1930 College Football All-Southern Team American all-star college football team
Pictures of the composite eleven.
The 1930 College Football All-Southern Team consists of American football players selected to the College Football All-Southern Teams selected by various organizations for the 1930 Southern Conference football season . Alabama won the Southern and national championship.
Composite eleven
The All-Southern eleven compiled by the Associated Press included:
Jerry Dalrymple , end for Tulane, elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1954.[ 1]
Bobby Dodd , quarterback for Tennessee, later coached Georgia Tech to a national title, inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1993.
Milton Leathers , guard for Georgia
Vance Maree , tackle for Georgia Tech. One writer said Maree and Frank Speer had the reputation as "the toughest pair of tackles in the south."[ 2]
Buddy Hackman , halfback for Tennessee. Hackman filled the role of Gene McEver , who missed the entire season with torn ligaments in his knee.[ 3] He was inducted into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame in 1974.[ 3]
Jack Roberts , fullback for Georgia. Known as "The Ripper ", he later played in the National Football League .
Loyd Roberts , center and captain for Tulane.
Fred Sington , tackle for Alabama. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1955. Sington was chosen for an Associated Press Southeast Area All-Time football team 1920–1969 era.
Vernon "Catfish" Smith , end for Georgia, made an all-time Georgia Bulldogs football team picked in 1935.[ 4]
Jimmy Steele , guard for Florida.
John Suther , halfback for Alabama. Suther described the feeling before the Tennessee game, which Alabama won 18–6. "Coach Wade was boiling mad. He was like a blood-thirsty drill sergeant anyway, and those critics made him more fiery ... He challenged us to help him shut up the loudmouths that were making his life miserable."[ 5]
All-Southerns of 1930
Jimmy Steele
Ends
Jerry Dalrymple , Tulane (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1, UP-1, DT-1)
Vernon "Catfish" Smith , Georgia (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1, UP-2, DT-2)
Herb Maffett , Georgia (AP-2, UP-1, DT-1)
Bill Schwartz, Vanderbilt (AP-2, UP-2, DT-2)
Tackles
Fred Sington *, Alabama (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1, UP-1, DT-1)
Vance Maree , Georgia Tech (AP-1, UP-2, DT-2)
Foots Clement , Alabama (AP-2, UP-1, DT-1)
Dale Waters , Florida (AP-2, UP-2, DT-2)
Guards
Jimmy Steele , Florida (AP-1, UP-1, DT-2)
Milton Leathers , Georgia (AP-1, UP-1, DT-1)
Ralph Maddox , Georgia (AP-2)
Maury Bodenger , Tulane (AP-2, DT-2)
Harry Thayer, Tennessee (UP-2)
L. G. "Floppy" Forquer, Kentucky (UP-2, DT-1)
Centers
Loyd Roberts , Tulane (AP-1, UP-1, DT-2)
Ned Lipscomb, North Carolina (AP-2, UP-2, DT-1)
Quarterbacks
Bobby Dodd †, Tennessee (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1, UP-1, DT-1)
Austin Downes , Georgia (AP-2, UP-2, DT-2)
Halfbacks
John Suther , Alabama (AP-1, UP-1, DT-1)
Buddy Hackman , Tennessee (AP-1, UP-1, DT-1)
Shipwreck Kelly , Kentucky (AP-2)
Don Zimmerman , Tulane (AP-2, UP-2)
Red Bethea , Florida (UP-2, DT-2)
Bill Murray , Duke (College Football Hall of Fame) (DT-2)
Fullbacks
Key
Bold = Composite selection
* = Consensus All-American
† = Unanimous Selection
AP = compiled from southern coaches and sportswriters by the Associated Press . It had a first and second team.[ 6]
UP = compiled from 20 of 23 southern coaches by the United Press.[ 7] It had a first and second team.
DT = selected by the
Daily Tar Heel .
[ 8] It had a first and second team.
See also
References
^ "Jerry Dalrymple" . National Football Foundation.
^ Davis, Ralph (October 10, 1930). "Tech Leader Awaiting Test" . The Pittsburgh Press .
^ a b "Hackman, Joseph Sandy "Buddy" " .
^ George Trevor. "All-Time All-Star Team" . Tulane University Football Program-The Greenie; Georgia vs. Tulane .
^ "Alabama-Tennessee: A Southern Tradition" . October 23, 2008. Archived from the original on February 12, 2015.
^ Dillow Graham (December 4, 1930). "Unanimous Vote of Coaches and Sports Writers Places Dodd At Top of Quarterback Candidates" . The Kingsport Times . p. 2. Retrieved March 4, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "All-Southern Squad Chosen" . The San Bernardino County Sun . November 29, 1930. p. 21. Retrieved March 4, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Tar Heel's All-Southern Teams" . The Daily Tar Heel . December 2, 1930. p. 3. Retrieved March 4, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
Backfield Line † = Unanimous selection