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・ 1893 Navy Midshipmen football team
・ 1893 Nebraska Bugeaters football team
・ 1893 New Year Honours
・ 1893 New York Giants season
・ 1893 New York hurricane
・ 1893 New Zealand rugby union tour of Australia
・ 1893 North Carolina Tar Heels football team
・ 1893 Ohio State Buckeyes football team
・ 1893 Open Championship
・ 1893 Oregon Agricultural Aggies football team
・ 1893 Penn Quakers football team
・ 1893 Penn State Nittany Lions football team
・ 1893 Philadelphia Phillies season
・ 1893 Pittsburg Pirates season
・ 1893 Pittsburgh Athletic Club football season
1893 Princeton Tigers football team
・ 1893 Quchan earthquake
・ 1893 SAFA season
・ 1893 Sea Islands hurricane
・ 1893 Sewanee Tigers football team
・ 1893 Shamrock
・ 1893 Singapore Amateur Football Association Challenge Cup
・ 1893 St. Louis Browns season
・ 1893 Stanford football team
・ 1893 Stanley Cup championship
・ 1893 State of the Union Address
・ 1893 Tennessee Volunteers football team
・ 1893 Texas Longhorns football team
・ 1893 Tulane Olive and Blue football team
・ 1893 U.S. National Championships (tennis)


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1893 Princeton Tigers football team : ウィキペディア英語版
1893 Princeton Tigers football team

The 1893 Princeton Tigers football team represented Princeton University in the 1893 college football season. They finished with an 11–0 record and were retroactively named national champions by the Billingsley Report, Helms Athletic Foundation, Houlgate System, and National Championship Foundation.〔(1893 Princeton University football scores and results ). College Football Data Warehouse. Retrieved on October 15, 2013.〕 They outscored their opponents 270 to 14.〔
As the Princeton and Yale teams prepared to meet in late November 1893, an unprecedented amount of media and public attention fell upon the big game, which was being billed as the championship game of the season. Both teams entered the game with undefeated with records of 10–0. Yale had outscored its opponents 336-6 and was riding a 37 game winning streak dating back to a loss to Harvard in 1890. Princeton had outscored its opponents by a cumulative total of 264–14, and was seeking to avenge its 12–0 loss to Yale the previous year. A crowd of 40,000, the largest ever to see a football game up to that time, showed up at the Polo Grounds in New York to see the two teams take the field. Three-time Consensus All-American Phil King led Princeton into the game. He would later head the Princeton Football Association and help coach. King had just developed the double wingback formation with the ends deployed on the wings of the line.
From the double wingback formation, Princeton precisely executed a complete set of plays and completely befuddled the Yale eleven, captained by college football Hall of Famer Frank Hinkey. The New York Sun noted that “Princeton in 1893 had the finest offensive machine it had developed up to this time – a team with continuity of attack, the ability to pile first down upon first down.” Princeton was able to cross the goal once and held Yale scoreless, thus winning 6-0 and claiming the national championship.
However, the game did not pass without engendering some controversy. The New York Herald declared in a scathing commentary: "Thanksgiving Day is no longer a solemn festival to God for mercies given. It is a holiday granted by the State and the Nation to see a game of football. The kicker now is king and the people bow down to him. The gory nosed tackler, hero of a hundred scrimmages and half as many wrecked wedges, is the idol of the hour. With swollen face and bleeding head, daubed from crown to sole with the mud of Manhattan Field, he stands triumphant amid the cheers of thousands. What matters that the purpose of the day is perverted, that church is foregone, that family reunion is neglected, that dinner is delayed if not forgot. Has not Princeton played a mighty game with Yale and has not Princeton won? This is the modern Thanksgiving Day."
The Yale-Princeton Thanksgiving Day game of 1893 earned $13,000 for each school from gate receipts, as the big games became the primary source of revenue for the college's athletic programs. Despite the loss, Yale was retroactively named champion by Parke H. Davis, and the Official NCAA Division I Football Records Book lists both Princeton and Yale as national champions.
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