1951 Tampa Spartans football team

http://dbpedia.org/resource/1951_Tampa_Spartans_football_team an entity of type: Thing

The 1951 Tampa Spartans football team represented the University of Tampa in the 1951 college football season. It was the Spartans' 15th season. The team was led by head coach Frank Sinkwich, in his second year, and played their home games at Phillips Field in Tampa, Florida. They finished with a record of seven wins, three losses and one tie (7–3–1). rdf:langString
rdf:langString 1951 Tampa Spartans football team
xsd:integer 38697964
xsd:integer 1063402491
rdf:langString Brandeis Classic champion
rdf:langString Independent
rdf:langString football
rdf:langString Brandeis Judges
rdf:langString Jacksonville State Gamecocks
rdf:langString Lenoir–Rhyne Bears
rdf:langString Tampa Spartans
rdf:langString Wofford Terriers
rdf:langString Livingston State Tigers
rdf:langString Wofford
rdf:langString Jacksonville State
rdf:langString Brandeis
rdf:langString Lenoir–Rhyne
rdf:langString Livingston State
xsd:integer 1951
rdf:langString Brandeis Classic
rdf:langString W 7–0 vs.
xsd:integer 2
xsd:integer 7
rdf:langString The 1951 Tampa Spartans football team represented the University of Tampa in the 1951 college football season. It was the Spartans' 15th season. The team was led by head coach Frank Sinkwich, in his second year, and played their home games at Phillips Field in Tampa, Florida. They finished with a record of seven wins, three losses and one tie (7–3–1). A week after they opened the season with a 72–0 victory over Patrick Air Force Base at home, the Spartans lost their first road game of the season at Bradley 32–6. The next Friday, Tampa lost their second consecutive game on the road. This time, Wofford overcame a 14–7 halftime deficit with a pair of third-quarter touchdowns in their 21–14 victory in Spartanburg. The Spartans then returned home and won games over Jacksonville State and Lenoir–Rhyne before they played Stetson to a 14–14 tie at DeLand after Tampa blocked a last-second field goal attempt by the Hatters. After a road loss at Appalachian State and a pair of road victories at Livingston State and South Georgia College, the Spartans returned home and played Florida State in the final home game of the season. Against the Seminoles, Tampa won in a 14–6 upset at Phillips Field before 12,500 fans. In mid-November, Tampa accepted an invitation to compete in their first postseason game against Brandeis in the first Brandeis Classic at Miami Beach. Against the Judges, the Spartans won 7–0 after they scored their only points on an 18-yard John Lahosky touchdown pass to H. L. Hiers on their opening drive. In February 1952, Sinkwich resigned as head coach of the Spartans after only two seasons and entered private business.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 9852

data from the linked data cloud