Georgia Bulldogs Football Games in The 1890s
There were six head coaches of the Georgia Bulldogs football team in the 1890s. Charles Herty (1982 season), Ernest Brown (1893 season), Robert Winston (1894 season), "Pop" Warner, (1895 & 1896 seasons), Charles McCarthy (1897 & 1898 seasons) and Gordon Saussy (1899 season).
Date | Opponent | Site | Result | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1892-01-30 | Mercer* | Herty Field • Athens, GA | W 50-0 | |||||
1892-02-20 | vs. Auburn* | Piedmont Park • Atlanta, Georgia (Deep South's Oldest Rivalry) | L 10-0 | |||||
1893-11-04 | Georgia Tech* | Herty Field, • Athens (Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate) | L 28-6 | |||||
1893-11-11 | at Vanderbilt* | Nashville, TN | L 35-10 | |||||
1893-11-30 | vs. Savannah AC* | Savannah, GA | T 0-0 | |||||
1893-12-01 | at Augusta AC* | Augusta, GA | W 24-0 | |||||
1893-12-09 | vs. Furman* | Augusta | W 35-10 | |||||
1894-10-29 | Sewanee* | Herty Field, • Athens | L 12-8 | |||||
1894-11-03 | at South Carolina* | Columbia, SC | W 40-0 | |||||
1894-11-10 | at Wofford* | Spartanburg, SC | W 0-0 | |||||
1894-11-30 | at Augusta AC* | Augusta | W 66-0 | |||||
1894-12-01 | vs. Auburn* | Atlanta (Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry) | W 10-8 | |||||
1894-12-09 | vs. Savannah AC* | Savannah, GA | W 22-0 | |||||
1895-10-19 | Wofford* | Herty Field • Athens | W 34-0 | |||||
1895-10-26 | vs. North Carolina | Atlanta | L 6-0 | |||||
1895-10-31 | vs. North Carolina | Atlanta | L 10-6 | |||||
1895-11-02 | vs. Alabama | Wildwood Park, • Columbus, GA | W 30-6 | |||||
1895-11-09 | vs. Sewanee | Atlanta | W 22-0 | |||||
1895-11-23 | at Vanderbilt | Nashville, TN | L 6-0 | |||||
1895-12-09 | vs. Auburn | Atlanta (Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry) | L 16-6 | |||||
1896-10-24 | at Wofford* | Spartanburg, SC | W 26-0 | |||||
1896-10-31 | vs. North Carolina | Atlanta | W 24-16 | |||||
1896-11-10 | vs. Sewanee | Atlanta | W 26-0 | |||||
1896-11-30 | vs. Auburn | Atlanta (Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry) | W 12-6 | |||||
1897-10-09 | Clemson | Herty Field • Athens | W 24-0 | |||||
1897-10-23 | Georgia Tech | Herty Field • Athens (Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate) | W 28-0 | |||||
1897-10-30 | vs. Virginia* | Atlanta | L 17-4 | |||||
1898-10-08 | Clemson | Herty Field • Athens | W 20-8 | |||||
1898-10-15 | Atlanta AC* | Herty Field • Athens | W 14-0 | |||||
1898-10-22 | Georgia Tech | Herty Field • Athens (Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate) | W 15-0 | |||||
1898-11-29 | vs. Vanderbilt | Atlanta | W 4-0 | |||||
1898-11-12 | vs. North Carolina | Macon, GA | L 44-0 | |||||
1898-11-24 | vs. Auburn | Atlanta (Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry) | L 18-17 | |||||
1899-10-07 | Clemson | Herty Field • Athens | W 11-0 | |||||
1899-10-21 | vs. Sewanee | Atlanta | L 12-0 | |||||
1899-10-28 | Georgia Tech | Herty Field • Athens (Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate) | W 33-0 | |||||
1899-11-11 | at Tennessee | Knoxville, TN | L 5-0 | |||||
1899-11-18 | vs. Auburn | Atlanta (Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry) | T 0-0 | |||||
1899-11-30 | vs. North Carolina | Atlanta | L 5-0 | |||||
Decade Record: 23-14-2, a winning percentage of .615.
Milestones: SIAA Co-Champion in 1896.
Read more about this topic: Georgia Bulldogs Football (all Games)
Famous quotes containing the words georgia, football and/or games:
“Being a Georgia author is a rather specious dignity, on the same order as, for the pig, being a Talmadge ham.”
—Flannery OConnor (19251964)
“People stress the violence. Thats the smallest part of it. Football is brutal only from a distance. In the middle of it theres a calm, a tranquility. The players accept pain. Theres a sense of order even at the end of a running play with bodies stewn everywhere. When the systems interlock, theres a satisfaction to the game that cant be duplicated. Theres a harmony.”
—Don Delillo (b. 1926)
“In the past, it seemed to make sense for a sportswriter on sabbatical from the playpen to attend the quadrennial hawgkilling when Presidential candidates are chosen, to observe and report upon politicians at play. After all, national conventions are games of a sort, and sports offers few spectacles richer in low comedy.”
—Walter Wellesley (Red)