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Revision as of 23:25, 18 December 2015 editCarrite (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers99,295 edits Pares off the team records, which bog down the list← Previous edit Revision as of 23:39, 18 December 2015 edit undoCarrite (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers99,295 edits adds contentNext edit →
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* ] Flying Kelleys, ]<ref name=Daye114>Daye, ''Encyclopedia of Armed Forces Football,'' pg. 114.</ref>
* ] Skycrackers<ref>Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pg. 18.</ref>

* ], ]<ref name=Daye115>Daye, ''Encyclopedia of Armed Forces Football,'' pg. 115.</ref>

* ] Skycrackers<ref>Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pg. 18.</ref>


* ]<ref>Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pp. 19-20.</ref> * ]<ref>Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pp. 19-20.</ref>
: In 1943 Iowa Pre-Flight finished the season 9-1 and was ranked by the Associated Press as the #2 college football team in the United States. :: In 1943 Iowa Pre-Flight finished the season 9-1 and was ranked by the Associated Press as the #2 college football team in the United States.


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* ] (])<ref>Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pp. 20-21.</ref> * ] (])<ref>Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pp. 20-21.</ref>

===United States Marine Corps teams===

* ] Blue Brigade, ]<ref name=Day114 />


===United States Coast Guard teams=== ===United States Coast Guard teams===
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==See also== ==See also==

Revision as of 23:39, 18 December 2015

This List of World War II military service football teams includes all those top-level American football teams consisting of active duty military personnel of the United States Armed Forces which played against collegiate or professional opponents during the seasons 1942, 1943, or 1944.

Background

During the years of World War II the American military saw a rapid expansion of its system of military bases as the number of young men skyrocketed through enlistment and conscription. Many of these included former collegiate and professional stars of the football gridiron. Some 19 active or former players of the National Football League would ultimately die in the American war effort, in addition to an uncounted number of former collegians.

Early in the war effort one football writer said about the applicability of the formation of football teams with military training:

Football is a body-toughener. Football lights the fighting spark in fighting men. It develops aggressiveness, teamwork, stamina, physical and mental coordination under active stress, and therefore it holds a foremost place in our national wartime training program. Teams by the hundreds are in formation at various Army camps and posts and Navy bases. The greatest participation in the history of the sport will be entered in the records of 1942.

Beginning in the fall of 1942 the War Department began to promote organized football exhibitions involving select teams from its military bases which played full schedules against the depleted squads of regional universities. These elite teams are included in the following list.

These were further distilled into military All-Star Teams which played against collegiate and professional opponents. In 1942 the U.S. Army named two "All-Army teams" of approximately 60 players per unit, located in the East and West. These were informally known as the "Million Dollar teams" — their purpose being to raise upwards of $1 million for the Army Emergency Relief fund through a series of exhibition clashes with the professional teams of the National Football League. The Eastern Army All-Star team was led by Lt. Col. Robert R. Neyland, and played September 1942 games against the New York Giants, Brooklyn Dodgers, and Chicago Bears. The Western All-Stars, coached by Major Wallace Wade Duke University coach played a slate including games beginning late in August 1942 against the Washington Redskins, Chicago Cardinals, Detroit Lions, Green Bay Packers, and New York Giants.

List of teams

United States Army teams

Teams associated with the bases of the United States Army included:

United States Army Air Forces teams

Teams associated with the bases of the United States Army Air Forces included:

In 1943 Iowa Pre-Flight finished the season 9-1 and was ranked by the Associated Press as the #2 college football team in the United States.

United States Navy teams

Teams associated with the bases of the United States Navy included:

The team was coached by former Ohio State University coach Paul Brown in 1944.

United States Marine Corps teams

United States Coast Guard teams

Teams associated with the bases of the United States Coast Guard included:

See also

Footnotes

  1. "Football and America: World War II," Professional Football Hall of Fame, pg. 2. Retrieved July 28, 2012.
  2. Eddie Dooley, "The Service Teams," 1942 Football Illustrated Annual. New York: Fiction House, Inc., 1942; pg. 21.
  3. ^ Jack Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," 1943 Football Illustrated Annual. New York: Fiction House, Inc., 1943; pg. 16.
  4. ^ Dooley, "The Service Teams," pg. 22.
  5. ^ Daye, Encyclopedia of Armed Forces Football, pg. 114.
  6. Daye, Encyclopedia of Armed Forces Football, pg. 115.
  7. Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pg. 18.
  8. Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pp. 19-20.
  9. Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pg. 19.
  10. Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pp. 18-19.
  11. Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pg. 22.
  12. Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pg. 21.
  13. Byrne, "The Service Teams USA," pp. 20-21.
  14. Cite error: The named reference Day114 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Further reading

  • John Daye, Encyclopedia of Armed Forces Football: The Complete History of the Glory Days. Haworth, NJ: St. Johann Press, 2014.
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