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・ 1906 Australasian Championships – Singles
・ 1906 Birthday Honours
・ 1906 Bolshevik raid on the Tsarevich Giorgi
・ 1906 Boston Americans season
・ 1906 Boston Beaneaters season
・ 1906 Brooklyn Superbas season
・ 1906 Canton Bulldogs season
・ 1906 Carlisle Indians football team
・ 1906 Carlisle vs. Vanderbilt football game
・ 1906 Chicago Cubs season
・ 1906 Chicago White Sox season
・ 1906 Cincinnati Reds season
・ 1906 Circuit des Ardennes
・ 1906 Clemson Tigers football team
・ 1906 Cleveland Naps season
1906 College Football All-America Team
・ 1906 College Football All-Southern Team
・ 1906 college football season
・ 1906 Connecticut Aggies football team
・ 1906 Copa del Rey
・ 1906 Copa del Rey Final
・ 1906 County Championship
・ 1906 Currie Cup
・ 1906 Detroit Tigers season
・ 1906 Dundee fire
・ 1906 earthquake
・ 1906 ECAHA season
・ 1906 Ecuador–Colombia earthquake
・ 1906 English cricket season
・ 1906 European Figure Skating Championships


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1906 College Football All-America Team : ウィキペディア英語版
1906 College Football All-America Team
The 1906 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers that chose College Football All-America Teams for the 1906 college football season. The organizations that chose the teams included Walter Camp for ''Collier's Weekly'', Caspar Whitney for ''Outing Magazine'', the ''New York World'', the ''New York Sun'', ''The New York Times'', the ''New York Mail'', and Charles Chadwick.
==Overview==
The 1906 college football season was a year of change. Following controversies in 1905 over the increase of violence and professionalism in college football, a number of rule changes were implemented in 1906. The most lasting change introduced in 1906 was the forward pass. Several of the players selected as All-Americans in 1906 gained attention for their use of the new tactic. These include Eddie Dillon, the first Princeton quarterback to make use of the forward pass, and Yale's Paul Veeder and Bob Forbes who combined for one of first important pass plays, a play described in one history of the game as follows: "The only other significant pass that season was thrown by Yale, which gained a first down that led to victory over Harvard, when Paul Veeder threw thirty yards to Bob Forbes."
The Eastern powers dominated the game of college football in 1906, and players from the Ivy League dominated the All-American selections. Both the Princeton Tigers and the Yale Bulldogs finished with undefeated seasons and played each other to a 0–0 tie on November 17, 1906.〔 ''The 2001 ESPN Information Please Sports Almanac'' (Hyperion ESPN Books, 2000), p. 152〕 Out of 15 players recognized in the NCAA Record Book as consensus All-Americans for the 1906 season, 13 played for Ivy League teams, and 7 played for Princeton or Yale.〔 Only two players from "western" schools were first-team selections—quarterback Walter Eckersall from the University of Chicago and center William Thomas Dunn from Penn State.
The only unanimous first-team All-American in 1906 was Yale end Bob Forbes. Other players who were named to the first team by at least five of the eight selectors reflected below were end Caspar Wister of Princeton (6 first-team designations), tackle Lucius Horatio Biglow of Yale (7 selections), guard Francis Burr of Harvard (7 selections), guard Elmer Thompson of Cornell (5 selections), center Clarence Hockenberger of Yale (5 selections), and halfback Hugh Knox of Yale (5 selections).
The ''Washington Post'' in December 1906 wrote of the difficulty involved in selecting eleven players for an All-American team:
"A big problem confronts the person who this year undertakes to select eleven men for a football team which he wishes to call the best in the country. There are more good men than ever before, among the minor elevens, because, with a premium, placed on speed rather than on weight, the lighter men have had a better opportunity to distinguish themselves. It would be possible to pick at least three teams which would make things mighty interesting for each other. The East has completely eclipsed the West this season, and that somewhat simplifies matters. The Western teams failed to grasp the possibilities of the new rules and players of that section who were brilliant last year did not get an opportunity, to shine this year in the new game. Walter Eckersall, of Chicago, appears to be the only Westerner who has a right to be in the All-American team this fall."

In announcing his All-American team, Caspar Whitney wrote that he had weighed character as a factor in his selections:
"This eleven is chosen, after a season's observation, with a view to collecting the most resourceful, strongest all-round team under the new rules. No man whose amateur status is a matter of question or whose play has been unsportsmanly is eligible to this national team, which, in keeping with its honorary nature, I endeavor to confine to sportsmen."〔


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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