1910 Yale Bulldogs football team

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1910 Yale Bulldogs football
ConferenceIndependent
Record6–2–2
Head coach
Home stadiumYale Field
Seasons
← 1909
1911 →
1910 Eastern college football independents records
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
Pittsburgh     9 0 0
Harvard     9 0 1
Penn     9 1 1
Princeton     7 1 0
Trinity (CT)     7 1 0
Ursinus     6 1 0
Rhode Island State     5 1 1
Lafayette     7 2 0
Army     6 2 0
Brown     7 2 1
Yale     6 2 2
Dartmouth     5 2 0
Cornell     5 2 1
Penn State     5 2 1
Colgate     4 2 1
Swarthmore     5 3 0
Franklin & Marshall     4 3 2
Syracuse     5 4 1
Rutgers     3 2 3
Carlisle     8 6 0
Holy Cross     3 3 2
Temple     3 3 0
Washington & Jefferson     3 3 1
Wesleyan     4 4 1
Geneva     2 5 2
NYU     2 4 1
Dickinson     3 7 0
Lehigh     2 6 1
Bucknell     2 6 0
Vermont     1 5 1
Carnegie Tech     1 6 1
Boston College     0 4 2
Tufts     1 7 1
Villanova     0 4 2

The 1910 Yale Bulldogs football team represented Yale University in the 1910 college football season. The Bulldogs finished with a 6–2–2 record under first-year head coach Ted Coy.[1]

Yale end John Kilpatrick was a consensus pick for the 1910 College Football All-America Team, and four other Yale players (quarterback Art Howe, halfback Fred J. Daly, tackle James W. "Jim" Scully, and a guard with the surname Morris) received first-team All-America honors from at least one selector in 1910.

Schedule[edit]

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 28 WesleyanW 22–0
October 1 Syracuse
  • Yale Field
  • New Haven, CT
W 12–6
October 5 Tufts
  • Yale Field
  • New Haven, CT
W 17–0
October 8 Holy Cross
  • Yale Field
  • New Haven, CT
W 12–07,000[2]
October 15at ArmyL 3–9
October 22 Vanderbilt
  • Yale Field
  • New Haven, CT
T 0–0[3]
October 29 Colgate
  • Yale Field
  • New Haven, CT
W 19–0[4]
November 5 Brown
  • Yale Field
  • New Haven, CT
L 0–21
November 12at PrincetonW 5–3
November 19 Harvard
T 0–033,000[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "1910 Yale Bulldogs Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
  2. ^ "Yale 12, Holy Cross 0". The Boston Sunday Globe. Boston, Mass. October 9, 1910. p. 16 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "Yale outplayed by Vanderbilt". The Boston Sunday Globe. October 23, 1910. Retrieved December 16, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ "Yale Score 19, Colgate Blanked: Blue Tallies in Every Way Known To Game of Football". The Boston Sunday Globe. October 30, 1910. p. 16 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ Melville E. Webb Jr. and W.D. Sullivan (November 20, 1910). "Harvard Held to 0-to-0 Tie: Yale Gives Big Red Team Surprise and Shock". The Boston Globe. pp. 1, 16, 17 – via Newspapers.com.