1936 Louisville Cardinals football team

Last updated

1936 Louisville Cardinals football
Conference Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association
Record4–4 (2–3 SIAA)
Head coach
Home stadium Parkway Field
Seasons
  1935
1937  
1936 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L TW L T
Middle Tennessee State Teachers + 4 0 07 1 0
The Citadel + 4 0 04 6 0
Miami (FL) 3 0 06 2 2
Centenary 2 0 06 4 2
Centre 2 0 05 4 0
Howard (AL) 2 0 15 3 1
Union (TN) 5 1 16 4 1
Rollins 4 1 07 1 0
Louisiana Tech 4 1 16 2 1
Morehead State 4 1 24 1 2
Eastern Kentucky State Teachers 4 2 07 2 0
Mississippi State Teachers 4 2 17 2 1
Mississippi College 2 1 15 3 1
Western Kentucky State Teachers 3 2 06 3 0
Erskine 3 2 04 5 0
Presbyterian 3 2 03 6 0
Louisiana Normal 3 2 15 4 1
Murray State 4 4 05 4 0
Mercer 1 1 13 6 1
Louisiana College 2 3 13 4 1
Louisville 2 3 04 4 0
Millsaps 1 2 23 5 2
Transylvania 1 3 13 4 1
Tennessee Tech 1 5 02 5 1
Georgetown (KY) 1 5 12 5 1
Loyola (LA) 0 1 04 6 0
Stetson 0 3 12 5 1
Union (KY) 0 3 22 4 2
SW Louisiana 0 4 12 7 1
Wofford 0 4 11 7 1
Newberry 0 4 11 10 1
West Tennessee State Teachers 0 7 00 9 0
  • + Conference co-champions

The 1936 Louisville Cardinals football team was an American football team that represented the University of Louisville as a member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA) during the 1936 college football season. In their first season under head coach Laurie Apitz, the Cardinals compiled a 4–4 record. [1]

Schedule

DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
October 3 Union (KY) Louisville, KY W 13–0
October 10at Hanover * Hanover, IN W 12–2
October 17at Eastern Kentucky Richmond, KY L 6–9
October 24at Union (KY)L 7–27
October 30 Georgetown (KY) Louisville, KYW 12–8
November 7Alfred Holbrook*Louisville, KYW 31–7
November 14at Morehead State Morehead, KY L 7–14
November 21 Baldwin–Wallace *
  • Parkway Field
  • Louisville, KY
L 0–672,900 [2]
  • *Non-conference game

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References

  1. "2019 Louisville Cardinals Football Media Guide" (PDF). University of Louisville. 2019. p. 152. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  2. Earl Ruby (November 22, 1936). "Baldwin-Wallace Wallops U.L. 67-0, takes Nation's Scoring Lead". The Courier-Journal. p. V-2 via Newspapers.com.