1945 Little All-America college football team |
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Little All-America college football team |
1945 college football season |
1942 ← → 1946 |
The 1945 Little All-America college football team is composed of college football players from small colleges and universities who were selected by the Associated Press (AP) as the best players at each position. The selection of Little All-America teams was interrupted by World War II; the 1945 selections were the first since 1942. Two linemen from the Orange Bowl champion 1945 Miami Hurricanes football team made the team. Due to Miami's postwar expansion plans, the AP opined that the school would likely not qualify in the future for Little All-America consideration. [1]
Position | Player | Team |
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B | Carroll Bowen | Catawba |
Walt Trojanowski | Connecticut | |
James Boswell | Oberlin | |
Walt Schlinkman | Texas Tech | |
E | Theodore Molitor | St. Thomas (MN) |
Robert Eyer | Lock Haven Teachers | |
T | Thomas Stewart | Chattanooga |
Robert Kirkman | Dakota Wesleyan | |
G | Andy Kavaounis | Presbyterian |
Ed Cameron | Miami (FL) | |
C | William Levett | Miami (FL) |
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The 2022 College Football All-America Team includes those players of American college football who have been honored by various selector organizations as the best players at their respective positions. The selector organizations award the "All-America" honor annually following the conclusion of the fall college football season. The original All-America team was the 1889 College Football All-America Team selected by Caspar Whitney and Walter Camp. The National Collegiate Athletic Bureau, which is the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) service bureau, compiled, in the 1950, the first list of All-Americans including first-team selections on teams created for a national audience that received national circulation with the intent of recognizing selections made from viewpoints that were nationwide. Since 1957, College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) has bestowed Academic All-American recognition on male and female athletes in Divisions I, II, and III of the NCAA as well as National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and NJCAA athletes, including all NCAA championship sports.