleanly as long as their opponents played that way.  Dillon, an old Sioux Indian, and one of the fastest guards I ever saw, was a good example of this.  If anybody started rough play, Dillon would say: 

“Stop that, boys!” and the chap who was guilty always stopped.  But if an opponent continually played dirty football, Dillon would say grimly:  “I’ll get you!” On the next play or two, you’d never know how, the rough player would be taken out.  Dillon had “got” his man.

“Wallace Denny and Bemus Pierce got up a code of signals, using an Indian word which designated a single play.  Among the Indian words which designated these signals were Water-bucket, Watehnee, Coocoohee.  I never could find out what it all meant, and following the Indian team by this code of signals was a task which was too much for me.”

Bill Horr, renowned in Colgate and Syracuse, writes:  “Colgate University and Colgate Academy are under the same administration, and the football teams were practicing when I entered school.  I went out for the team and after the second practice I was put into the scrimmage.  I was greatly impressed with the game and continued for the afternoon practice, and played at tackle in the first game of the season.  In four years of winning football I became acquainted with such wonderful athletes as Riley Castleman and Walter Runge of the Colgate Varsity team.

“In the fall of 1905 I entered Syracuse University and played right tackle on the varsity team for four years and was captain of the victorious 1908 team.  In the four years I never missed a scrimmage or a game.

“I think that one of the hardest games I ever played in was the game against Princeton in 1908, when they had such stars as Siegling, MacFadyen, Eddie Dillon and Tibbott.  The game ended in a scoreless tie with the ball see-sawing back and forth on the 40-yard line.  I had been accustomed to carry the ball, and had been successful in executing a forward pass of fifty-five yards in the Yale game the week before, placing the ball on the 1-yard line, only to lose it on a fumble.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Football Days from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.