1940 College Football All-America Team

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The 1940 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers that chose College Football All-America Teams in 1940. The nine selectors recognized by the NCAA as "official" for the 1940 season are (1) Collier's Weekly, as selected by Grantland Rice, (2) the Associated Press (AP), (3) the United Press (UP), (4) the All-America Board (AAB), (5) the International News Service (INS), (6) Liberty magazine, (7) the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), (8) Newsweek, and (9) the Sporting News (SN).

Michigan halfback (and Heisman Trophy winner) Tom Harmon, Texas A&M fullback John Kimbrough, and Tennessee guard Bob Suffridge were the only three unanimous first-team All-Americans chosen by all nine official selectors.

Consensus All-Americans[]

For the year 1940, the NCAA recognizes nine published All-American teams as "official" designations for purposes of its consensus determinations. The following chart identifies the NCAA-recognized consensus All-Americans and displays which first-team designations they received.

Name Position School UP votes Number Official selectors Other selectors
Tom Harmon Halfback Michigan 478 9/9 AAB, AP, CO, INS, LIB, NEA, NW, SN, UP CP, DH, FD, NYS, WC
John Kimbrough Fullback Texas A&M 474 9/9 AAB, AP, CO, INS, LIB, NEA, NW, SN, UP CP, DH, FD, NYS, WC
Bob Suffridge Guard Tennessee 340 9/9 AAB, AP, CO, INS, LIB, NEA, NW, SN, UP CP, DH, FD, NYS, WC
George Franck Halfback Minnesota 436 8/9 AAB, AP, CO, INS, LIB, NW, SN, UP CP, DH FD, NYS, WC
Nick Drahos Tackle Cornell 382 8/9 AAB, AP, INS, LIB, NEA, NW, SN, UP CP, DH, FD, WC
Frankie Albert Quarterback Stanford 229 6/9 AAB, AP, CO, INS, NW, UP CP, DH, FD, WC
Gene Goodreault End Boston College 200 6/9 AAB, CO, INS, NW, SN, UP CP, DH, FD, WC
Rudy Mucha Center Washington 201 5/9 AAB, CO, NW, SN, UP CP, WC
David Rankin End Purdue 4/9 AAB, CO, SN, UP WC
Marshall Robnett Guard Texas A&M 3/9 AAB, NW, UP CP, DH, FD, WC
Alf Bauman Tackle Northwestern 184 3/9 AAB, CO, UP NYS, WC
Urban Odson Tackle Minnesota 3/9 INS, LIB, NW CP

All-American selections for 1940[]

Ends[]

  • Gene Goodreault, Boston College (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; CO-1; INS-1; NW; SN; UP-1; CP-1; DH; FD-1; WC-1; NEA-2)
  • David Rankin, Purdue (AAB; AP-2; CO-1; INS-2; SN; UP-1; CP-2; FD-2; WC-1)
  • Paul Severin, North Carolina (AP-1; INS-2; NEA-1; NW; UP-2; CP-2; DH; FD-1)
  • Buddy Elrod, Mississippi State (AP-1; LIB; CP-1; NYS-1; NEA-3)
  • Ed Frutig, Michigan (AP-3; INS-1; LIB; UP-3; CP-3)
  • Jay MacDowell, Washington (NEA-1; CP-4; NYS-1)
  • Joe Blalock, Clemson (UP-2)
  • , Harvard (AP-2)
  • , Oklahoma (AP-3)
  • Bob Ison, Georgia Tech (UP-3)
  • , SMU (CP-3)
  • Smith, UCLA (FD-2)
  • Holt Rast, Alabama (NEA-2; CP-4)
  • Jack Russell, Baylor (NEA-3)

Tackles[]

  • Alf Bauman, Northwestern (AAB; AP-3; CO-1; INS-2; UP-1; CP-3; FD-2; NYS-1; WC-1; NEA-3)
  • Nick Drahos, Cornell (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AP-1; INS-1; LIB; NEA-1; NW; SN; UP-1; INS-1; CP-1; DH; FD-1; WC-1)
  • Urban Odson, Minnesota (INS-1; LIB; NW; UP-2; CP-1; FD-2)
  • Bob Reinhard, California (AP-1; CO-1; INS-2; CP-2; NEA-2)
  • Forrest Behm, Nebraska (NEA-1)
  • , Duke (AP-2; UP-3; CP-2; NEA-2)
  • Fred Hartman, Rice (AP-2; CP-4)
  • Vic Sears, Oregon State (CP-4; NYS-1)
  • Joe Ungerer, Fordham (AP-3)
  • Mike Enich, Iowa (UP-2; SN; DH; FD-1)
  • , Texas A&M (UP-3)
  • , Lafayette ()
  • Abe Shires, Tennessee (CP-3; NEA-3)

Guards[]

  • Bob Suffridge, Tennessee (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AP-1; INS-1; CO-1; LIB; NEA-1; NW; SN; UP-1; CP-1; NYS-1; DH; FD-1; WC-1)
  • Marshall Robnett, Texas A&M (AAB; AP-2; INS-2; NW; UP-1; CP-1; DH; FD-1; WC-1; NEA-3)
  • Warren Alfson, Nebraska (AP-1; INS-1; UP-2; CP-2; FD-2)
  • Augie Lio, Georgetown (College Football Hall of Fame) (CO-1; INS-2; UP-2; CP-2; FD-2; NYS-1; NEA-2)
  • Helge Pukema, Minnesota (NEA-1)
  • , Mississippi State (AP-2)
  • George Kerr, Boston College (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-3)
  • , Denver (AP-3)
  • Ray Frankowski, Washington (LIB; UP-3)
  • Ed Molinski, Tennessee (College Football Hall of Fame) (SN; UP-3; CP-3; NEA-2)
  • Hal Lahar, Oklahoma (CP-3)
  • George Kinard, Ole Miss (CP-4)
  • John W. Goree, LSU (CP-4)
  • Tom Smith, Iowa State (NEA-3)

