Bernie Bierman was the head football coach at the University of Minnesota for 16 seasons, from 1932 through 1941 and then again from 1945 to 1950.[1] The team had a 93-35-6 overall record.[1] In the Big Ten, the Golden Gophers had a 57-28-6 record and won six conference championships.[2] The team won national titles in 1934, 1935, 1936, 1940 and 1941.[3] Twenty-one players were awarded All-American status.[4] Thirty-six players were named All-Big Ten first team.[5]
Contents |
| 1932 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| 1932 record | 5-3 (2-3 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1932 season was the Golden Gophers' first under head coach Bernie Bierman.[6] The Golden Gophers won five games and lost three.[6] Total attendance for the season was 113,956, which averaged to 43,557.[7] The season high for attendance was against Northwestern.[7]
Tackle Marshall Wells was named All-Big Ten first team.[5] Fullback John Baumgartner was named Academic All-Big Ten.[8]
Center Roy Oen was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent | Site | Result | Attendance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10/01/1932* | South Dakota State | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 12-0 | 20,000 | |||
| 10/08/1932 | Purdue | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 0-7 | 20,000 | |||
| 10/15/1932* | Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 7-6 | 18,000 | |||
| 10/22/1932 | at Iowa | Iowa Stadium • Iowa City, IA | W 21-6 | 12,000 | |||
| 10/29/1932† | Northwestern | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 7-0 | 35,000 | |||
| 11/05/1932* | Ole Miss | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 26-0 | 12,000 | |||
| 11/12/1932 | at Wisconsin | Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI | L 13-20 | 31,000 | |||
| 11/19/1932 | Michigan | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 0-3 | 24,766 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. | |||||||
| 1933 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Big Ten co-champions | |||
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| 1933 record | 4-0-4 (2-0-4 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1933 season was the Golden Gophers' second under head coach Bernie Bierman.[6] The Golden Gophers won four games and tied four.[6] Total attendance for the season was 164,301, which averaged to 27,384.[7] The season high for attendance was against Iowa.[7]
End Frank Larson was named an All-American by United Press International (UPI), Collier's Weekly/Grantland Rice and Look Magazine. Halfback Pug Lund was named an All-American by the Associated Press, UPI and Liberty Magazine.[4]
Frank Larson and Pug Lund were named All-Big Ten.[5]
Pug Lund was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent | Site | Result | Attendance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/30/1933* | South Dakota State | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 19-6 | 25,000 | |||
| 10/07/1933 | Indiana | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | T 6-6 | 20,000 | |||
| 10/14/1933 | Purdue | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | T 7-7 | 26,497 | |||
| 10/21/1933* | Pittsburgh | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 7-3 | 26,000 | |||
| 10/28/1933† | Iowa | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 19-7 | 45,000 | |||
| 11/04/1933 | at Northwestern | Dyche Stadium • Evanston, IL | T 0-0 | 35,000 | |||
| 11/18/1933 | at Michigan | Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI | T 0-0 | 52,137 | |||
| 11/25/1933 | Wisconsin | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 6-3 | 25,000 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. | |||||||
| 1934 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|
National Champions Big Ten Champions |
|||
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| 1934 record | 8-0 (5-0 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1934 season was the Golden Gophers' third under head coach Bernie Bierman.[6] The Golden Gophers won eight games and lost none.[6] Total attendance for the season was 192,922, which averaged to 38,584.[7] The season high for attendance was against rival Michigan.[7] The team was named national champions, the first national championship for the University.[10]
End Frank Larson was named an All-American by the Associated Press (AP), Collier's Weekly/Grantland Rice and Look Magazine.[4] Halfback Pug Lund was named an All-American by the AP, Collier’s Weekly/Grantland Rice, Liberty, Walter Camp Football Foundation and Look Magazine.[4] Guard Bill Bevan was named an All-American by Collier’s Weekly/Grantland Rice, Liberty and Look Magazine.[4] End Bob Tenner was named an All-American by the United Press International.[4] Tackle Phil Bengston, Bevan, Larson, Lund, Tenner, and tackle Ed Widseth were named All-Big Ten.[5] Lund received Chicago Tribune Silver Football, awarded to the most valuable player of the Big Ten.[5]
