The 1935 college football season was the last one before the Associated Press (AP) writers' poll was used in selecting the national champion. There were seven contemporary math system selectors that year who are informally recognized by the NCAA as "nationwide in scope". The Dickinson System, run by University of Illinois Professor Frank Dickinson, selected Southern Methodist University (SMU) as best in the nation. The Houlgate System, created by Carroll Everard "Deke" Houlgate Sr., also selected SMU. The contemporary Boand, Litkenhous and Poling math rating systems all selected Minnesota as the No. 1 team in the nation. The Dunkel System selected Princeton as its top team. The Williamson System, by Paul O. Williamson of New Orleans, ranked Texas Christian University first.
The 1935 season also marked the first time the Heisman Trophy was awarded. It was won by Jay Berwanger of Chicago. Quarterback Ray Zeh of Case Western Reserve led the nation in scoring.
September 21
SMU opened with a 39âÂÂ0 win over North Texas and TCU opened its season with a 41âÂÂ0 win over visiting Howard Payne College.
September 28
SMU beat Austin College 60âÂÂ0 and TCU beat North Texas 28âÂÂ11. Stanford beat San Jose State 35âÂÂ0 and UCLA beat Utah State 39âÂÂ0., Fordham University, whose 1936 team would include the legendary Seven Blocks of Granite was a favorite New York City college football teams, after New York University and Columbia University. The Rams played all of their games at home at the Polo Grounds, which also hosted the NFL's New york Giants. In a game against visiting Franklin & Marshall, the Rams were losing until they scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter for a 14âÂÂ7 win. California played a doubleheader, beating UC-Davis 47âÂÂ0 and Whittier 6âÂÂ0. Notre Dame defeated visiting Kansas, 28âÂÂ7. Pittsburgh had an unexpectedly difficult time in a 14âÂÂ0 win over visiting Waynesburg College.
October 5
Minnesota beat visiting North Dakota State 26âÂÂ6, Stanford won at the U. of San Francisco 10âÂÂ0 and California beat St. Mary's 10âÂÂ0. In Portland, UCLA beat Oregon State 20âÂÂ7. Ohio State beat Kentucky 19âÂÂ6, Princeton edged Penn 7âÂÂ6, Fordham beat Boston College 19âÂÂ0, Notre Dame won at Carnegie Tech 14âÂÂ3, and Pittsburgh won at Washington & Jefferson 35âÂÂ0. TCU won at Arkansas 13âÂÂ7 and SMU beat visiting Tulsa 14âÂÂ0.
October 12
Minnesota won at Nebraska 12âÂÂ7 and Ohio State defeated visiting Drake 85âÂÂ7. In Portland, California beat Oregon, 6âÂÂ0. TCU won at Tulsa, 13âÂÂ0. In St. Louis, SMU beat Washington University 35âÂÂ6. Notre Dame won at Wisconsin, 27âÂÂ0 Pittsburgh beat West Virginia, 24âÂÂ6. Fordham lost to Purdue, 20âÂÂ0 Princeton defeated Williams College, 14âÂÂ7.
October 19
UCLA won at Stanford, 7âÂÂ6. Notre Dame (3âÂÂ0) and Pittsburgh, both 3âÂÂ0âÂÂ0, met at South Bend, with the Fighting Irish handing Pitt its first loss, 9âÂÂ6. Minnesota beat visiting Tulane 20âÂÂ0 Ohio State beat Northwestern 28âÂÂ7. SMU and Rice, both 4âÂÂ0âÂÂ0, met in Dallas, with SMU winning, 10âÂÂ0. TCU beat visiting Texas A&M 19âÂÂ14 to stay unbeaten. California beat Santa Clara 6âÂÂ0. Princeton beat Rutgers, 29âÂÂ6. Fordham beat Vanderbilt, 13âÂÂ7
October 26
TCU won at Centenary, 27âÂÂ7. Stanford won at Washington 6âÂÂ0, California beat visiting USC, 21âÂÂ7, and UCLA beat Oregon, 33âÂÂ6. Minnesota beat Northwestern at home 21âÂÂ13 and Ohio State won at Indiana 28âÂÂ6 Fordham defeated Lebanon Valley College 15âÂÂ0. Pittsburgh beat Penn State 9âÂÂ0. Princeton won at Cornell 54âÂÂ0. At Baltimore, Notre Dame beat Navy 14âÂÂ0. In a game at Wichita Falls, Texas, SMU beat HardinâÂÂSimmons 18âÂÂ6.
