1906 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1906 Nebraska Cornhuskers football
1906 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team.jpg
Nebraska state champion
ConferenceIndependent
1906 record6–4
Head coach
Home stadiumAntelope Field
Seasons
← 1905
1907 →
1906 Midwestern college football independents records
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
Saint Louis     11 0 0
North Dakota Agricultural     5 0 0
Butler     1 0 0
Michigan State Normal     5 0 1
Iowa State     9 1 0
Ohio     7 1 0
Notre Dame     6 1 0
St. Mary's (OH)     5 1 0
Fairmount     7 1 2
Wabash     5 1 1
Kansas     7 2 2
Michigan Agricultural     7 2 2
Kansas State     5 2 0
Missouri     5 2 1
Detroit College     4 2 1
Northern Illinois State     4 2 1
Carthage     3 2 0
Lake Forest     3 2 0
Nebraska     6 4 0
Wittenberg     5 4 1
Heidelberg     3 3 1
Washington University     2 2 2
Beloit     3 4 1
Franklin     3 4 0
Doane     2 3 0
Western State Normal (MI)     1 2 0
Mount Union     2 5 1
Drake     2 5 0
Haskell     2 5 0
Marquette     1 4 2
Chicago P&S     0 1 1
Cincinnati     0 7 2

The 1906 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team represented the University of Nebraska in the 1906 college football season. The team was coached by first-year head coach Amos Foster and played its home games at Antelope Field in Lincoln, Nebraska.[1] The team competed as an independent.

Prior to replacing the retiring Walter C. Booth at NU, Foster compiled an 11–4 record in two years coaching Cincinnati. Foster left Nebraska following the season and was quickly offered his old job at Cincinnati, but declined, instead accepting an offer to coach at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.

Following the 1905 season, United States President Theodore Roosevelt urged Among the new rules adopted in 1906 included the legalization of the forward pass, an increase in the distance required to get a first down, the abolishment of the dangerous flying wedge, and the establishment of a neutral zone between the offense and defense at the line of scrimmage.[2]

Schedule[]

DateTimeOpponentSiteResult
September 29Hastings
  • Antelope Field
  • Lincoln, NE
W 56–0
October 6South Dakota
  • Antelope Field
  • Lincoln, NE
W 4–0
October 13Drake
  • Antelope Field
  • Lincoln, NE
W 5–0
October 20Iowa State
  • Antelope Field
  • Lincoln, NE
L 14–2
October 27Doane
  • Antelope Field
  • Lincoln, NE
W 28–0
November 3at Minnesota
L 13–0
November 103:30 p.m.at Creighton
  • Vinton Street Park
  • Omaha, NE
W 17–0
November 172:30 p.m.Kansas
  • Antelope Field
  • Lincoln, NE
L 8–6
November 24at Chicago
L 38–5
November 29Cincinnati
  • Antelope Field
  • Lincoln, NE
W 41–0

Coaching staff[]

Coach[3][4][5] Position First year Alma mater
Amos Foster Head coach 1906 Dartmouth
T. M. Stewart Assistant coach 1906 Michigan
Jack Best Trainer 1890 Nebraska

Roster[]

[6]

Benedict, Maurice E
Chaloupka, William FB
Cooke, Harold QB
Cornell G
Craig, Hugh FB
Denslow, Lloyd E
Drain, Dale QB
Ewing, Henry LT
Harvey, James E/LT
Johnson, William E
Little, Ernest (Merle) E
Mason, John LT
Matters, Thomas LT
McDonald, Gil QB
Rice, John RT
Schmidt, Francis E
Taylor, Robert RG
Voss RT
Weller, John HB
Wilke, C.R. C

Game summaries[]

Hastings[]

Hastings at Nebraska
1 2Total
Hastings 0
Nebraska 56
  • Date: September 29
  • Location: Antelope Field, Lincoln, NE

[7][8]

South Dakota[]

South Dakota at Nebraska
1 2Total
South Dakota 0 0 0
Nebraska 0 4 4
  • Date: October 6
  • Location: Antelope Field, Lincoln, NE

[7][8]

Drake[]

Drake at Nebraska
1 2Total
Drake 0
Nebraska 5
  • Date: October 13
  • Location: Antelope Field, Lincoln, NE

[7][8]

Iowa State[]

Iowa State at Nebraska
1 2Total
Iowa State 14
Nebraska 2
  • Date: October 20
  • Location: Antelope Field, Lincoln, NE

Nebraska's 35-game home field winning streak, dating back to the beginning of the 1901 season, was broken when Iowa State beat NU 14–2. Only a late safety prevented Nebraska from being shut out.[7][8]

Doane[]

Doane at Nebraska
1 2Total
Doane 0
Nebraska 28
  • Date: October 27
  • Location: Antelope Field, Lincoln, NE

[7][8]

at Minnesota[]

Nebraska at Minnesota
1 2Total
Nebraska 0 0 0
Minnesota 0 13 13
  • Date: November 3
  • Location: Northrop Field, Minneapolis, MN

Minnesota shut out the Cornhuskers in Minneapolis for the second consecutive year in a game that remained scoreless until after halftime. Minnesota finished the season as co-champion of the Big Nine.[7][8]

at Creighton[]

Creighton at Nebraska
1 2Total
Creighton 0
Nebraska 17
  • Date: November 10
  • Location: Omaha, NE

Nebraska shut out Creighton in Omaha in the final game between the two teams. NU defeated all other in-state teams for the third year in a row to claim another state championship.[7][8]

Kansas[]

Kansas at Nebraska
1 2Total
Kansas 8 0 8
Nebraska 6 0 6
  • Date: November 17
  • Location: Antelope Field, Lincoln, NE

KU defeated a sloppy Nebraska team in the first game in a streak of 107 consecutive seasons the two teams played, still an NCAA record.[7][8]

at Chicago[]

Nebraska at Chicago
1 2Total
Nebraska 5
Chicago 38

Nebraska was shut out by Chicago, then a member of the Big Nine Conference, in the first meeting between the two teams.[7][8]

Cincinnati[]

Cincinnati at Nebraska
1 2Total
Cincinnati 0
Nebraska 41
  • Date: November 29
  • Location: Antelope Field, Lincoln, NE

Foster's former team traveled to Lincoln in what is still the only game ever played between Cincinnati and Nebraska. The teams were scheduled to play in 2020, but the game was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Cincinnati and Nebraska are scheduled to meet for the second time in 2025.[7][8]

References[]

  1. ^ "1906 Nebraska Cornhuskers Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  2. ^ "How Teddy Roosevelt helped save football - The Washington Post".
  3. ^ "Nebraska head coaches". HuskerMax. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
  4. ^ "118 Years of Cornhusker Football" (PDF). University of Nebraska Athletics Department. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  5. ^ "1907 Sombrero - University of Nebraska Yearbook". University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries. Archived from the original on March 5, 2012. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
  6. ^ "Nebraska Football 1906 Roster". University of Nebraska-Lincoln Athletics Department. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "1906 Game Recaps". Husker Press Box. Retrieved 2009-11-15.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "the 1900s". HuskerMax. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
Retrieved from ""