Pug Lund was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent | Site | Result | Attendance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/29/1934* | North Dakota State | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 56-12 | 25,000 | |||
| 10/06/1934* | Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 20-0 | 35,000 | |||
| 10/20/1934* | at Pittsburgh | Pitt Stadium • Pittsburgh, PA | W 13-7 | 65,000 | |||
| 10/27/1934 | at Iowa | Iowa Stadium • Iowa City, IA | W 48-12 | 53,000 | |||
| 11/03/1934† | Michigan | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 34-0 | 59,362 | |||
| 11/10/1934 | Indiana | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 30-0 | 28,100 | |||
| 11/17/1934 | Chicago | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 35-7 | 46,000 | |||
| 11/24/1934 | at Wisconsin | Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI | W 34-0 | 38,000 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. | |||||||
| 1935 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|
National Champions Co-Big Ten Champions |
|||
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| 1935 record | 8-0 (5-0 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1935 season was the Golden Gophers' fourth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won eight games and lost none.[11] Total attendance for the season was 217,785, which averaged to 43,557.[7] The season high for attendance was against Northwestern.[7] The team was named national champions, the second consecutive national championship for the University.[10]
Guard Bud Wilkinson was named All-American by Grantland Rice and the Associated Press (AP).[4] Tackle Ed Widseth was named an All-American by the Walter Camp Football Foundation, United Press International (UPI), Liberty, Hearst and New York World Telegram.[4] Tackle Dick Smith was named an All-American by the AP, UPI, New York World Telegram and Look Magazine.[4] Halfback Sheldon Beise was named an All-American by the American Sports Service and New York Daily Mirror.[4]
Beise, quarterback Babe LeVoir, Smith, Widseth and Wilkinson were named All-Big Ten.[5]
Quarterback Babe LeVoir was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent | Site | Result | Attendance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/28/1935* | North Dakota State | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 26-6 | 35,000 | |||
| 10/12/1935* | at Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE | W 12-7 | 37,000 | |||
| 10/19/1935* | Tulane | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 20-0 | 38,000 | |||
| 10/26/1935† | Northwestern | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 21-13 | 52,000 | |||
| 11/02/1935 | Purdue | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 29-7 | 49,400 | |||
| 11/09/1935 | at Iowa | Iowa Stadium • Iowa City, IA | W 13-6 | 52,000 | |||
| 11/16/1935 | at Michigan | Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI | W 40-0 | 35,000 | |||
| 11/23/1935 | Wisconsin | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 33-7 | 45,000 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. | |||||||
| 1936 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| National Champions | |||
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| Ranking | |||
| AP | #1 | ||
| 1936 record | 7-1 (4-1 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1936 season was the Golden Gophers' fifth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won seven games and lost one.[11] Total attendance for the season was 247,653, which averaged to 49,531.[7] The season high for attendance was against Iowa.[7] The team was named national champions, the third consecutive national championship for the University.[10]
Tackle Ed Widseth was named an All-American by Collier's/Grantland Rice, Associated Press, INS, NEA, New York Sun, Look Magazine, New York Morning Telegram, Hearst, United Press International and Paramount News.[4] Widseth and halfback Andy Uram were named All-Big Ten first team.[5]
Widseth was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | Result | Attendance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/26/1936* | at Washington | Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA | W 14-7 | 40,000 | |||
| 10/10/1936* | Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 7-0 | 53,000 | |||
| 10/17/1936 | Michigan | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 26-0 | 48,000 | |||
| 10/24/1936 | Purdue | #1 | Memorial Stadium • MInneapolis, MN | W 33-0 | 47,780 | ||
| 10/31/1936 | at #3 Northwestern | #1 | Dyche Stadium • Evanston, IL | L 0-6 | 48,347 | ||
| 11/07/1936† | Iowa | #2 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 52-0 | 63,200 | ||
| 11/14/1936* | Texas | #2 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 47-19 | 47,000 | ||
