The 1924 College Football All-America team consists of American football players selected to the College Football All-America Teams selected by various organizations in 1924.
Key [ ]
WC = Collier's Weekly as selected by Walter Camp [1]
AAB = All-America Board[2]
FW = Football World magazine[2]
ASM = All-Sports Magazine, selected from a combined vote of 312 prominent football coaches, officials and sport writers in all sections of the country, "representing the opinions of the best informed critics in all parts of the country, appear in the December number of All-Sports Magazine."[3] [4]
INS = International News Service[2]
LIB = Liberty magazine[2]
NEA = Newspaper Editors Association[2]
NB = Norman E. Brown[5]
LP = Lawrence Perry[6]
BE = Billy Evans[7]
DW = Davis J. Walsh, sports editor of the International News Service[8]
WE = Walter Eckersall for the Chicago Tribune[9]
BC = Bruno Crenna[10]
Bold - Consensus All-American[11]
1 - First Team Selection
2 - Second Team Selection
3 - Third Team Selection
All-Americans of 1924 [ ]
Ends [ ]
Jim Lawson , Stanford (WC-2; AAB; FW; ASM-1; NEA; BE-1; DW-2; WE-2)
Dick Luman , Yale (AAB; INS; LP-1; BE-2; DW-1; WE-1)
Henry Wakefield , Vanderbilt (WC-2; INS; NEA; LP-1; BE-1; NB-1; DW-1; WE-3; BC)
Charles Berry, Lafayette (WC-1; ASM-2; DW-3)
Henry Bjorkman, Dartmouth (WC-1; ASM-2; LIB; NB-2; WE-1)
Craig, Penn (NB-1)
Edmond Stout, Princeton (FW; ASM-1)
Hilary F. Mahaney , Holy Cross (WC-3; FW; BE-2; DW-2; WE-2)
Lowell Otte, Iowa (LP-2; DW-3; WE-3)
Cal Hubbard , Centenary (College and Pro Football Hall of Fame) (LP-2)
Frazer, Army (WC-3)
Pulaski, Wisconsin (NB-2)
Frank Rokusek, Illinois (NB-3; BC)
Shep Bingham, Yale (NB-3)
Henderson, Cornell (ASM-3)
Muhl, Illinois (ASM-3)
Tackles [ ]
Ed Weir , Nebraska (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; AAB; FW; ASM-1; INS; LIB; LP-2; BE-2; NB-1; DW-1; WE-1; BC)
Ed McGinley , Penn (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; AAB; INS; NEA; BE-1; DW-1; WE-2)
Bob Beattie , Princeton (WC-2; NEA; BE-1; NB-2; DW-2; WE-1)
Frank Gowdy , Chicago (WC-3; FW; ASM-1; LIB; LP-1; DW-2; WE-2)
Johnny H. Joss, Yale (LP-1)
Mordecai Starobin, Syracuse (NB-1)
Tom Edwards , Michigan (LP-2)
John Hancock, Iowa (ASM-2; BE-2; NB-2; BC)
Pappy Waldorf , Syracuse (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-2)
Zonar "Zeke" Wissinger, Pittsburgh (WC-3)
Taylor, Georgia (NB-3)
Prevost, Penn State (ASM-2; NB-3)
Anderson, So. California (ASM-2; DW-3; WE-3)
Joe Bach , Notre Dame (DW-3)
Tex Cox , Minnesota (ASM-3)
Van Dyne, Missouri (WE-3)
Guards [ ]
Carl Diehl , Dartmouth (INS; LIB; NEA; BE-1; DW-1; NB-1; WE-3)
Joe Pondelik , Chicago (WC-2; AAB; INS; ASM-2; LIB; LP-1; DW-1; WE-1)
Edliff Slaughter , Michigan (WC-1; LP-1; BE-2; NB-1; BC)
August "Gus" Farwick , Army (AAB; NEA; ASM-2; BE-1; NB-2; DW-2; WE-1)
Alton Papworth, Penn (FW; ASM-1)
Walter "Red" Mahan, West Virginia (WC-3; BE-2)
Herbert Sturhahn , Yale (College Football Hall of Fame) (DW-2)
Howard, Princeton (LP-2)
Parsons, Northwestern (LP-2; WE-3)
George Abramson , Minnesota (WC-2; NB-2; WE-2; BC)
Bill Fleckenstein , Iowa (WC-3)
Bill Buckler, Alabama (NB-3)
House, Penn State (NB-3)
Goodwin, Georgia Tech (DW-3)
Ellinger, Army (DW-3)
Hills, Princeton (ASM-2)
Bieberstein, Wisconsin (ASM-3)
Centers [ ]
