1921 Cleveland Tigers season

Sports season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1921 Cleveland Tigers season was their second completed in the young American Professional Football Association (APFA), soon to be renamed the National Football League. The team improved on their previous record of 2–4–2, winning three games.[1] They finished eleventh in the league.[2]

OwnerJim O'Donnell
Home stadiumDunn Field
Record3–5 APFA
(3–5–1 overall)
Quick facts Cleveland Tigers (NFL) season, Owner ...
1921 Cleveland Tigers (NFL) season
OwnerJim O'Donnell
Head coachJim Thorpe
Home stadiumDunn Field
Results
Record3–5 APFA
(3–5–1 overall)
League place11th APFA
Close

The 1921 team, remembered by some as the Cleveland Indians,[3] featured legendary player-coach Jim Thorpe at halfback and two other Native-American football stars in the backfield — "Indian Joe" Guyon and fullback Pete Calac, both of whom played with Thorpe on the 1920 Canton Bulldogs.[4] In all, six members of the 1921 Cleveland Tigers team played on the Canton Bulldogs the previous season.[4]

The 34-year old Thorpe — ancient in football years — used himself sparingly but was still effective enough that the Cleveland Plain Dealer could write good-naturedly of his season-opening performance against the Columbus Panhandles:

"Poor Jim Thorpe. He has become so old and decrepit that the best he could do yesterday was run eighty yards for a touchdown, shaking off half a dozen tacklers and dodging three or four others. His arm has become so weak he cannot throw the football more than forty or fifty yards in executing forward passes. Poor Jim. The first thing we know he will have to quit the game in ten years or so."[5]

Schedule

Tiny display advertisement promoting the first Cleveland Tigers game of the 1921 season.
More information Game, Date ...
Game Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap Sources
1 October 16 Columbus Panhandles W 35–9 1–0 Dunn Field "several thousand" Recap [5][6][7]
2 October 23 Cincinnati Celts W 28–0 2–0 Dunn Field Recap [8][9][10]
3 October 30 at Dayton Triangles L 2–3 2–1 Triangle Park 4,000 Recap [11]
4 November 6 at Buffalo All-Americans L 6–10 2–2 Canisius Villa 7,000 Recap [12][13]
5 November 13 Canton Bulldogs L 0–7 2–3 Dunn Field < 3,500 Recap [14][15]
6 November 20 at Chicago Staleys L 7–22 2–4 Cubs Park 10,000 Recap [4][16][17][18][19]
– November 27 (open date) — —
7 December 3 at New York Brickley Giants W 17–0 3–4 Polo Grounds 3,000 Recap
– December 10 at Richmond Athletic Club T 0–0 —
8 December 11 at Washington Senators L 0–7 3–5 American League Park 5,000 Recap
Note: Games in italics indicate a non-league opponent.
Close

Standings

Cleveland fullback Pete Calac gains ground through the Columbus line in the October 16 season-opener.
More information APFA standings, W ...
APFA standings
W L T PCT PF PA STK
Chicago Staleys 911.90012853T1
Buffalo All-Americans 912.90021129L1
Akron Pros 831.72714831W1
Canton Bulldogs 523.71410655W1
Rock Island Independents 421.6676530L1
Evansville Crimson Giants 320.6008946W1
Green Bay Packers 321.6007055L1
Dayton Triangles 441.5009667L1
Chicago Cardinals 332.5005453T1
Rochester Jeffersons 230.4008576W2
Cleveland Tigers 350.3759558L1
Washington Senators 120.3342143L1
Cincinnati Celts 130.25014117L2
Hammond Pros 131.2501745L2
Minneapolis Marines 130.2503741L1
Detroit Tigers 151.16719109L5
Columbus Panhandles 180.11147222W1
Tonawanda Kardex 010.000045L1
Muncie Flyers 020.000028L2
Louisville Brecks 020.000027L2
New York Brickley Giants 020.000072L2
Close
Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

References

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