| 11/21/1936 | at Wisconsin | #2 | Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI | W 24-0 | 33,000 | ||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll. | |||||||
| 1937 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Big Ten Champions | |||
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| Ranking | |||
| AP | #5 | ||
| 1937 record | 6-2 (5-0 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1937 season was the Golden Gophers' sixth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won six games and lost two.[11] Total attendance for the season was 254,188, which averaged to 50,838.[7] The season high for attendance was against Notre Dame.[7]
End Ray King was named an All-American by the Walter Camp Football Foundation and Look Magazine.[4] Fullback Andy Uram was named an All-American by the Associated Press.[4] King, halfback Rudy Gmitro, tackle Lou Midler and guard Francis Twedell were named All-Big Ten first team.[5]
Rudy Gmitro was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent | Site | Result | Attendance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/25/1937* | North Dakota State | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 69-7 | 47,492 | |||
| 10/02/1937* | at Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE | L 9-14 | 37,000 | |||
| 10/09/1937 | Indiana | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 6-0 | 35,000 | |||
| 10/16/1937 | Michigan | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 39-6 | 53,266 | |||
| 10/30/1937* | Notre Dame | #4 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 6-7 | 63,237 | ||
| 11/06/1937 | at Iowa | #14 | Iowa Stadium • Iowa City, IA | W 35-10 | 40,000 | ||
| 11/13/1937 | Northwestern | #10 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 7-0 | 63,000 | ||
| 11/20/1937 | Wisconsin | #7 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 13-6 | 46,000 | ||
| *Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll. | |||||||
| 1938 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Big Ten Champions | |||
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| Ranking | |||
| AP | #10 | ||
| 1938 record | 6-2 (4-1 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
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The 1938 season was the Golden Gophers' seventh under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won six games and lost two.[11] Total attendance for the season was 237,000, which averaged to 47,400.[7] The season high for attendance was against Michigan.[7]
Guard Francis Twedell was named an All-American by the Associated Press and United Press International.[4] Twedell and quarterback Wilbur Moore were named All-Big Ten first team.[5]
Fullback Larry Buhker was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent | Site | Result | Attendance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/24/1938* | Washington | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 15-0 | 50,000 | |||
| 10/01/1938* | Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 16-7 | 46,000 | |||
| 10/08/1938 | Purdue | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 7-0 | 52,000 | |||
| 10/15/1938† | Michigan | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 7-6 | 54,212 | |||
| 10/29/1938 | at Northwestern | #2 | Dyche Stadium • Evanston, IL | L 3-6 | 48,000 | ||
| 11/05/1938 | Iowa | #12 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 28-0 | 42,000 | ||
| 11/12/1938* | at #2 Notre Dame | #12 | Notre Dame Stadium • South Bend, IN | L 0-19 | 55,245 | ||
| 11/19/1938 | at #12 Wisconsin | Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI | W 21-0 | 38,000 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll. | |||||||
| 1939 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| 1939 record | 3-4-1 (2-3-1 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1939 season was the Golden Gophers' eighth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won three games, lost four and tied one.[11] Total attendance for the season was 229,954, which averaged to 45,991.[7] The season high for attendance was against Northwestern.[7]
Tackle Win Pederson was named All-Big Ten first team.[5]
Halfback Harold Van Every was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | Result | Attendance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/30/1939* | Arizona | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 62-0 | 42,875 | |||
| 10/07/1939* | at Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE | L 0-6 | 33,000 | |||
| 10/14/1939 | Purdue | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | T 13-13 | 35,000 | |||
| 10/21/1939 | #10 Ohio State | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 23-20 | 55,000 | |||
| 11/04/1939 | Northwestern | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 7-14 | 53,200 | |||
