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Mark F. Bernstein
(2001) Every autumn American football fans pack large
college stadiums or crowd around grassy fields to root for
their favorite teams. Most are unaware that this most
popular American sport was created by the teams that now
make up the Ivy League. From the day Princeton played the
first intercollegiate game in 1869, these major schools of
the northeast--Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth,
Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton, and Yale--shaped
football as we now know it. Almost every facet of the game
still bears their imprint: they created the All-America
team, produced the first coaches, devised the basic rules,
invented many of the strategies, developed much of the
equipment, and even named the positions. Both the Heisman
and Outland trophies are named for Ivy League players.
Crowds of 80,000 no longer attend Ivy League games as they
did seventy years ago, and Ivy teams are not the
powerhouses they once were, but at times they can still be
a step ahead of the rest of football, as in 1973 when
Brown and Penn started the first black quarterbacks to
face each other in major college history. From University of
Pennsylvania Press |
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