1930 Syracuse Orangemen football team

The 1930 Syracuse Orangemen football team represented Syracuse University in the 1930 college football season. The Orangemen were led by first-year head coach Vic Hanson and played their home games at Archbold Stadium in Syracuse, New York.[2][1] Hanson was previously an All-American football and basketball player for the Orangemen in the 1920s, and was hired as coach after serving as an assistant in 1928 and 1929.

1930 Syracuse Orangemen football
ConferenceIndependent
1930 record5–2–2
Head coach
CaptainMilton Berner[1]
Home stadiumArchbold Stadium
1930 Eastern college football independents records
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Colgate    9 1 0
Fordham    8 1 0
Army    9 1 1
Dartmouth    7 1 1
NYU    7 3 0
Cornell    6 2 0
Pittsburgh    6 2 1
Washington & Jefferson    6 2 1
Tufts    5 2 0
Temple    7 3 0
Bucknell    6 3 0
Carnegie Tech    6 3 0
Duquesne    6 3 0
Syracuse    5 2 2
Yale    5 2 2
CCNY    5 2 1
Brown    6 3 1
Drexel    6 3 1
Franklin & Marshall    5 3 1
Columbia    5 4 0
Penn    5 4 0
Boston College    5 5 0
Villanova    5 5 0
Penn State    3 4 2
Harvard    3 4 1
Princeton    1 5 1
Boston University    1 7 1
Vermont    1 7 1
Massachusetts    1 8 0

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 27RPIW 55–015,000
October 4Hobart
  • Archbold Stadium
  • Syracuse, NY
W 49–015,000
October 11Rutgers
  • Archbold Stadium
  • Syracuse, NY
W 27–012,000
October 18Pittsburgh
  • Archbold Stadium
  • Syracuse, NY (rivalry)
L 0–1415,000
October 25St. Lawrence
  • Archbold Stadium
  • Syracuse, NY
W 34–65,000
November 1Brown
  • Archbold Stadium
  • Syracuse, NY
T 16–1612,000
November 8at Penn StateT 0–010,000
November 15Colgate
  • Archbold Stadium
  • Syracuse, NY (rivalry)
L 7–3630,000
November 27at ColumbiaW 19–725,000[3]

References

  1. 2017 Syracuse football media guide. pg. 146.
  2. "1930 Syracuse Orange Schedule and Results". Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  3. Ted Vosburgh (November 28, 1930). "Long Runs Aid Orange To Win, 19-7". Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. p. 20 via Newspapers.com.
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