| 11/11/1939 | at #10 Michigan | Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI | W 20-7 | 66,572 | |||
| 11/18/1939 | at Iowa | #20 | Iowa Stadium • Iowa City, IA | L 13-9 | 60,100 | ||
| 11/25/1939 | Wisconsin | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 23-6 | 40,000 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll. | |||||||
| 1940 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|
Big Ten Champions National Champions |
|||
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| Ranking | |||
| AP | #1 | ||
| 1940 record | 8-0 (6-0 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
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The 1940 season was the Golden Gophers' ninth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won eight games and lost none.[11] Total attendance for the season was 234,990, which averaged to 46,998.[7] The season high for attendance was against Michigan.[7] The team finished first in the Associated Press poll, giving the Gophers their fourth national title.[11][12]
Tackle Urban Odson was named an All-American by Liberty.[4] Halfback George Franck was named an All-American by the Walter Camp Football Foundation, Associated Press, United Press International, Look (American magazine) and Collier's.[4] Franck and Odson were named All-Big Ten first team.[5] Franck placed third in voting for the Heisman Trophy.[8]
Bob Paffrath, QB was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | Result | Attendance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/28/1940* | Washington | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 19-14 | 46,000 | |||
| 10/05/1940* | Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 13-7 | 41,000 | |||
| 10/19/1940 | at #15 Ohio State | #7 | Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH | W 13-7 | 63,199 | ||
| 10/26/1940 | Iowa | #6 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 34-6 | 62,992 | ||
| 11/02/1940 | at Northwestern | #4 | Dyche Stadium • Evanston, IL | W 13-12 | 48,000 | ||
| 11/09/1940 | #3 Michigan | #2 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 7-6 | 60,481 | ||
| 11/16/1940 | Purdue | #1 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 33-6 | 30,140 | ||
| 11/23/1940 | at Wisconsin | #1 | Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI | W 22-13 | 40,000 | ||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll. | |||||||
| 1941 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|
National Champions Big Ten Champions |
|||
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| Ranking | |||
| AP | #1 | ||
| 1941 record | 8-0 (5-0 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1941 season was the Golden Gophers' tenth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won eight games and lost none.[11] Total attendance for the season was 239,227, which averaged to 47,845.[7] The season high for attendance was against Northwestern.[7]
Dick Wildung Tackle Walter Camp, INS, Time Life, AP, UPI Halfback Bruce Smith was named an All-American by the Walter Camp Football Foundation, INS, Time-Life, United Press International (UPI), Associated Press (AP) and Look Magazine.[4] Tackle Dick Wildung was named an All-American by the Walter Camp Football Foundation, INS, Time Life, AP and UPI.[4] Wildung, Smith, Halfback Bill Daley, End Bob Fitch and Guard Len Levy were named All-Big Ten.[5] Bruce Smith was awarded the Heisman Trophy, the only Golden Gopher to win the award.[8]
Back Bob Sweiger was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | Result | Attendance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/27/1941* | at Washington | Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA | W 14-6 | 43,000 | |||
| 10/11/1941 | Illinois | #1 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 34-6 | 50,345 | ||
| 10/18/1941* | Pittsburgh | #1 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 39-0 | 35,000 | ||
| 10/25/1941 | at Michigan | #1 | Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI | W 7-0 | 84,658 | ||
| 11/01/1941 | Northwestern | #1 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 8-7 | 64,464 | ||
| 11/08/1941* | Nebraska | #2 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 9-0 | 42,893 | ||
| 11/15/1941 | at Iowa | #1 | Iowa Stadium • Iowa City, IA | W 34-13 | 43,200 | ||
| 11/22/1941 | Wisconsin | #1 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 41-6 | 52,984 | ||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll. | |||||||
| 1945 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| 1945 record | 4-5 (1-5 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1945 season was the Golden Gophers' eleventh under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won four games and lost five.[11] Total attendance for the season was 246,931, which averaged to 41,155.[7] The season high for attendance was against Ohio State.[7]
