1935 Southern Illinois Maroons football
ConferenceIllinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
Record1–7–1 (1–4–1 IIAC)
Head coach
1935 Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Millikin + 4 0 05 1 0
Monmouth (IL) + 4 0 06 3 0
Northern Illinois State 5 1 17 1 1
Illinois College 5 1 05 3 0
McKendree 4 1 15 3 1
Illinois Wesleyan 4 1 07 3 0
Illinois State Normal 4 2 15 2 2
Elmhurst 2 1 15 2 1
Knox (IL) 2 1 15 2 2
Augustana (IL) 3 2 05 3 0
North Central 3 3 04 3 0
Carthage 2 3 04 4 0
Wheaton (IL) 1 2 12 5 1
St. Viator 1 2 02 4 2
Southern Illinois 1 4 11 7 1
Bradley 1 5 11 6 1
Western Illinois 1 6 02 6 0
Lake Forest 0 1 03 4 0
Eastern Illinois 0 5 01 7 0
Eureka 0 6 00 6 0
  • + Conference co-champions

The 1935 Southern Illinois Maroons football team was an American football team that represented Southern Illinois Normal University (now known as Southern Illinois University Carbondale) in the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (IIAC) during the 1935 college football season. In its 19th season under head coach William McAndrew, the team compiled a 1–7–1 record (1–4–1 against conference opponents) and finished in 15th place out of 20 teams in the IIAC.[1]

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultSource
September 28Arkansas State*Carbondale, ILL 0–7[2]
October 4Cape Girardeau*Carbondale, ILL 0–7
October 12at Illinois State Normal
L 0–13[3]
October 19at St. ViatorBourbonnais, ILL 7–20
October 26Northern Illinois StateCarbondale, ILL 0–28
November 2at McKendreeLebanon, ILT 12–12
November 8at Cape GirardeauL 0–14
November 16at Eastern Illinois
W 13–9
November 23Illinois WesleyanCarbondale, ILL 0–20
  • *Non-conference game

References

  1. "Southern Illinois Saluki Football 2019 Media Guide" (PDF). Southern Illinois University. 2019. p. 114. Retrieved July 14, 2020.
  2. "Bad pass is fatal to Southern Normal". The Pantagraph. September 29, 1935. Retrieved October 17, 2022 via Newspapers.com.
  3. "Two Spectacular Plays Enable State Normal to Score 13-0 Victory Over Southern". The Pantagraph. October 13, 1935. p. 11. Retrieved January 9, 2022 via Newspapers.com.
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