November 2
Notre Dame (5âÂÂ0âÂÂ0) and Ohio State (4âÂÂ0âÂÂ0) met at Columbus before a crowd of 80,000. Grantland Rice described what happened: "Completely outplayed in the first two quarters, trailing 13 to 0 as the final quarter started with every killing break against it-- breaks that would crack the heart of an iron ox-- this Notre Dame team came surging back in the final quarter...". Notre Dame scored early in the fourth, but the extra point attempt bounced off the crossbar, and it was 13âÂÂ6. After an interception, the Irish drove to within six inches of the goal line when Milner fumbled the ball away. With 90 seconds left, Andy Pilney passed to Mike Layden for a touchdown, but the extra point failed and the Irish trailed 13âÂÂ12. Andy Pilney forced a Buckeye fumble at midfield, giving the Irish the ball at the 49 yard line, and on the next play, Pilney, taking back over as quarterback, scrambled to the 19 yard line, but was injured. With only one play left in the game, reserve quarterback Bill Shakespeare passed to Wayne Milner for the 18âÂÂ13 win.
At Los Angeles, California (6âÂÂ0âÂÂ0) faced UCLA (4âÂÂ0âÂÂ0) and won 14âÂÂ2. TCU visited Baylor (6âÂÂ0âÂÂ0). TCU shut the Bears out 28âÂÂ0. SMU beat visiting Texas 20âÂÂ0. Minnesota beat Purdue 29âÂÂ7. Stanford beat Santa Clara in another close game, 9âÂÂ6. Fordham and Pittsburgh played to a 0âÂÂ0 tie. Princeton defeated Navy 26âÂÂ0.
November 9
Unbeaten Notre Dame hosted the Northwestern Wildcats, who had a losing record (2âÂÂ3âÂÂ0). With William Shakespeare at left halfback for the Irish, and Henry Wardsworth Longfellow playing right end for the Wildcats, the game looked like no more than a meeting of literary namesakes. Shakespeare's running game was shut down, while Longfellow caught one touchdown pass, and then recovered a fumble in the fourth quarter to set up a second touchdown for a major upset, as Northwestern won 14âÂÂ7 Minnesota won at Iowa 13âÂÂ6. In Los Angeles, SMU handed UCLA (4âÂÂ1âÂÂ0) its second straight loss, 21âÂÂ0. Stanford won at USC, 3âÂÂ0. California beat Washington 14âÂÂ0.
Fordham tied St. Mary's College 7âÂÂ7, Princeton beat Harvard 35âÂÂ0 and Pittsburgh beat visiting Army 29âÂÂ6. Ohio State won at Chicago, 20âÂÂ13. In a Friday game at New Orleans, TCU beat Loyola College 14âÂÂ0.
November 16
TCU won at Texas 28âÂÂ0 and SMU won at Arkansas 17âÂÂ6. Fordham beat Muhlenberg College 45âÂÂ0 at the Polo Grounds, while Notre Dame and Army played to a 6âÂÂ6 tie at Yankee Stadium. Pittsburgh beat Nebraska 6âÂÂ0 and Princeton beat Lehigh 27âÂÂ0. Stanford defeated Montana 32âÂÂ0 California beat Pacific 39âÂÂ0 Ohio State beat Illinois 38âÂÂ0 and Minnesota won at Michigan 40âÂÂ0 In a Friday game, UCLA beat visiting Hawaii 19âÂÂ6.
November 23
California (9âÂÂ0) and Stanford (6âÂÂ1âÂÂ0) met at Palo Alto, as Stanford handed the Golden Bears their first loss, 13âÂÂ0. On the strength of the win, Stanford got the bid to the Rose Bowl. In a matchup of two great Ivy teams, Princeton (7âÂÂ0âÂÂ0) hosted Dartmouth (8âÂÂ0âÂÂ0), with Princeton winning 26âÂÂ6. SMU defeated visiting Baylor 10âÂÂ0 and TCU beat visiting Rice, 27âÂÂ6, as both teams raised their records to 10âÂÂ0âÂÂ0.
