1918 VPI Gobblers football team

The 1918 VPI Gobblers football team represented Virginia Polytechnic Institute, now known as Virginia Tech, in the 1918 college football season. The 1918 team went 7–0 and claims a South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SAIAA) championship. It is the only team in Virginia Tech history to have finished the season with a perfect record.

Led by second-year head coach Charles Bernier, the team allowed only two touchdowns during its seven games. Tech's captain was Henry Crisp, a man without a right hand, who was ineligible for military service in World War I. He was voted MVP of the South Atlantic conference.

World War I
In the summer of 1918, the United States was not only in the midst of World War I, a world-wide flu pandemic began to impact the colleges of the United States. These two factors had a significant impact on the 1918 college football season. Tech was an all-male military school in 1918, and was therefore unlike other schools which had to join with the military to have football programs, or even remain open.

In an early September meeting between college and War Department officials in Plattsburg, Missouri it became clear that the training regimen envisioned for the soldiers could be incompatible with participation in intercollegiate athletics. Coach Charles Bernier was one of those who successfully argued that athletics training was an important part of military training. Virginia Tech planned to continue its football program in conjunction with the SATC program.

Original schedule
Tech originally had a nine-game schedule which was supposed to start the first weekend of October. Due to the flu, only three of the originally scheduled games were played.


 * Hampden-Sydney in Blacksburg on October 5 (team played only 3 games and is listed as having no coach)
 * Emory & Henry in Blacksburg on October 12 (no record of any games played)
 * Georgetown in Washington on October 19 (cancelled game with Tech early in year, but played 5 games according to conference standings)
 * Maryland State in College Park October 26 (played six games)
 * Georgia Tech in Atlanta on November 2 (distance cited as reason for cancellation)
 * Wake Forest in Blacksburg on November 9 (played on this date)
 * North Carolina State in Norfolk on November 16 (played on this date)
 * Roanoke in Blacksburg on November 23 (scheduled for October 19 in place of the Georgetown game, but Roanoke College did not play)
 * VMI in Roanoke on November 28 (played on this date)
 * Source: Spalding's Official Foot Ball Guide 1918.

Building a new schedule
Tech leaders attempted to schedule games with two groups on the dates that opened: 1) military bases, which were fielding teams of young men who were football players that were away from their home campuses or had recently graduated after playing football; and 2) college teams for that had SATC programs, whose students were encouraged to participate in athletic programs along with the more traditional athletes. This not only enabled colleges to justify the inclusion of football in the SATC regimen, it also helped fill the gaps left by some of their star athletes. For instance, at Virginia Tech, one of the team captains, Monk Younger, was actually in the military in France during the season. He was captain of Hospital No. 41, but the "Techs," (the common nickname for VPI spots teams in newspapers at the time) were still referred to as "Younger's team."

Washington and Lee and the University of North Carolina were in the first category. Camp Humphreys and Aero Squadron of Richmond were in the second (although the Aero Squadron of Richmond game was scheduled but never played.

Schedule

 * Source: The Bugle 1919 (VPI Yearbook with information on 1918 football)

Belmont Athletic Club
Tech opened the season at Miles Field with a 30–0 win over Belmont Athletic Club, an organization in Roanoke, Virginia. Tech completed 9 of 16 forward passes for 157 yards.

Tech's starting lineup against Belmont: Roden (left end), Hardwick (left tackle), Camper (left guard), Copenhaver (center), Quarles (right guard), Hitchens (right tackle), Huddle (right end), Siegel (quarterback), McCann (left halfback), Bock (right halfback), Conners (fullback).

Camp Humphreys
Camp Humphreys was one of the teams fielded by military bases that played against college opponents in 1918. Originally the Gobblers were scheduled to face another military team, the Aero Squadron of Richmond, but there was a change during the week before the game. Camp Humphreys was a semi-temporary cantonment built on the Belvoir peninsula in Fairfax County, VA in 1918. When the men on the Camp Humphreys team came to Blacksburg, they were coming from a place where over 50 men per week had been dying of the Spanish flu and related pneumonia. The flu was said to have been "conquered" by the week of the game; the number of deaths per week had fallen to 10.

