Harman Patil (Editor)

1939 Iowa Hawkeyes football team

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Conference
  
Big Ten Conference

1939 record
  
6-1-1 (4-1-1 Big Ten)

MVP
  
Nile Kinnick

AP
  
No. 9

Head coach
  
Eddie Anderson

Home stadium
  
Iowa Stadium

The 1939 Iowa Hawkeyes football team represented the University of Iowa in the 1939 Big Ten Conference football season. The team, nicknamed the Ironmen, was coached by Dr. Eddie Anderson and was led on the field by halfback Nile Kinnick.

Contents

Preseason

Iowa football was clearly struggling as 1939 began. In fact, the entire Iowa athletic department was in poor financial shape. The Great Depression had greatly impacted the small farming state, and Iowa's athletic receipts sharply declined throughout the 1930s. The debt on Iowa Stadium, which was built in 1929, grew by the year. The Hawkeyes had finished among the worst three teams in the Big Ten standings every year in the 1930s except 1933. Iowa had won just one Big Ten game in the last three years, and the team they beat, Chicago, announced that they would be dropping their football program following the 1939 season. Chicago soon withdrew from the Big Ten Conference.

After compiling a 2-13-1 record in two years at Iowa, head football coach Irl Tubbs was fired. Iowa athletic director E. G. Schroeder tried to inject some life into the program by hiring Dr. Eddie Anderson of Holy Cross. Anderson, a Mason City, Iowa native, played and coached under Knute Rockne at Notre Dame. He was the 1921 Notre Dame team captain, and Notre Dame went 28-1 in Anderson’s last three years as a player. Ironically, the lone loss was to the 1921 Hawkeyes.

Around 85 players arrived for spring practice in 1939. About fifty of them did not return in the fall. Anderson installed a complicated new offense and conducted rigorous practices. The 1939 Hawkeye team would be severely lacking in depth. Anderson felt the Hawks could still be a good team in 1939, but only if the starters played significant minutes. A coach brought in temporarily to help with Iowa's spring practice was quoted as saying when he left, "Among 5000 male students at the University of Iowa, there are only five real football players."

Michigan, Minnesota, Northwestern, and Ohio State were the Big Ten favorites for the 1939 season, while many sportswriters liked Purdue. Notre Dame was also highly ranked nationally. Iowa was picked at the bottom of the Big Ten.

Before the season, Iowa's best player appeared to be Nile Kinnick. Kinnick was an all-Big Ten selection as a sophomore, when he led the nation in punting average, but he struggled through an injury-riddled junior season. As a result, end Erwin Prasse, an all-Big Ten selection in 1938, was elected as the team captain of the 1939 Hawkeyes. However, Kinnick had recovered from his injuries and was ready for a standout senior season.

Roster

23 || Carl Conrad || End || Senior || Fonda, IA

Postseason

  • Kinnick threw for 638 yards and 11 touchdowns on only 31 passes and ran for 374 yards and 5 touchdowns.
  • Kinnick was involved in 107 of the 130 points that Iowa scored and played 402 of a possible 420 minutes.
  • Kinnick set the school record with eight interceptions in a season, a record which still stands today.
  • Nile Kinnick won virtually every major award in the country. He was named:
  • A consensus first team All-American
  • The Big Ten MVP
  • The Walter Camp Award winner
  • The Maxwell Award winner
  • The Heisman Trophy winner
  • Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year
  • Iowa was ranked ninth in the final Associated Press (AP) poll.
  • Iowa did not attempt a field goal all season.
  • Erwin Prasse was a second team All-American.
  • Mike Enich actually played more minutes in 1939 than Nile Kinnick. In the final seven games, Kinnick played six complete games before leaving in the third quarter against Northwestern. Enich left the Indiana game in the fourth quarter before finishing the season by playing six complete games.
  • Nile Kinnick, Erwin Prasse, and Mike Enich were named all-Big Ten.
  • References

    1939 Iowa Hawkeyes football team Wikipedia