1936 Louisville Cardinals football team

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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
Conf.Overall
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

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.