Tackle Bob Fitch was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | Result | Attendance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/22/1945* | Missouri | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 34-0 | 34,246 | |||
| 10/06/1945* | at Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE | W 61-7 | 25,000 | |||
| 10/13/1945* | Fort Warren | #5 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 14-0 | 32,465 | ||
| 10/20/1945 | Northwestern | #5 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 30-7 | 55,940 | ||
| 10/27/1945 | #12 Ohio State | #5 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 7-20 | 56,000 | ||
| 11/03/1945 | at #10 Michigan | #16 | Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI | L 0-26 | 84,472 | ||
| 11/10/1945 | Indiana | #20 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 0-49 | 41,400 | ||
| 11/17/1945 | at Iowa | Iowa Stadium • Iowa City, IA | L 19-20 | 13,880 | |||
| 11/24/1945 | Wisconsin | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 12-26 | 34,800 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. | |||||||
| 1946 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| 1946 record | 5-4 (3-4 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1946 season was the Golden Gophers' twelfth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won five games and lost four.[11] Total attendance for the season was 328,003, which averaged to 54,667.[7] The season high for attendance was against Michigan.[7]
Halfback Billy Bye was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent | Site | Result | Attendance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/28/1946* | Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 33-6 | 51,096 | |||
| 10/05/1946 | Indiana | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 0-21 | 53,648 | |||
| 10/12/1946 | at Northwestern | Dyche Stadium • Evanston, IL | L 7-14 | 40,000 | |||
| 10/19/1946* | Wyoming | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 46-0 | 46,087 | |||
| 10/26/1946 | at Ohio State | Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH | L 9-39 | 76,611 | |||
| 11/02/1946 | #13 Michigan | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 0-21 | 58,476 | |||
| 11/09/1946 | Purdue | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 13-7 | 58,341 | |||
| 11/16/1946 | Iowa | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 16-6 | 59,180 | |||
| 11/23/1946 | at Wisconsin | Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI | W 6-0 | 45,000 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. | |||||||
| 1947 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| 1947 record | 6-3 (3-3 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1947 season was the Golden Gophers' thirteenth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won six games and lost three.[6] Total attendance for the season was 289,612, which averaged to 57,922.[7] The season high for attendance was against Purdue.[7]
Guard Leo Nomellini was named All-Big Ten.[5]
Guard Larry Olsonoski was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | Result | Attendance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/27/1947* | Washington | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 7-6 | 43,377 | |||
| 10/04/1947* | at Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE | W 28-13 | 34,000 | |||
| 10/12/1947 | Northwestern | #17 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 37-21 | 59,598 | ||
| 10/18/1947 | at Illinois | #13 | Memorial Stadium • Champaign, IL | L 13-40 | 56,048 | ||
| 10/25/1947 | at #1 Michigan | Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI | L 6-13 | 85,938 | |||
| 11/01/1947* | Pittsburgh | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 29-0 | 55,624 | |||
| 11/08/1947 | Purdue | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 26-21 | 63,659 | |||
| 11/15/1947 | at Iowa | #20 | Iowa Stadium • Iowa City, IA | L 7-13 | 50,000 | ||
| 11/22/1947 | Wisconsin | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 21-0 | 63,862 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. | |||||||
| 1948 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| Ranking | |||
| AP | #16 | ||
| 1948 record | 7-2 (5-2 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
|
|||
The 1948 season was the Golden Gophers' fourteenth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won seven games and lost two.[11] Total attendance for the season was 308,556, which averaged to 61,711.[7] The season high for attendance was against Purdue.[7]
Guard Leo Nomellini was named All-American by Walter Camp Football Foundation, Associated Press (AP), Collier's Weekly/Grantland Rice, The Sporting News, INS, Look Magazine, Football Writers Association of America and the American Football Coaches Association.[4]
Nomellini and end Bud Grant were named All-Big Ten.[5]
