From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
1917 Rose Bowl
American college football game
American college football game
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| year_game_played | 1917 |
| game_name | Tournament East-West football game |
| subheader | 3rd Rose Bowl Game |
| football_season | 1916 |
| visitor_name_short | Penn |
| visitor_nickname | Quakers |
| visitor_school | Pennsylvania University |
| home_name_short | Oregon |
| home_nickname | Webfoots |
| home_school | Oregon University |
| visitor_record | 7–2–1 |
| visitor_conference | Independent |
| home_record | 6–0–1 |
| home_conference | PCC |
| visitor_coach | Bob Folwell |
| home_coach | Hugo Bezdek |
| visitor_1q | 0 |
| visitor_2q | 0 |
| visitor_3q | 0 |
| visitor_4q | 0 |
| home_1q | 0 |
| home_2q | 0 |
| home_3q | 7 |
| home_4q | 7 |
| date_game_played | January 1 |
| stadium | Tournament Park |
| city | Pasadena, California |
| MVP | John Beckett (Oregon) |
| attendance | 27,000 |
| different_previous | [1916](1916-rose-bowl) |
| different_next | [1918](1918-rose-bowl) |
The 1917 Rose Bowl, known at the time as the Tournament East-West Football Game, was a college football bowl game on Monday, January 1, 1917. It was the third Rose Bowl Game, and matched the Oregon Webfoots and the Penn Quakers. It was played at Tournament Park in Pasadena, California, a suburb northeast of Los Angeles.
Scoreless at halftime, Oregon scored a touchdown in each of the final two quarters and won 14–0. Oregon team captain John Beckett was named the Player of the Game when the award was created in 1953, with selections made retroactively. This shutout win was Oregon's sole Rose Bowl victory for 95 years, until January 2012; they made appearances in 1920, 1958, 1995, and 2010, and won again in 2015 and 2020. This was Penn's only appearance; other Ivy League teams at the Rose Bowl were Harvard in 1920 and Columbia in 1934, both winners.
Oregon and Washington were both unbeaten in the new Pacific Coast Conference that year, and tied in their head-to-head meeting. Oregon was invited to participate in the Tournament of Roses game prior to their {{nowrap|final game,{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=DzJNAAAAIBAJ&sjid=pkcDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3723,1720235|title=Oregon plays Penn on New Year's Day |access-date=October 31, 2011
Game summary
Oregon was led by the two Huntington brothers, Shy and Hollis. Following a scoreless first half, the Webfoots scored on a 15-yard pass in the 3rd quarter from Shy Huntington to Lloyd Tegert. Oregon scored again in the 4th quarter on a 1-yard run from Shy to lead the Webfoots to a 14–0 upset win.
Scoring
| Qtr. | Team | Scoring play | Score | Source: | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **3** | Oregon Ducks | border=0}}; text-align:center" | **ORE** | Tegert 15 yard pass from S. Huntington, S. Huntington kick | ORE 7–0 | |
| **4** | Oregon Ducks | border=0}}; text-align:center" | **ORE** | S. Huntington 1 yard rush, S. Huntington kick | ORE 14–0 |
Statistics
| Team stats | Oregon | Pennsylvania |
|---|---|---|
| First downs | 8 | 13 |
| Net Yards Rushing | 198 | 111 |
| Net Yards Passing | 32 | 131 |
| Total Yards | 230 | 242 |
| PC–PA–Int. | 2–9–2 | 12–27–5 |
| Punts-Avg. | 16-35.7 | 10-41.8 |
Game notes
Attendance was swelled to 25,000 when the Pasadena Tournament of Roses put up temporary grandstand seating.
References
References
- "Oregon State Bowl History".
- (January 1, 1917). "Pennsy eleven vs. Oregon today". Spokesman-Review.
- (January 1, 1917). "Oregon eleven wins, score 14 to 0". Eugene Daily Guard.
- (January 2, 1917). "Oregon beats Pennsy in exciting football battle at Pasadena". Deseret News.
- (November 21, 1916). "Oregon to meet Pennsy eleven". Spokesman-Review.
- (November 21, 1916). "Oregon selected to meet eastern team". Eugene Daily Guard.
- "Rose Bowl 1917". RoseBowlHistory.org.
- "1917 Rose Bowl". GoDucks.com.
- (2005). "ESPN College Football Encyclopedia". ESPN Books.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 1917 Rose Bowl — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report