1924 Santa Barbara State Roadrunners football team

The 1924 Santa Barbara State Roadrunners football team represented Santa Barbara State[note 1] during the 1924 college football season.

1924 Santa Barbara State Roadrunners football
ConferenceIndependent
Record2–5–1
Head coach
Home stadiumPeabody Stadium
1924 Western college football independents records
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Hawaii    8 0 0
Saint Mary's    8 1 0
La Verne    7 1 1
New Mexico A&M    7 3 0
Tempe Normal    6 1 1
Pacific (CA)    6 3 0
Gonzaga    5 0 2
New Mexico    5 1 0
Cal Aggies    5 4 1
Nevada    3 4 1
Santa Clara    3 5 1
Arizona    2 4 0
Santa Barbara    2 5 1
Humboldt State    1 0 0

Santa Barbara State competed as an independent in 1924. Records may be incomplete, but eight games have been documented. The Roadrunners were led by third-year head coach Otho J. Gilliland and played home games at Peabody Stadium in Santa Barbara, California. They finished the season with a record of two wins, five losses and one tie (2–5–1). Overall, the team was outscored by its opponents 52–176 for the season.

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultSource
October 4California ChristianW 24–0[1]
October 11Loyola (CA)
L 0–17
October 17USC freshmen
L 9–46
October 25Santa Maria Junior College
W 0–34
November 1La VerneL 7–24
November 8at San Diego StateL 6–42[2]
November 15Bakersfield Junior College
  • Peabody Stadium
  • Santa Barbara, CA
T 6–6
November 22at Cal PolySan Luis Obispo, CAL 0–7

[3]

Notes

  1. University of California, Santa Barbara was known as Santa Barbara State College from 1921 to 1943.

References

  1. "Chapman Football Year-by-Year Results - First Era" (document). Orange, California: Chapman Athletic Department.
  2. Lewis Schellbach (November 9, 1924). "State College Defeats Santa Barbara, 42-3; Coach Peterson's Squad Displays Punch; Hancock, Dilley, Ruffa, Russo Star". The San Diego Union. San Diego, California.
  3. "1924 - California-Santa Barbara". Archived from the original on September 30, 2017. Retrieved February 1, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.