The 1923 All-Eastern football team consists of American football players chosen by various selectors as the best players at each position among the Eastern colleges and universities during the 1923 college football season.
All-Eastern selections edit
Quarterbacks edit
- George Pfann, Cornell (PGT-1; NT-1, NYS-1)
- Lyle Richeson, Yale (NT-2; NYS-2)
- Jimmy Robertson, Carnegie Tech (PGT-2)
Halfbacks edit
- Harry Wilson, Penn State (PGT-1; NT-1; NYS-1)
- Mal Stevens, Yale (NT-1; NYS-1)
- Eddie Tryon, Colgate (PGT-1; NT-2)
- Walter Koppisch, Columbia (NT-2)
- Karl Bohren, Pittsburgh (PGT-2)
- Nick Nardacci, West Virginia (PGT-2)
- Floyd Ramsey, Cornell (NYS-2)
- West, Washington & Jefferson (NYS-2)
Fullbacks edit
- Bill Mallory, Yale (PGT-1; NT-1; NYS-1)
- Charles Darling, Boston College (NT-2; NYS-2)
- Jack McBride, Syracuse (PGT-2)
Ends edit
- Pete MacRae, Syracuse (PGT-1; NT-1; NYS-1)
- Richard Luman, Yale (PGT-2; NT-1)
- Henry Bjorkman, Dartmouth (NT-2; NYS-1)
- Charlie Berry, Lafayette (PGT-1)
- Stephens, Penn (PGT-2)
- Taylor, Navy (NYS-2)
- Bill Supplee, Maryland (NYS-2)
Tackles edit
- Century Milstead, Yale (PGT-1; NT-1; NYS-1)
- Frank Sundstrom, Cornell (PGT-1; NT-1; NYS-2)
- Chester Weiderquist, Washington & Jefferson (PGT-2; NT-2; NYS-1)
- Edwin F. Blair, Yale (PGT-2; NT-2; NYS-2)
Guards edit
- Charles Hubbard, Harvard (PGT-2; NT-1; NYS-1)
- Cyril Aschenbach, Dartmouth (PGT-1; NT-2; NYS-2)
- Jim Welsh, Colgate (NT-1; NYS-2)
- Joe Bedenk, Penn State (NT-2; NYS-1)
- Harry Seidelson, Pittsburgh (PGT-1)
- Walter Mahan, West Virginia (PGT-2)
Centers edit
- Winslow Lovejoy, Yale (PGT-2; NT-1; NYS-1)
- Edgar Garbisch, Army (PGT-1; NT-2)
- Dolph Eckstein, Brown (NYS-2)
Key edit
- PGT = Pittsburgh Gazette Times [1]
- NT = Nashua Telegraph, selections made by more than 20 eastern observers [2]
- NYS = New York Sun [3]
See also edit
References edit
- ^ "Two Pitt Men On All-Eastern Teams". Pittsburgh Gazette Times. December 9, 1923. p. 4.
- ^ "Selection for All East Grid Team". Nashua Telegraph. December 8, 1923. p. 4.
- ^ "News and Views". The Washington Reporter. December 5, 1923. p. 7.