Halfback Everette Faunce was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | Result | Attendance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/25/1948* | at Washington | Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA | W 20-0 | 40,000 | |||
| 10/02/1948* | Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 39-13 | 57,206 | |||
| 10/09/1948* | at Northwestern | #8 | Dyche Stadium • Evanston, IL | L 16-19 | 47,000 | ||
| 10/16/1948 | Illinois | #11 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 6-0 | 62,066 | ||
| 10/23/1948 | Michigan | #13 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 14-27 | 65,130 | ||
| 10/30/1948 | Indiana | #15 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 30-7 | 64,926 | ||
| 11/06/1948 | Purdue | #19 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 34-7 | 66,953 | ||
| 11/13/1948 | at Iowa | #14 | Iowa Stadium • Iowa City, IA | W 28-21 | 44,000 | ||
| 11/20/1948 | at Wisconsin | #15 | Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI | W 16-0 | 45,000 | ||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. | |||||||
| 1949 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| Ranking | |||
| AP | #8 | ||
| 1949 record | 7-2 (4-2 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
|
Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
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The 1949 season was the Golden Gophers' fifteenth under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won seven games and lost two.[11] Total attendance for the season was 305,200, which averaged to 61,040.[7] The season high for attendance was against Wisconsin.[7]
Tackle Leo Nomellini was named an All-American by Walter Camp Football Foundation, Associated Press (AP), Look Magazine, and the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA). Center Clayton Tonnemaker was named an All-American by Walter Camp Football Foundation, AP, Collier's/Grantland Rice, Look Magazine, Football Writers Association of America and the AFCA.[4] Nomellini, Tonnemaker and end Bud Grant were named All-Big Ten first team.[5]
Grant was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent# | Rank# | Site | Result | Attendance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/24/1949* | Washington | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 48-20 | 55,256 | |||
| 10/01/1949* | at Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Lincoln, NE | W 28-6 | 34,000 | |||
| 10/08/1949 | Northwestern | #5 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 21-7 | 63,063 | ||
| 10/15/1949 | at #11 Ohio State | #5 | Ohio Stadium • Columbus, OH | W 27-0 | 82,111 | ||
| 10/22/1949 | at #11 Michigan | #3 | Michigan Stadium • Ann Arbor, MI | L 7-14 | 97,239 | ||
| 10/29/1949 | Purdue | #7 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 7-13 | 61,154 | ||
| 11/05/1949 | Iowa | #9 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 24-7 | 42,515 | ||
| 11/19/1949 | Wisconsin | #8 | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 14-6 | 63,139 | ||
| *Non-Conference Game. †Homecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll. | |||||||
| 1950 Minnesota Golden Gophers football | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big Ten Conference | ||
| 1950 record | 1-7-1 (1-4-1 Big Ten) | ||
| Head coach | Bernie Bierman | ||
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Home stadium |
Memorial Stadium | ||
Seasons
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The 1937 season was the Golden Gophers' sixteenth and final under head coach Bernie Bierman.[11] The Golden Gophers won one game, lost seven and tied one.[11] Total attendance for the season was 267,015, which averaged to 53,403.[7] The season high for attendance was against Iowa.[7]
Wayne Robinson was awarded the Team MVP Award.[9]
| Date | Opponent | Site | Result | Attendance | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09/30/1950* | at Washington | Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA | L 13-28 | 49,500 | |||
| 10/07/1950* | Nebraska | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 26-32 | 47,710 | |||
| 10/14/1950 | at Northwestern | Dyche Stadium • Evanston, IL | L 6-13 | 45,000 | |||
| 10/21/1950 | #9 Ohio State | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 0-48 | 53,192 | |||
| 10/28/1950 | #14 Michigan | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | T 7-7 | 59,412 | |||
| 11/04/1950 | Iowa | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | L 0-13 | 60,321 | |||
| 11/11/1950 | at Michigan State | Spartan Stadium • East Lansing, MI | L 0-27 | 47,461 | |||
| 11/18/1950 | Purdue | Memorial Stadium • Minneapolis, MN | W 27-14 | 46,389 | |||
| 11/25/1950 | at Wisconsin | Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI | L 0-14 | 45,000 | |||
| *Non-Conference Game. #Rankings from AP Poll. | |||||||
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