1940 Boston College Eagles football team

American college football season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1940 Boston College Eagles football team represented Boston College as an independent during the 1940 college football season. The team was led by head coach Frank Leahy in his second year, and played their home games at Fenway Park in Boston and Alumni Field in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. The "team of destiny" finished with an overall record of 11–0, including six shutouts and a win in the Sugar Bowl.[1]

ConferenceIndependent
APNo. 5
Record11–0
Headcoach
Quick facts Boston College Eagles football, National champion (self-claimed)Eastern championSugar Bowl champion ...
1940 Boston College Eagles football
National champion (self-claimed)
Eastern champion
Sugar Bowl champion
Sugar Bowl, W 19–13 vs. Tennessee
ConferenceIndependent
Ranking
APNo. 5
Record11–0
Head coach
CaptainHenry Toczylowski
Home stadiumAlumni Field
Fenway Park
Seasons
 1939
1941 
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More information Conf., Overall ...
1940 Eastern college football independents records
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
No. 5 Boston College  1100
Duquesne  710
No. 14 Penn  611
Penn State  611
No. 12 Fordham  720
No. 15 Cornell  620
La Salle  620
Princeton  521
Columbia  522
Brown  631
Bucknell  422
Boston University  530
Colgate  530
Hofstra  430
Harvard  323
Dartmouth  540
Temple  441
Tufts  440
Vermont  440
Villanova  450
Pittsburgh  341
Syracuse  341
Buffalo  350
Carnegie Tech  350
Manhattan  360
Providence  360
NYU  270
Yale  170
Army  171
CCNY  151
Massachusetts State  180
Rankings from AP Poll
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Schedule

More information Date, Opponent ...
DateOpponentRankSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 21CentreW 40–019,000[2]
September 28at TulaneW 27–742,000[3]
October 12TempleW 33–2028,000[4]
October 19IdahoNo. 8
  • Fenway Park
  • Boston, MA
W 60–08,000[5][6][7]
October 26Saint AnselmNo. 10
  • Alumni Field
  • Chestnut Hill, MA
W 55–017,000[8]
November 2ManhattanNo. 9
  • Alumni Field
  • Chestnut Hill, MA
W 25–012,000[9]
November 9Boston UniversityNo. 8
W 21–020,000[10]
November 16No. 9 GeorgetownNo. 8
  • Fenway Park
  • Boston, MA
W 19–1843,000[11]
November 23AuburnNo. 4
  • Fenway Park
  • Boston, MA
W 33–730,000[12]
November 30Holy CrossNo. 4
W 7–038,000[13]
January 1, 1941vs. No. 4 TennesseeNo. 5
W 19–1373,181[14]
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
  • Source: [15]
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Rankings

More information Week, Poll ...
Ranking movements
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking
( ) = First-place votes
Week
Poll1234567Final
AP8109 (2)8 (2)84 (12)4 (15)5 (7)
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Season summary

The BC Eagles won all ten games in the regular season, were the highest-scoring team in the country, and won the Lambert Trophy, awarded to the "Eastern champion". Scoring leaders during the regular season were Frank Maznicki (80 points), Mike Holovak (67 points), and Lou Montgomery (36 points).[16]

From 1936 to 1964, the final AP Poll ranking college football teams was taken at the end of the regular season, before the postseason bowl games. The final 1940 rankings were published on December 2, and listed undefeated Minnesota (8–0) first. Minnesota had secured a thrilling home win by an extra point, 7–6, over Michigan in early November—Michigan finished the regular season with a 7–1 record and was ranked third. Stanford (10–0) was ranked second, Tennessee (10–0) fourth, and Boston College (10–0) was fifth.[17]

Postseason

Boston College played in the Sugar Bowl on New Year's Day and defeated Tennessee, champion of the Southeastern Conference (SEC), by a score of 19–13. The Eagles played without Montgomery, a halfback, due to racial policies of the era.[18] Tennessee had outscored its regular season opponents 319–26, soundly beating such opponents as Alabama, Florida, LSU, Kentucky, Virginia, and Duke.[19]

Neither Minnesota nor Michigan played in a postseason bowl game, and Stanford defeated No. 7 Nebraska in the Rose Bowl by a score of 21–13. Despite where the AP rated teams at the end of the regular season, BC's postseason win over Tennessee was widely deemed the best win of any team in the 1940 season.[20]

Aftermath

1940 banner

For this era, when a limited number of bowl games were played and no polling was conducted after postseason contests, there are often competing claims for the national championship of a given season.

With its undefeated season and bowl win, the BC Eagles were widely acclaimed as national champions.[20][21] While there is a banner on the BC campus that lists the score of each game the Eagles played, along with "National Champions" wording,[citation needed] BC's football media guide only makes passing mention of a "claim to the national championship with a 19-13 victory over Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl."[22]

The NCAA lists only Minnesota (ranked first in the final AP Poll of early December) as the national champion for 1940, and does not credit Boston College with any national championships in football.[23] Several other selectors list Stanford as the 1940 champion and one lists Tennessee.[24]

References

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