UCLA beat Loyola Marymount 14âÂÂ6 Notre Dame closed its season with a 20âÂÂ13 win over USC. Minnesota beat visiting Wisconsin, 33âÂÂ7 to close its season at 8âÂÂ0âÂÂ0.
For the first time, Ohio State closed with its regular season with Michigan, a tradition that continued with only one interruption, in 1942. OSU won at Ann Arbor, 38âÂÂ0.
On Thanksgiving Day, November 28 a crowd of 78,000 turned out at Yankee Stadium to watch Fordham (5âÂÂ1âÂÂ2) face New York University (7âÂÂ1âÂÂ0). Fordham shut out NYU 21âÂÂ0, but not before a fight broke out with the spectators crowding the field, Pittsburgh (6âÂÂ1âÂÂ0) and Carnegie Tech (2âÂÂ5âÂÂ0) played to a 0âÂÂ0 tie.
November 30
The most eagerly watched game of the season matched two unbeaten (10âÂÂ0âÂÂ0) teams, with Texas Christian (10âÂÂ0âÂÂ0) hosting Southern Methodist. SMU won 20âÂÂ14 and was invited to the Rose Bowl, while TCU went to the Sugar Bowl.
Princeton closed its season with a 38âÂÂ7 win at Yale, to finish 9âÂÂ0âÂÂ0.
December 7
UCLA beat Idaho 13âÂÂ6. TCU won at Santa Clara, 10âÂÂ6.
December 14
In San Francisco, UCLA closed its season with a 13âÂÂ7 win over St. Mary's, while in Los Angeles, Pittsburgh beat USC 12âÂÂ7.
A poll of 142 newspaper writers, taken at year's endâÂÂby United Press International (known as United Press Associations at the time)âÂÂconcluded that Minnesota was the best in the nation. Alan J. Gould, creator of the AP writer's poll that would begin in the following year, named Minnesota, Princeton, and SMU co-champions.
Years later, other selectors recognized as âÂÂmajorâ by the NCAA, the Billingsley Report, the Helms Athletic Foundation title, and National Championship Foundation, retroactively selected Minnesota as national champion. Modern selectors, the Sagarin Ratings and Berryman Quality Point Rating System (Berryman QPRS), retroactively deemed SMU as national champion.
Rankings from the Dickinson System
The Rose Bowl matched unbeaten Southwest Conference champion SMU (12âÂÂ0) against Pacific Coast Conference co-champion Stanford (7âÂÂ1) before a crowd of 86,000. Stanford has lost the two previous Rose Bowls, falling to Columbia in the 1934 Rose Bowl and 1934 Alabama Crimson Tide football team the 1935 game. Determined not three-peat, the Stanford scored an early touchdown and held off the Mustangs to win 7âÂÂ0.
In New Orleans, the second annual Sugar Bowl pitted TCU (11âÂÂ1) against Southeastern Conference champion LSU (9âÂÂ1) before a crowd of 38,000. TCU's Sammy Baugh was forced out of the end zone on a pass attempt, and the safety gave LSU a 2âÂÂ0 lead. Two minutes later, Baugh drove the Frogs to the 17-yard line, setting up Taldon Malton's field goal. The final score was TCU 3, LSU 2
In Miami, the second annual Orange Bowl matched Ole Miss (9âÂÂ2) against unheralded Catholic University (8âÂÂ1). A crowd of 10,000 watched Catholic take an early lead and pull off a 20âÂÂ19 upset. The Sun Bowl matched two colleges for the first time, as New Mexico A&M and HardinâÂÂSimmons battled to a 14âÂÂ14 tie.
1935 was the first year that the Heisman Trophy was ever awarded, although it was named differently in the first year. In 1935, it was presented by the Downtown Athletic Club (DAC) in Manhattan, New York, a privately owned recreation facility near the site of the former World Trade Center. It was first known simply as the "DAC Trophy" for this inaugural year. The first winner, Jay Berwanger of the University of Chicago, was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles but declined to sign for them. He never played professional football for any team. In 1936, John Heisman died and the trophy was renamed in his honor. Larry Kelley, the second winner of the award was the first man to win it officially named as the "Heisman Trophy."
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