Showing posts with label 1921 APFA season. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1921 APFA season. Show all posts

May 5, 2015

Highlighted Year: Benny Boynton, 1921

Back, Rochester Jeffersons/Washington Senators


Age: 23 (Dec. 6)
1st season in pro football
College: Williams
Height: 5’9”   Weight: 170

Prelude:
Boynton earned the nickname “The Purple Streak” at Williams College, where he was part of an undefeated (7-0-1) team and a consensus All-American as a freshman before entering the military during World War I. He returned to college in 1919 and was captain of the football team in addition to playing baseball and basketball. Boynton scored 141 points as a senior in 1920 on 22 touchdowns and 9 extra points to lead the nation, including a six-TD game against Trinity College. He was a Walter Camp All-American selection. Following college, he was recruited to play pro football for Rochester and, after appearing in three games, signed on with Washington later in the season.

1921 Season Summary
Appeared in three games with Rochester, two with Washington
[Bracketed numbers indicate league rank in Top 20]

Scoring
Rushing TDs – 3 [8, tied with Pete Calac, Frank Fausch & Frank McCormick]
Receiving TDs – 0
Total TDs – 3 [9, tied with ten others]
Field Goals – 1 [8, tied with eight others]
PATs – 11 [3]
Points – 32 [7]

Awards & Honors:
1st team All-APFA: Buffalo Evening News

Jeffersons went 2-3 to finish tenth in the APFA.

Senators went 1-2 to finish twelfth in the APFA.

Aftermath:
Boynton played in only one game for Rochester in 1922, concentrating more on baseball. He returned to the NFL with the Buffalo Bisons in 1924 and again performed with distinction, scoring 59 points and receiving first-team All-NFL honors from Collyer’s Eye and the Green Bay Press-Gazette. It was his final season as a player, although Boynton went on to become a football referee for many years in his native Texas, most notably officiating in the first Cotton Bowl game. Overall, in a short but productive playing career, Boynton appeared in a total of 16 games and scored 91 points on 9 touchdowns, 22 extra points, and five field goals.

--

Highlighted Years features players who were consensus first-team All-League* selections or league* or conference** leaders in the following statistical categories:

Rushing: Yards, TDs (min. 10)
Passing: Yards, Completion Pct., Yards per Attempt, TDs, Rating
Receiving: Catches, Yards, TDs (min. 10)
Scoring: TDs, Points, Field Goals (min. 5)
All-Purpose: Total Yards
Defense: Interceptions, Sacks
Kickoff Returns: Average
Punt Returns: Average
Punting: Average

*Leagues include NFL (1920 to date), AFL (1926), AFL (1936-37), AAFC (1946-49), AFL (1960-69), WFL (1974-75), USFL (1983-85)

**NFC/AFC since 1970

June 23, 2014

Highlighted Year: Ockie Anderson, 1921

Back, Buffalo All-Americans



Age: 27 (Oct. 15)
2nd season in pro football & with All-Americans
College: Colgate
Height: 5’9”   Weight: 165

Prelude:
Anderson was a three-sport star in college (basketball and track were the others) and, in football, a first-team Walter Camp All-American in 1916. He served two years in the military during World War I and then returned to his native Erie, Pennsylvania where he became athletic director in the city’s school system. He joined the new Buffalo team of the APFA (later NFL) in 1920. With several other former college stars on the squad, the team became known as the All-Americans and the fast and elusive Anderson was the featured back. Unofficially, since individual statistics weren’t yet being compiled by the new league, he led the team in touchdowns (11) and scoring (69 points) in ’20.

1921 Season Summary
Appeared in all 11 games
[Bracketed numbers indicate league rank in Top 20]

Scoring
Rushing TDs – 5 [2, tied with Frank Bacon & Jim Laird]
Receiving TDs – 1 [8, tied with many]
Punt Ret. TDs – 1 [1, tied with Paddy Driscoll]
Total TDs – 7 [1, tied with Fritz Pollard]
Points – 42 [2, tied with Fritz Pollard]

All-Americans went 9-1-2 to finish second in the APFA while leading the league in scoring (211 points).

Aftermath:
Anderson’s pro career came to an end during the 1922 season due to a knee injury. Over the course of three seasons and 29 games, he officially scored 8 touchdowns for a total of 48 points, but adding in the unofficial numbers from 1920, it comes to 19 TDs and 117 points.