Centers[]

  • Rudy Mucha, Washington (AAB; AP-2; CO-1; INS-2; NW; SN; UP-1; CP-1; WC-1)
  • Leon Gajecki, Penn State (LIB; NEA-1; CP-2)
  • Chet Gladchuk, Boston College (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-1; UP-2)
  • , Penn (INS-1; CP-3; FD-2; NYS-1)
  • Ray Apolskis, Marquette (AP-3; UP-3; CP-4; DH; FD-1; NEA-2)
  • Stuart Clarkson, Texas A&M-Kingsville (NEA-3)

Quarterbacks[]

  • Frankie Albert, Stanford (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AP-1; CO-1; INS-1; NW; UP-1; CP-1; DH; FD-1; WC-1)
  • Paul Christman, Missouri (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-2; INS-2; UP-2; CP-3; DH; FD-1; NEA-2)
  • Henry Toczylowski, Boston College (NYS-1)
  • Don Scott, Ohio State (UP-3; CP-3; NEA-2 [fb])
  • Forest Evashevski, Michigan (CP-4; FD-2)
  • Jim Lalanne, North Carolina (NEA-3)

Halfbacks[]

  • Tom Harmon, Michigan (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AP-1; CO-1; INS-1; LIB; NEA-1; NW; SN; UP-1; CP-1; NYS-1; DH; FD-1; WC-1)
  • George Franck, Minnesota (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AP-1; CO-1; INS-1; LIB; NW; SN; UP-1; CP-1; DH; FD-1; NYS-1; WC-1; NEA-2)
  • Charlie O'Rourke, Boston College (College Football Hall of Fame) (AP-2; INS-2; NEA-1 [qb]; UP-2; CP-2; FD-2)
  • Hugh Gallarneau, Stanford (College Football Hall of Fame) (NEA-1)
  • Frank Reagan, Penn (AP-2; INS-2; LIB; SN; UP-2; CP-2; FD-2)
  • Bill Dudley, Virginia (College and Pro Football Hall of Fame) (AP-3)
  • Bob Foxx, Tennessee (AP-3; INS-2; CP-4)
  • Jim Kisselburgh, Oregon State (AP-3; CP-4)
  • Jim Thomason, Texas A&M (AP-3; CP-4; NEA-2)
  • Merle Hapes, Ole Miss (UP-3; NEA-3)
  • Steve Juzwik, Notre Dame (UP-3)
  • Jimmy Nelson, Alabama (CP-2)
  • Dave Allerdice, Princeton (CP-3)
  • Milt Piepul, Notre Dame (CP-3)
  • Bill Sewell, Washington State (FD-2)
  • Dean McAdams, Washington (NEA-3)

Fullbacks[]

  • John Kimbrough, Texas A&M (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; AP-1; CO-1; INS-1; LIB; NEA-1; NW; SN; UP-1; CP-1; NYS-1; WC-1; DH; FD-1)
  • George Paskvan, Wisconsin (AP-2; UP-3)
  • Norm Standlee, Stanford (UP-2; CP-2; FD-2; NEA-3)

Key[]

Bold = Consensus All-American[1]

  • -1 – First-team selection
  • -2 – Second-team selection
  • -3 – Third-team selection

Official selectors[]

  • AAB = All-America Board[2]
  • AP = Associated Press, based on a nationwide survey of expert opinion[3]
  • CO = Collier's Weekly, selected by Grantland Rice[4]
  • INS = International News Service, selected through a nationwide poll of coaches and sports writers[5]
  • LIB = Liberty magazine[2]
  • NEA = Newspaper Enterprise Association, picked with the aid and assistance of coaches, scouts, officials and football writers of the nation.[6]
  • NW = Newsweek[2]
  • SN = The Sporting News[2]
  • UP = United Press[7]

Other selectors[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Football Award Winners" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2016. p. 8. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d ESPN College Football Encyclopedia. ESPN Books. 2005. p. 1181. ISBN 1401337031.
  3. ^ Herb Barker (1940-12-08). "Two Dixie Stars Fill Flank Posts on All-America". The Sunday Spartanburg Herald-Journal.
  4. ^ "All-Star Team Is Announced by Collier's". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. 1940-12-06.
  5. ^ "Michigan, Minnesota Dominate All-America". St. Petersburg Times. 1940-12-03.
  6. ^ Harry Grayson (1940-11-26). "NEA Has Harmon and Kimbrough On All-American". Sarasota Herald-Tribune.
  7. ^ Harry Ferguson (1940-12-04). "Albert Named on United Press All-America 11". Lodi News-Sentinel.
  8. ^ Walter L. Johns (1940-12-10). "Captains Pick All-America for Central Press; Reinhard on List". Berkeley Daily Gazette.
  9. ^ "All-America Addendum" (PDF). College Football Historical Society Newsletter. May 1999.[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ "All-America Addendum" (PDF). College Football Historical Society Newsletter. May 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-13. Retrieved 2010-03-05.
  11. ^ "New York Sun Now Names All-Americans". Los Angeles Times. 1940-12-01.
  12. ^ "Walter Camp Football Foundation All-American Selections". Walter Camp Football Foundation. Archived from the original on 2007-12-18.
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