The 1923 All-Big Ten Conference football team consists of American football players selected to the All-Big Ten Conference teams chosen by various selectors for the 1923 Big Ten Conference football season.
Ends
- Ray Eklund, Minnesota (BE; NB-1; WE-1)
- Elmer A. Lampe, Chicago (NB-1; WE-2)
- John W. Hancock, Iowa (BE; WE-3)
- Lowell Otte, Iowa (WE-1)
- Russell Irish, Wisconsin (NB-2; WE-3)
- Frank Rokusek, Illinois (NB-2; WE-2)
Tackles
- Marty Below, Wisconsin (BE; NB-1; WE-1)
- Stanley Muirhead, Michigan (BE; NB-1; WE-1)
- Leo Kriz, Iowa (NB-2; WE-2)
- Gowdy, Chicago (NB-2; WE-3)
- Boni Petcoff, Ohio State (WE-2)
- Louis Gross, Minnesota (WE-3)
Guards
- Jim McMillen, Illinois (BE; NB-1; WE-1)
- Adolph Bieberstein, Wisconsin (BE; WE-2)
- George Abramson, Minnesota (NB-1)
- Lloyd Rohrke, Chicago (WE-1)
- Joe Pondelik, Chicago (NB-2)
- Thomas Butler, Indiana (NB-2; WE-3)
- Gay, Minnesota (WE-2)
- Bill Fleckenstein, Iowa (WE-3)
Centers
- Jack Blott, Michigan (BE; NB-1; WE-1)
- Billy Young, Ohio State (NB-2)
- Ralph Claypool, Purdue (WE-2)
- King, Chicago (WE-3)
Quarterbacks
- Hoge Workman, Ohio State (NB-1; WE-1)
- Irwin Uteritz, Michigan (NB-2)
- Harry A. Hall, Illinois (WE-2)
- Malcolm Graham, Minnesota (WE-3)
Halfbacks
- Red Grange, Illinois (BE; NB-1; WE-1)
- Earl Martineau, Minnesota (BE; NB-1; WE-2)
- Harry Kipke, Michigan (BE [qb]; NB-2; WE-1)
- Bill McElwain, Northwestern (NB-2; WE-3)
- Jack Harris, Wisconsin (WE-2)
- Cully Lidberg, Minnesota (WE-3)
Fullbacks
- Merrill Taft, Wisconsin (BE; NB-1; WE-1)
- Earl Britton, Illinois (NB-2; WE-3)
- John Webster Thomas, Chicago (WE-2)
See also
Key
BE = Billy Evans released an all-conference team based on his polling of the conference's head coaches, with eight of ten providing their votes[1]
NB = Norman E. Brown
WE = Walter Eckersall[2]
Bold = first-team selection by a majority of the selectors listed above
References
- ↑ Billy Evans (December 4, 1923). "Coaches Select All-Conference Football Team for Evans". The New Castle Herald. p. 9.
- ↑ "Eckersall's All-Conference Elevens". Detroit Free Press. December 2, 1923. p. 21.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.