Edwin "Babe" Horrell , California (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1 [g]; INS; ASM-3; LIB; NEA; BE-1; DW-1; WE-1)
Adam
Walsh , Notre Dame (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-3; LP-1; ASM-2; BE-2; NB-2; DW-2; WE-2; BC)
Edgar Garbisch , Army (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; FW; ASM-1 [g]; NB-3; DW-3; WE-2 [g])
Probst, Alabama (LP-2)
Winslow Lovejoy, Yale (WC-2; AAB; FW; ASM-1; NB-1; WE-3)
Quarterbacks [ ]
Harry Stuhldreher , Notre Dame (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; AAB; INS; ASM-2; LIB; NEA; LP-1; BE-1; NB-1; DW-1; WE-1)
Eddie Dooley, Dartmouth (FW; ASM-1; BE-2; DW-2; WE-2)
Herb Covington, Centre (DW-3)
Leland Parkin, Iowa (LP-2; NB-3; WE-3)
Jacob Slagle, Princeton (WC-2)
Vernon "Skippy" Stivers, Idaho (WC-3)
Charles Darling, Boston College (LIB; NB-2)
Tod Rockwell , Michigan (BC)
Bloodgood, Nebraska (ASM-3)
Halfbacks [ ]
Red Grange , Illinois (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; AAB; FW; ASM-1; INS; LIB; NEA; LP-1 [fb]; BE-1; NB-1; DW-1; WE-1; BC)
Jim Crowley , Notre Dame (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-2 [fb]; AAB; FW; ASM-1; INS; NEA; BE-1; NB-1; DW-1; WE-1; BC)
Walter Koppisch , Columbia (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; BE-2; NB-2; DW-2)
Ralph Baker , Northwestern (LP-1; BE-2; NB-3; DW-2; WE-2)
Ducky Pond , Yale (WC-2; NEA; ASM-2; NB-2; DW-3; WE-3; BE-1 [FB])
Don Miller , Notre Dame (College Football Hall of Fame) (DW-3)
Clarence Schutte , Minnesota (LP-2)
Wildcat Wilson , Washington (WC-2)
Benkert, Rutgers (ASM-2)
Herb Steger , Michigan (ASM-3)
Wilson, Army (ASM-3)
Talma Imlay, California (WC-3)
Jackson Keefer , Brown (WC-3)
Gil Reese, Vanderbilt (NB-3)
Stockton, Gonzaga (WE-2)
Bahr, Purdue (WE-3)
Fullbacks [ ]
Elmer Layden , Notre Dame (College Football Hall of Fame) (AAB; INS; LIB; LP-2 [hb]; NB-1; DW-1; WE-1)
Homer Hazel , Rutgers (College Football Hall of Fame) (WC-1; FW; ASM-1; NB-3; BC)
Doug Wycoff , Georgia Tech (ASM-3; LP-1 [hb]; NB-2; DW-2; WE-3)
Jack McBride , Syracuse (BE-2; DW-3; WE-2)
John Webster Thomas , Chicago (LP-2)
Norman "Red" Strader , St. Mary's (WC-3)
McCarty, Chicago (ASM-2)
Notes [ ]
↑ "Walter Camp Slights Big Three In Naming All-America Eleven: Football Expert Neglects To Name Princeton, Harvard or Yale Man on His First Team". Appleton Post-Crescent. 1924-12-30.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 ESPN College Football Encyclopedia, p. 1156
↑ "Lawson Named For Post On All-American". Oakland Tribune . 1924-12-07.
↑ "Handcock Honored on All-American By "All-Sports"". Iowa City Press-Citizen . 1924-12-05.
↑ Norman E. Brown (1924-12-08). "Brown Picks All-American Team for the Journal". Hamilton Evening Journal.
↑ Lawrence Perry (1923-12-14). "Lawrence Perry's All-American Teams Announced". Oakland Tribune.
↑ "Evans Names Hancock On Second All-American". Iowa City Press-Citizen. 1924-12-11.
↑ "Davis Walsh Designates His All-American Teams". The Coshocton Tribune. 1924-12-15.
↑ "WALTER ECKERSALL'S ALL-AMERICAN ELEVEN HONORS NOTRE DAME". The Washington Post . 1924-12-15.
↑ "More Selections of Big Ten Elevens: And Bruno Crenna Makes His Pick Of An All American Team, Too". Ironwood Daily Globe . 1924-11-29.
↑ Consensus All-American designations based on the NCAA guide to football award winners
v · d · e 1924 College Football All-America Team consensus selections