1915 Princeton Tigers football team

The 1915 Princeton Tigers football team represented Princeton University in the 1915 college football season. The team finished with a 6–2 record under first-year head coach John H. Rush.[1] No Princeton players were selected as consensus first-team honorees on the 1915 College Football All-America Team,[2] but three players (halfback Dave Tibbott, fullback Edward H. Driggs, and end Jack "Red" Lamberton) were selected as first-team honorees by at least one selector.

1915 Princeton Tigers football
ConferenceIndependent
1915 record6–2
Head coach
Home stadiumPalmer Stadium
1915 Eastern college football independents records
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Cornell    9 0 0
Pittsburgh    8 0 0
Columbia    5 0 0
Harvard    8 1 0
Carnegie Tech    7 1 0
Rutgers    7 1 0
Villanova    6 1 0
Washington & Jefferson    8 1 1
Colgate    5 1 0
Syracuse    9 1 2
Dartmouth    7 1 1
Tufts    5 1 2
Penn State    7 2 0
Lafayette    8 3 0
Princeton    6 2 0
Franklin & Marshall    6 2 0
Temple    3 1 1
Geneva    6 3 0
Wesleyan    6 3 0
Allegheny    5 3 0
Swarthmore    5 3 0
Army    5 3 1
Lehigh    6 4 0
Holy Cross    3 2 2
Brown    5 4 1
Fordham    4 4 0
NYU    4 4 1
Middlebury    3 4 2
Muhlenberg    4 5 0
Yale    4 5 0
Boston College    3 4 0
Penn    3 5 2
WPI    3 5 1
Buffalo    3 5 0
Carlisle    3 6 2
Rhode Island State    3 5 0
New Hampshire    3 6 1
Gettysburg    3 6 0
Rochester    3 6 0
Bucknell    2 6 3
Vermont    1 4 2
Williams    1 7 0

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendance
September 25 GeorgetownW 13–0
October 2 Rutgers
  • Palmer Stadium
  • Princeton, NJ (rivalry)
W 10–0
October 9 Syracuse
  • Palmer Stadium
  • Princeton, NJ
W 3–05,000
October 16 Lafayette
  • Palmer Stadium
  • Princeton, NJ
W 40–3
October 23 Dartmouth
  • Palmer Stadium
  • Princeton, NJ
W 30–7
October 30 Williams
  • Palmer Stadium
  • Princeton, NJ
W 27–0
November 6 Harvard
  • Palmer Stadium
  • Princeton, NJ (rivalry)
L 6–10
November 13at Yale L 7–13

References

  1. "1915 Princeton Tigers Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
  2. "Award Winners" (PDF). NCAA. 2012. pp. 2–4.
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