1946 VPI Gobblers football team

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1946 Virginia Tech Hokies football
VT logo.svg
Sun Bowl, L 6–18 vs. Cincinnati
Conference Southern Conference
1946 record 3–4–3 (3–3–2 SoCon)
Head coach James Kitts (2nd year)
Captain William Elmer Wilson
Home stadium Miles Stadium
Seasons
« 1945 1947 »
1946 Southern Conference football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
#9 North Carolina $ 4 0 1     8 2 1
William & Mary 7 1 0     8 2 0
#18 NC State 6 1 0     8 3 0
South Carolina 4 2 0     5 3 0
Duke 3 2 0     4 5 0
Richmond 3 2 2     6 2 2
VPI 3 3 2     3 4 3
VMI 2 3 1     4 5 1
George Washington 1 1 0     4 3 0
Clemson 2 3 0     4 5 0
Wake Forest 2 3 0     6 3 0
Maryland 2 5 0     3 6 0
Furman 1 4 0     2 8 0
Washington and Lee 1 4 0     2 6 0
The Citadel 1 5 0     3 5 0
Davidson 1 5 0     4 5 0
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1946 VPI Gobblers football team represented Virginia Polytechnic Institute in the 1946 college football season. The team was led by their head coach Herbert McEver and finished with a record of three wins, four losses and three ties (3–4–3).

During the 1946 season, VPI defeated the No. 12 NC State Wolfpack for the first win over an Associated Press Top 25 team in school history,[1] the Washington and Lee Generals, and the Gobblers' traditional rivals, the VMI Keydets.[2]

The 1946 season also included VPI's first post-season bowl appearance, in the 1947 Sun Bowl in El Paso, Texas against the Cincinnati Bearcats.[3] VPI was the third choice after Border Conference champions, Hardin–Simmons, and runner-up, Texas Tech, both declined the bowl invitation.[4] VPI lost the game, 18–6.

Schedule

Date Time Opponent Site Result Attendance
September 28, 1946 at North Carolina Kenan Memorial StadiumChapel Hill, NC T 14–14   -
October 5, 1946 vs. Virginia* Victory StadiumRoanoke, VA (Rivalry) T 21–21   -
October 12, 1946 at William & Mary Cary FieldWilliamsburg, VA L 0–49   14,000[5]
October 18, 1946 at Maryland Byrd StadiumCollege Park, MD L 0–6   -
October 26, 1946 #12 NC Statedagger Miles StadiumBlacksburg, VA W 14–6   13,000[6]
November 2, 1946 Clemson Miles StadiumBlacksburg, VA L 7–14   -
November 9, 1946 vs. Washington and Lee Municipal Stadium • Lynchburg, VA W 13–7   12,000[7]
November 16, 1946 at Richmond City StadiumRichmond, VA T 7–7   -
November 28, 1946 vs. VMI Victory StadiumRoanoke, VA (Rivalry) W 20–7   24,000[8]–28,000[9]
January 1, 1947 vs. Cincinnati* Kidd FieldEl Paso, TX (Sun Bowl) L 6–18   10,000[3]
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming.
  • Source: HokieSports.com: 1946 Virginia Tech football schedule[10]

Players

The following players were members of the 1946 football team according to the roster published in the 1947 edition of The Bugle, the Virginia Tech yearbook.[11]