Tech won the game 33–6, allowing one of the two touchdowns it allowed all year. (The Associated Press report of the game reported the score to be 23–6, which is apparently a mistake).

Washington and Lee

 * Sources:

Tech played Washington & Lee in Roanoke for the first time since 1915. After fighting to a 0–0 draw after three quarters, Bock and Crisp each scored a touchdown as the Gobblers beat the Generals 13–0.

Tech's starting lineup against W&L: Hardwick (left end), Rangsley (left tackle), Tilson (left guard), Resh (center), Quarles (right guard), Pierce (right tackle), Camper (right end), Bonney (quarterback), Crocker (left halfback), McCann (right halfback), Crisp (fullback).

Wake Forest
It was Wake Forest' s first game of the year. Tech beat the Baptists (the nickname of the team at the time, owing to the school's affiliation with the church) by a score of either 27–0 (the school yearbook, the Bugle) or 25–0 (the Associated Press). The Gobblers ran up a three-touchdown halftime lead, and then scored once in the second half.

Tech's starting lineup against UNC: Roden (left end), Rangley (left tackle), Tilson (left guard), Resh (center), Quarles (right guard), Pierce (right tackle), Comper (right end), Bonney (quarterback), Crocker (left halfback), McCann (right halfback), Crisp (fullback).

NC State
VPI beat NC State 25–0 in Norfolk. Tech's Crocker scored the game's first touchdown just five minutes into the game and the Gobblers never looked back.

North Carolina

 * Sources:

VPI beat the North Carolina Tar Heels, though the game is not counted as official by UNC. 18–7. (University of North Carolina officials did not recognize the 1918 football team as a varsity program because it was under the auspices of the SATC). Tech outweighed UNC by 15 pounds per man. drove to the 10-yard line in the first three minutes, but was unable to score. In the second quarter, Crisp scored a touchdown on a fake end run from the 6-yard line. UNC's Bristol had a 70-yard run soon after, to the 20-year line. A forward pass from Pharr to Fearrington resulted in a touchdown for UNC.

In the third quarter a series of passes from UNC toot the Tar Heels to the 15-yard line, then Crocker intercepted a pass a ran 90 yards for the touchdown. Rangley of UNC plunged for the final score in the fourth quarter.

Tech's starting lineup against UNC: Roden (left end), Rangley (left tackle), Tilson (left guard), Resh (center), Quarles (right guard), Pierce (right tackle), Hardwick (right end), Crisp (quarterback), Robinson (left halfback), Maddox (right halfback), Bonney (fullback).

VMI

 * Sources:

The season closed against VMI on Thanksgiving Day. The Norfolk and Western Railroad ran two special trains for VPI and VMI students to attend the game in Roanoke. Tech defeated VMI 6–0. In the third quarter, Harry Roden blocked a VMI punt at the 10-yard line. Three runs off tackle by Crisp resulted in the game's lone touchdown.

Tech's starting lineup against VMI: Roden (left end), Hardwick (left tackle), Tilson (left guard), Resh (center), Quarles (right guard), Pierce (right tackle), Camper (right end), Crisp (quarterback), Crocker (left halfback), Mattox (right halfback), Bonney (fullback).

After the season
Coach Bernier wrote a story in the 1919 Walter Camp-edited Spalding Foot Ball Guide praising Crisp, one of the team's captains: ""Uncle Sam could not use a one-hand man, so Henry Crisp, much to Tech's good fortune, played the next biggest game [referring to football compared to war fighting], and to him, more than anyone else, goes the glory for a driving, consistent attack. This big fellow, playing in the back-field for the first time, literally mowed them all down..."" Crisp was the captain of the All-South Atlantic Eleven team (league MVP), and was joined on that team by the Gobblers' James Hardwick (end), Walter Wrangley (tackle), and Charles Quarles (center).

Players
The following players were members of the 1918 football team according to the roster published in the 1919 edition of The Bugle, the Virginia Tech yearbook.