Harman Patil (Editor)

Cumberland Phoenix football

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Athletic director
  
Ron Pavan

League
  
NAIA

Claimed national titles
  
0

Postseason bowl record
  
0

Location
  
Lebanon, Tennessee

First season
  
1894

Consensus all americans
  
0

Conference titles
  
1

Head coach
  
Donnie Suber 2nd year, 13–9 (.591)

Stadium
  
Lindsey Donnell Stadium

Past conferences
  
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (1895-1903) Smoky Mountain Athletic Conference (1932-1941)

The Cumberland Phoenix football team represents Cumberland University in National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the Mid-South Conference. The Phoenix formerly competed in the TranSouth Athletic Conference and Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association.

Contents

History

Cumberland football began on October 26, 1894 with a 6-6 tie with Peabody and finished that first year with a 2-1-1 season record. The early days of Cumberland football were very promising. The pinnacle of the early days of CU football was the 1903 season that began with a (6-0) win over Vanderbilt then a (0-6) loss to Sewanee and continued with a five-day road trip with victories over Alabama (44-0) November 14, 1903, LSU (41-0) November 16, 1903, and Tulane (28-0) November 18, 1903. Cumberland would play a postseason game against Coach John Heisman's Clemson team on Thanksgiving Day that ended in an 11-11 tie and a record of 4-1-1 which gave Coach A. L. Phillips and Cumberland University the Championship of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association. The 1916 game against Georgia Tech is famous as the most lopsided-scoring game in the history of college football; Georgia Tech defeated Cumberland by a score of 222–0.

For the 2008 season, CU's football earned a share of the Mid-South Conference West Division. In 2016, the team changed its name from Bulldogs to the Phoenix.

Notable individual achievements

Cumberland Athletics Hall of Fame

  • Joe Black Hayes
  • Garland Morrow
  • Thug Murray
  • Red Smith
  • All-Southerns

  • 1903: Marvin O. Bridges, guard
  • 1903: Red Smith, center
  • 1904: Willard Steele, halfback
  • 1905: Red Smith, center
  • References

    Cumberland Phoenix football Wikipedia