1931 Florida Gators football team

The 1931 Florida Gators football team represented the University of Florida as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) during the 1931 college football season. The season was the fourth of Charlie Bachman as the head coach of the Florida Gators football team. Bachman's 1931 Florida Gators finished with an overall record of 2–6–2[1] and a Southern Conference record of 2–4–2, placing fifteenth of twenty-three teams in the conference standings—Bachman's second worst conference record in five seasons.[2]

1931 Florida Gators football
ConferenceSouthern Conference
Record2–6–2 (2–4–2 SoCon)
Head coach
Offensive schemeNotre Dame Box
CaptainEd N. Parnell
Home stadiumFlorida Field
Uniform
Seasons
← 1930
1932 →
1931 Southern Conference football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 2 Tulane $8001110
No. 3 Tennessee601901
Alabama710910
No. 6 Georgia610820
Maryland411811
Kentucky422522
LSU320540
South Carolina331541
Duke331532
Auburn330530
Sewanee330631
Vanderbilt340540
North Carolina233433
Washington and Lee230451
Florida242262
Georgia Tech241271
VMI240361
NC State240360
VPI141342
Clemson140162
Ole Miss150261
Virginia051261
Mississippi A&M050260
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from Dickinson System

The season's highlights included the Gators' only victories over the NC State (31–0) in Raleigh, North Carolina and the Auburn Tigers (13–12) in Jacksonville, Florida, both of which were fellow SoCon members. Tom McEwen relays "The handwriting was on the wall during that dismal 1931 season. The Gators lost five of their last six games, tying the other. During that streak the Florida offense – three years earlier the best in the country—managed only two touchdowns and a safety."[3]

Before the season

Captain-elect Monk Dorsett did not return.[4] The next captain-elect Carlos Proctor was expelled.[5] The team's captain was then end Ed Parnell.[6]

The Gators lost both Ben Clemons and Frank Clark.[7] "Scabby" Pheil was one promising newcomer.[8] Florida was to have a tough schedule.[9]

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
October 3at NC StateW 31–0[10]
October 10North CarolinaT 0–08,000[11]
October 17at Syracuse*L 12–3314,000[12]
October 24vs. AuburnW 13–1215,000[13]
October 31Georgia
  • Florida Field
  • Gainesville, FL (rivalry)
L 6–3320,000[14]
November 7at AlabamaL 0–417,000[15]
November 14vs. South CarolinaT 6–6[16]
November 21at Georgia TechL 0–2310,000[17]
November 28at UCLA*L 0–1320,000[18]
December 5vs. Kentucky
  • Fairfield Stadium
  • Jacksonville, FL (rivalry)
L 2–7[19]
  • *Non-conference game

Primary source: 2015 Florida Gators Football Media Guide.[1]

Game summaries

NC State

The season opened with a 31–0 win over the NC State Wolfpack in Raleigh. The team surprised coach Bachman.[20]

North Carolina

1234Total
UNC00000
Florida00000
  • Date: October 10
  • Location: Florida Field
    Gainesville, Florida
  • Game attendance: 8,000
  • Source:

In the second week of play, the Gators played the North Carolina Tar Heels to a scoreless tie.[21] The Tar Heels were twice at the 1-yard line.[22]

Syracuse

Florida traveled to Syracuse[23] and lost 33–12.

Auburn

1234Total
Auburn060612
Florida600713
  • Date: October 24
  • Location: Fairfield Stadium
    Jacksonville, Florida
  • Game attendance: 15,000

The season's lone highlight after opening week, Florida defeated Auburn by a point, 13–12. Jimmy Hitchcock missed the tying extra point.[24]

Georgia

The rival Georgia Bulldogs beat coach Bachman for the first time, 33–6. Both Florida governor Doyle E. Carlton and Georgia governor Richard B. Russell attended the game.[25] Florida scored when Scabby Phiel blocked a punt.[25]

Alabama

1234Total
Florida00000
Alabama014141341
  • Date: November 7
  • Location: Legion Field
    Birmingham, Alabama
  • Game attendance: 7,000

Alabama and new head coach Frank Thomas shut out the Gators with a 41–0 victory.[26] After a scoreless first quarter, Alabama scored a pair of second-quarter touchdowns on short runs by Johnny Cain and Leon Long to take a 14–0 halftime lead.[26] The Crimson Tide then scored four second half touchdowns on runs by Long and Hillman Holley in the third and on runs by Howard Chappell and Erskine Walker in the fourth to make the final score 41–0.[26]

South Carolina

1234Total
S. Carolina00066
Florida06006

In Tampa, the South Carolina Gamecocks were tied, 6–6.[27]

The starting lineup was Williamson (left end), McClellan (left tackle), Bernhart (left guard), Spiers (Center), Osgood (right guard), Simpson (right tackle), Goodyear (right end), Culler (quarterback), Davis (left halfback), Emmelhainz (right halfback), Silsby (fullback).[27]

Georgia Tech

1234Total
Florida00000
Ga. Tech2014723

Coach Bill Alexander's Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets beat Florida 23–0. The second half opened with an 86-yard kickoff return by Pat Barron, and a subsequent goal line stand.[28]

The starting lineup was Parnell (left end), Phiel (left tackle), Bernhard (left guard), Perrazzi (Center), Osgood (right guard), Jenkins (right tackle), Ball (right end), Culler (quarterback), Davis (left halfback), McClellan (right halfback), Silsby (fullback).[28]

UCLA

The Gators traveled to Los Angeles and lost to the UCLA Bruins 13–0. The Gators stopped in Albuquerque, New Mexico on the way back.[29]

Kentucky

A frustrating season ended with a 7–2 loss to Kentucky.[30]

Postseason

The Gators traveled 6,586 miles.[31] Former Gator end Dutch Stanley was hired to coach the ends next season.

References

Bibliography

  • McEwen, Tom (1974). The Gators: A Story of Florida Football. Huntsville, Alabama: The Strode Publishers. ISBN 0-87397-025-X.