Michigan Wolverines football
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Michigan_Wolverines_football an entity of type: Thing
The Michigan Wolverines football team represents the University of Michigan in college football at the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision level. Michigan has the most all-time wins in college football history. The team is known for its distinctive winged helmet, its fight song, its record-breaking attendance figures at Michigan Stadium, and its many rivalries, particularly its annual, regular season-ending game against Ohio State, known simply as “The Game,” once voted as ESPN's best sports rivalry.
rdf:langString
I Michigan Wolverines sono la squadra collegiale di football americano della Michigan University di Ann Arbor (Michigan) e competono nella Division I Football Bowl Subdivision della National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA). I Michigan Wolverines hanno avuto tra le loro fila ottanta giocatori nominati All-America e tre vincitori dell'Heisman Trophy. Gerald Ford, trentottesimo Presidente degli Stati Uniti d'America, fu il centro titolare della squadra durante la stagione 1934.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Michigan Wolverines football
rdf:langString
Michigan Wolverines football
xsd:integer
6142330
xsd:integer
1124876621
xsd:integer
107601
xsd:integer
1927
xsd:integer
5
rdf:langString
MGoBlue.com
xsd:integer
150
rdf:langString
Michigan Wolverines football
xsd:integer
180
xsd:integer
0
rdf:langString
The Michigan Wolverines football team represents the University of Michigan in college football at the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision level. Michigan has the most all-time wins in college football history. The team is known for its distinctive winged helmet, its fight song, its record-breaking attendance figures at Michigan Stadium, and its many rivalries, particularly its annual, regular season-ending game against Ohio State, known simply as “The Game,” once voted as ESPN's best sports rivalry. Michigan began competing in intercollegiate football in 1879. The Wolverines joined the Big Ten Conference at its inception in 1896, and other than a hiatus from 1907 to 1916, have been members since. Michigan has won or shared 44 league titles, and since the inception of the AP Poll in 1936, has finished in the top 10 a total of 39 times. The Wolverines claim 11 national championships, most recently that of the 1997 squad voted atop the final AP Poll. From 1900 to 1989, Michigan was led by a series of nine head coaches, each of whom has been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame either as a player or as a coach. Fielding H. Yost became Michigan's head coach in 1901 and guided his "Point-a-Minute" squads to a streak of 56 games without a defeat, spanning from his arrival until the season finale in 1905, including a victory in the 1902 Rose Bowl, the first college football bowl game ever played. Fritz Crisler brought his winged helmet from Princeton University in 1938 and led the 1947 Wolverines to a national title and Michigan's second Rose Bowl win. Bo Schembechler coached the team for 21 seasons (1969–1989) in which he won 13 Big Ten titles and 194 games, a program record. The first decade of his tenure was underscored by a fierce competition with his former mentor, Woody Hayes, whose Ohio State Buckeyes squared off against Schembechler's Wolverines in a stretch of the Michigan–Ohio State rivalry dubbed the "Ten-Year War". Following Schembechler's retirement, the program was coached by two of his former assistants, Gary Moeller and then Lloyd Carr, who maintained the program's overall success over the next 18 years. However, the program's fortunes declined under the next two coaches, Rich Rodriguez and Brady Hoke, who were both fired after relatively short tenures. Following Hoke's dismissal, Michigan hired Jim Harbaugh on December 30, 2014. Harbaugh is a former quarterback of the team, having played for Michigan between 1982 and 1986 under Schembechler. The Michigan Wolverines have featured 85 players that have garnered consensus selection to the College Football All-America Team. Three Wolverines have won the Heisman Trophy: Tom Harmon in 1940, Desmond Howard in 1991, and Charles Woodson in 1997. Gerald Ford, who later became the 38th President of the United States, started at center and was voted most valuable player by his teammates on the 1934 team.
rdf:langString
I Michigan Wolverines sono la squadra collegiale di football americano della Michigan University di Ann Arbor (Michigan) e competono nella Division I Football Bowl Subdivision della National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA). Al 2021 i Michigan Wolverines detengono il record per il maggior numero di partite vinte nella storia del football collegiale statunitense (963); in totale la squadra ha conquistato quarantadue titoli di divisione e undici titoli nazionali, l'ultimo dei quali giunto nella stagione 1997. La rivalità più accesa dei Wolverines è quella con gli Ohio State Buckeyes di Columbus (Ohio), considerata da ESPN come la rivalità sportiva più sentita di tutti i tempi. I Michigan Wolverines hanno avuto tra le loro fila ottanta giocatori nominati All-America e tre vincitori dell'Heisman Trophy. Gerald Ford, trentottesimo Presidente degli Stati Uniti d'America, fu il centro titolare della squadra durante la stagione 1934.
xsd:integer
85
xsd:integer
352
xsd:integer
36
xsd:integer
988
xsd:integer
28
xsd:integer
21
rdf:langString
East
xsd:integer
43
xsd:integer
2022
xsd:integer
3
rdf:langString
"The Victors"
xsd:integer
1879
xsd:integer
24
xsd:integer
73
xsd:integer
8
xsd:integer
3
xsd:integer
11
rdf:langString
I FBS
rdf:langString
Outfitter
xsd:integer
1
rdf:langString
Minnesota
rdf:langString
Michigan State
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
160633