VPI 1946 roster
  • Jim Adams
  • Frank H. Ballard
  • Billy Shelby Barbour
  • Ralph Coe Beard
  • Raymond Rucker Beasley
  • Floyd Samuel Bowles
  • Maynard Leon David Bruce
  • Thomas Craig Burns
  • Coy Lenard Chambers
  • Chip Collum
  • Jack Cooke
  • Billy Patrick DeNardo
  • F. DeNardo
  • Dick DeShazo
  • Charles Mugler Forbes
  • Nelson Fuller
  • John E. Gallagher
  • John Eugene Gerngross
  • Bob Hess
  • Joseph Hoffmann
  • Oren Edward Hopkins
  • Jack Ross Ittner
  • Cary Kenyon Johnson
  • Robert Edward Johnson
  • Ted James Johnson
  • R. S. Kilbourne
  • John Harry Kroehling
  • Carl Leonard
  • John James Maskas
  • Augustus Paul Mengulas
  • Ross Moore Orr
  • Horace Lee Pearce
  • Erving Hascall Rand
  • Frank Ransome
  • Fred Ovid Shanks
  • Bobby Smith
  • Peter Smith
  • Warren William Squires
  • Bob Taylor
  • Franklin Ray Taylor
  • David Lacy Thomas
  • W. Harry Walton
  • Robert Franklin Webb
  • Wegman
  • William Elmer Wilson (Capt.)
  • Gerhard Charles Zekert
  • Paul Zender

Season summary

1947 Sun Bowl

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VPI vs. Cincinnati
1 2 3 4 Total
VPI 0 0 0 6 6
Cincinnati 0 0 12 6 18

During VPI's preparations before its departure for El Paso, heavy snow fell on Blacksburg, Virginia, forcing the team to use snowplows and construction equipment to clear a space for the team to practice.[12] The Gobblers traveled to El Paso without star punter and rusher Bobby Smith, who had been injured in Virginia Tech's final regular-season game.[13]

The game was played in extremely cold and icy conditions, still the worst in Sun Bowl history.[14] Three inches of snow fell on top of a layer of frozen rain the day before the game, and at kickoff the teams took the field under cloudy skies and in below-freezing temperatures.[3] Despite the inclement weather, 15,000-seat Kidd Field was approximately half full, and bowl officials estimated the crowd at around 10,000 people.[3]

Weather conditions allowed both teams' defenses to dominate in the first half. VPI had the best chance to score of either team in the first half when it drove to a first down inside the Cincinnati two-yard line late in the first quarter.[3] On four straight running plays, however, the Bearcats' defense held, and VPI was denied a scoring opportunity.[3]

In the second half, however, Cincinnati's offense managed to begin moving the ball effectively. On Cincinnati’s first play of the second half, halfback Roger Stephens broke through the VPI defensive line for 26 yards, taking the ball inside VPI territory. Cincinnati's drive would overcome two 15-yard penalties and one five-yard penalty en route to a touchdown just a few plays later.[3] On its next possession, Cincinnati's All-American Roger Stephens again broke off another long run, this time for 19 yards, setting up another Bearcats' touchdown.[3] VPI countered with a long drive that reached the Cincinnati 23-yard line before an errant pass was intercepted by the Bearcats in the end zone. VPI managed a defensive stop, however, and marched down the field for a touchdown to climb within six points. Cincinnati sealed its victory, however, when Bearcats' halfback Harold Johnson intercepted a VPI pass late in the fourth quarter, returning it all the way to the VPI 25-yard line. That return set up a Cincinnati touchdown and put the Bearcats up by the game's final score, 18–6.[3]

References

  1. The Hokies and the AP Ratings (PDF) Virginia Tech Sports Information, 2004 Football Media Guide Page 42. Accessed January 22, 2016.
  2. Year-by-Year Scores and Results (PDF) "1946", Virginia Tech Sports Information, 2004 Football Media Guide Page 37. Accessed January 22, 2016.
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  4. Colston, Chris. Tales from the Virginia Tech Sidelines. Sports Publishing LLC, 2003. Page 26.
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  10. Virginia Tech Football Past Schedules "1946–1947". Virginia Tech Sports Information Department, Hokiesports.com. Accessed January 22, 2016.
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  12. Tech's Bowl History (PDF) Virginia Tech Sports Information Department, 2007 Virginia Tech Football Media Guide, Page 32. Accessed January 22, 2016.
  13. Six Names To Tech Hall Of Fame Virginia Tech Sports Information Department, Hokiesports.com, July 31, 2000. Accessed January 22, 2016.
  14. http://www.sunbowl.org/the_sun_bowl_game/recap/13 Referenced January 22, 2016.