1907 Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States football rankings | |
---|---|
Season | 1907 |
Bowl season | 1907–08 bowl games |
End of season champions | Yale |
The 1907 college football season rankings included a ranking by Caspar Whitney for The Outing Magazine.
Writing for The Outing Magazine, alongside his All-America Eleven for 1907, Caspar Whitney ranked the top fourteen teams in the country at the conclusion of the season. [1] [2] [3]
Whitney is designated by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) as a "major selector" of national championships, and his contemporary rankings in Outing for 1905–1907 are included in the NCAA college football records book. [2]
Rank | Team [1] | Record |
---|---|---|
1 | Yale | 9–0–1 |
2 | Princeton | 7–2 |
3 | Carlisle | 10–1 |
4 | Penn | 11–1 |
5 | Harvard | 7–3 |
6 | Cornell | 8–2 |
7 | Michigan | 5–1 |
8 | Chicago | 4–1 |
9 | Annapolis | 9–2–1 |
10 | Army | 6–2–1 |
11 | Minnesota | 2–2–1 |
12 | Brown | 7–3 |
13 | Dartmouth | 8–0–1 |
14 | Swarthmore | 6–2 |
Caspar Whitney (1905-07), one of the founders of the first All-American Football Team. Also selected national polls for Outing magazine.
Polls and systems to determine the No. 1 team are not nearly so ancient as the mere naming of the "intercollegiate champion" by a Casper Whitney or a J. Parmly Paret.
1907 Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States football rankings | |
---|---|
Season | 1907 |
Bowl season | 1907–08 bowl games |
End of season champions | Yale |
The 1907 college football season rankings included a ranking by Caspar Whitney for The Outing Magazine.
Writing for The Outing Magazine, alongside his All-America Eleven for 1907, Caspar Whitney ranked the top fourteen teams in the country at the conclusion of the season. [1] [2] [3]
Whitney is designated by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) as a "major selector" of national championships, and his contemporary rankings in Outing for 1905–1907 are included in the NCAA college football records book. [2]
Rank | Team [1] | Record |
---|---|---|
1 | Yale | 9–0–1 |
2 | Princeton | 7–2 |
3 | Carlisle | 10–1 |
4 | Penn | 11–1 |
5 | Harvard | 7–3 |
6 | Cornell | 8–2 |
7 | Michigan | 5–1 |
8 | Chicago | 4–1 |
9 | Annapolis | 9–2–1 |
10 | Army | 6–2–1 |
11 | Minnesota | 2–2–1 |
12 | Brown | 7–3 |
13 | Dartmouth | 8–0–1 |
14 | Swarthmore | 6–2 |
Caspar Whitney (1905-07), one of the founders of the first All-American Football Team. Also selected national polls for Outing magazine.
Polls and systems to determine the No. 1 team are not nearly so ancient as the mere naming of the "intercollegiate champion" by a Casper Whitney or a J. Parmly Paret.