--

Highlighted Years features players who were first-team All-League* selections or league* or conference** leaders in the following statistical categories:

Rushing: Yards, TDs (min. 10)
Passing: Yards, Completion Pct., Yards per Attempt, TDs, Rating
Receiving: Catches, Yards, TDs (min. 10)
Scoring: TDs, Points, Field Goals (min. 5)
All-Purpose: Total Yards
Defense: Interceptions, Sacks
Kickoff Returns: Average
Punt Returns: Average
Punting: Average

*Leagues include NFL (1920 to date), AFL (1926), AFL (1936-37), AAFC (1946-49), AFL (1960-69), WFL (1974-75), USFL (1983-85)

**NFC/AFC since 1970

December 3, 2011

1921: Thorpe & Brickley Stage Halftime Drop-kicking Competition


The pro football game between the Cleveland Indians and New York Brickley Giants on December 3, 1921 was something of an oddity in that the contest became secondary to what happened during halftime.

The fledgling American Professional Football Association, which would be renamed the National Football League the next year, was getting its first shot at a New York City franchise with Brickley’s Giants (no relation to the current New York Giants franchise). The team was named for Charlie Brickley, a former Harvard star who organized the club along with a sports promoter named Billy Gibson.

Cleveland had been an original APFA franchise in 1920 and was called the Tigers during that 2-4-2 season. For 1921, the team had added to its backfield three ex-members of the Canton Bulldogs who happened to also be Native Americans – the legendary Jim Thorpe (pictured above), plus Joe Guyon and Pete Calac – and was rechristened the Indians.

Brickley and Thorpe were considered to be two of the greatest, if not the greatest, drop-kickers ever. At that point, drop-kicking was an important skill in an era when the ball was more round and less sleek than it is today and touchdowns more difficult to come by.


Brickley (pictured at left) was an All-American halfback in 1913 and ’14 and had his most notable performance against Yale in 1913 as he kicked five field goals in a 15-5 win. He booted 13 field goals in all that year and had a career total of 34, which were both records at the time. Brickley went into college coaching and also played pro football in those pre-NFL years with the Canton Bulldogs and Massillon Tigers.

Thorpe had been star halfback at Carlisle Indian School, scoring 25 touchdowns in the 1912 season alone. An amazing all-around athlete who won the decathlon at the 1912 Olympics and played major league baseball, he was at his best on the football field and was a leading professional star from the time he joined the Canton Bulldogs in 1915. He was also a major figure as a player/coach (which he was for the Indians in 1921) and was the first president of the APFA in 1920.

On this day, the 33-year-old Thorpe was bandaged up due to two broken ribs. Brickley, who had recently turned 30, did not play for his team, despite calls from the crowd. The field was muddy and hindered the offenses, and the game itself was drab and generated little enthusiasm from the crowd of 5000 on a Saturday afternoon at the Polo Grounds.

Cleveland dominated as the Brickley Giants managed only one first down the entire game. Joe Guyon had an outstanding rushing performance, scoring the first touchdown in the opening period and on four occasions turning the corner for long runs down the sideline. Thorpe added the extra point and a 40-yard field goal in the second quarter. HB Johnny Hendren capped a long fourth-quarter drive with the last TD for Cleveland, and the Indians coasted to a 17-0 win.

The dropkicking exhibition proved to be more competitive. Thorpe and Brickley started off at the 25-yard line and moved progressively farther back, with Thorpe leading early but the two ending up tied at six successful kicks apiece. Accounts differ as to the lengths of the successful kicks, with Brickley getting credited for drop-kicks of 48 and 50 yards and Thorpe of 45, though some said Thorpe connected from 55 yards and Brickley hit the upright from that distance. Whatever the actual result, the exhibition attracted great interest.

Cleveland went on to finish the season with a 3-5 record, placing 11th in the 21-club league that was not yet broken up into divisions (that wouldn’t happen until 1933). The Brickley Giants were just 0-2 in league games - as was the practice at the time, they played several non-league contests against teams such as the Union Quakers of Philadelphia and Brooklyn All-Star Collegians and were 5-3 overall. Both clubs folded following the 1921 season.

Jim Thorpe went on to play with five more teams until 1928, his final year at age 41. Among many honors that he received, in 1950 he was chosen as Greatest Athlete of the First Half of the 20th Century in a poll of Associated Press sportswriters and was selected as a charter member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963. Charlie Brickley left football coaching to pursue a rather checkered career as a stock broker (he was convicted of illegal practices in the operation of his brokerage firm in 1928).

The art of drop-kicking began to die away in the 1930s with the streamlining of the football. It became more and more necessary for kickers to use a holder in order to assure that the ball would be positioned properly. The last drop-kicked field goal in the NFL was by Detroit’s Dutch Clark in 1937. However, the drop-kick has never been completely forgotten – in the final game of the 2005 season (the actual date was Jan. 1, 2006), QB Doug Flutie of the Patriots drop-kicked an extra point to cap his pro football career.