Oregon Intercollegiate Football Association

The Oregon Intercollegiate Football Association (OIFA) was the pioneer governing committee which coordinated games of football between various colleges in the American state of Oregon. The committee agreed upon common rules of play, scheduled games, and provided a framework for an annual champion in the years 1893 and 1897.[1]

Oregon Intercollegiate Football Association
Founded1893
Ceased1897
Sports fielded
No. of teams4–7

The conference was relaunched for the 1899 season but was abruptly scuttled by the withdrawal on November 14 of two league teams over allegations that Willamette University had enrolled "ringers" for the sole purpose of playing football.

Organizational history edit

1893 season edit

There were four teams participating in the OIFA in 1893. Oregon Agricultural College Aggies were crowned 'Champions'

The teams finished the 1893 season with the following records:

Team Wins Losses Ties Source
Oregon Agricultural College 3 0 0 [2]
Pacific University 2 0 0 [2]
Albany College 0 1 0 [3]
Oregon Normal School 0 4 0 [2]

1894 season edit

There were seven teams participating in the OIFA in 1894. Portland University were crowned 'Champions.'

The teams finished the 1894 season with the following records:

Team Wins Losses Ties Source
Portland University 4 0 0 [3]
Oregon Agricultural College 3 1 0 [3]
Willamette University 2 4 1
Pacific University 1 2 1 [3]
University of Oregon 1 2 1 [3]
Pacific College 1 3 0
Oregon Normal School 0 4 0 [3]

1895 season edit

A meeting of college representatives was held in Salem on Saturday, October 5, 1895 to organize a schedule for the coming year.[4] Attending were representatives of Portland University, Oregon Agricultural College, the University of Oregon, Pacific University, and new participant Willamette University.[4] The 1894 season marked the first year of organized football for Willamette and the 1895 campaign would be their second. Oregon Normal School (today's Western Oregon State College) did not participate.

President E. E. Washburne of Portland University was selected as president of the conference by virtue of his school having won the championship in 1894.[4] The conference representatives agreed to accept the Harvard–Pennsylvania–Cornell rules for the 1895–96 season[5] and adopted the Spalding No. J football as the official ball of the league.[4] The University of Oregon Webfoots won their 1st football Conference/League Championship.

The teams finished the 1895 season with the following overall records:

Team Wins Losses Ties Source
University of Oregon 4 0 0
Pacific University 1 0 1
Willamette University 2 2 0
Portland University 0 1 0
Oregon Normal School 0 1 0
Oregon Agricultural College 0 2 1

1896 season edit

There were seven teams participating in the OIFA in 1896. Willamette University were crowned 'Champions.'

The teams finished the 1896 season with the following records:

Team Wins Losses Ties Source
Willamette University 2 0 1
Pacific College 2 0 0
Pacific University 1 0 0
Oregon Agricultural College 1 2 0
Portland University 0 0 0
Oregon Normal School 0 0 0
McMinnville College 0 3 0

1897 season edit

There were six teams participating in the OIFA in 1897. Oregon Agricultural College Aggies were crowned 'Champions.'[6] They also went on the beat the Oregon Webfoots and Washington Sun-Dodgers and with those two wins, the team proclaimed themselves the "Champions of the Northwest"..[7]

The teams finished the 1897 season with the following records:

Team Wins Losses Ties Source
Oregon Agricultural College 5 0 0
Pacific College 2 2 0
McMinnville College 2 2 0
Pacific University 1 1 0
Albany College 0 1 0
Oregon Normal School 0 1 0

1899 season edit

The OIAA was relaunched for the 1899 football season but was abruptly scuttled midseason by the November 14 withdrawal of two conference members, the University of Oregon and Oregon Agricultural College, behind charges that Willamette University was enrolling "ringers" on its books for the sole purpose of playing football.[8]

A story in the Eugene Guard declared:

"It is said that no less than eight of Willamette's eleven are 'grafters.' 'Spike' Young occupies a fat job in the state house; Ruben Sanders comes up from Chemawa for daily practice; Savage, a Salem blacksmith; two practicing physicians, two asylum employees. These are samples of the 'students' that play under Willamette colors."[8]

The declaration by Oregon and OAC that all agreement between them and the league were consequently "null and void" and a refusal to play further games with Willamette spelled a final end for the OIAA.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ "the football rage".
  2. ^ a b c "Football," Corvallis Gazette vol. 30, no. 45 (Dec. 22, 1893), p. 1., quoting the Corvallis Gazette.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Football," Daily Eugene Guard, vol. 8, no. 21 (Jan. 1, 1895), p. 1, quoting the Corvallis Gazette.
  4. ^ a b c d "Pig-Skin Punchers," Corvallis Times, vol. 8, no. 34 (Oct. 9, 1895), p. 3.
  5. ^ The Harvard–Pennsylvania–Cornell rules were a specific set of amendments to the basic rules published in Spalding's Official Football Guide for 1895, by Walter Camp. See: "The Official Football Rules," Harvard Crimson, Sept. 23, 1895.
  6. ^ "football team, 1897".
  7. ^ Welsch, Jeff (January 2003). Tales from Oregon State Sports. Sports Publishing. pp. 1–10. ISBN 978-1-58261-706-0. Retrieved January 3, 2008.
  8. ^ a b c "For Clean Sport: U of O and OAC Withdraw From the Football League: Dirty Work at Willamette," Eugene Guard, Nov. 15, 1899, p. 3.