User:Cbl62/2013-15
Appearance
User:Cbl62/2010-12 <--- ---> User:Cbl62/2016-18
Most viewed
[edit]Created
[edit]This list displays articles created in 2015 which have received the most page views.
Rank | Title | Creation date |
Size | Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nick Mullens | 2015-11-19 | 41,296 | 2,361,016 | Southern Miss QB 2013-2016 |
2 | C. J. Beathard | 2015-12-06 | 42,883 | 1,809,321 | Iowa quarterback 2012-2016 |
3 | Jordan Howard | 2015-11-15 | 63,121 | 1,165,889 | Indiana running back 2015 |
4 | Ryan Switzer | 2015-11-10 | 34,222 | 1,129,576 | North Carolina wide receiver 2013-2016 |
5 | Jake Butt | 2015-09-11 | 26,525 | 834,557 | UM tight end 2013-2016 |
6 | Shamir | 2014-07-21 | 22,899 | 541,927 | Singer songwriter from Las Vegas |
7 | Justin Jackson | 26,995 | 420,137 | Northwestern RB 2014-2017, NFL 2018-2022 | |
8 | Jourdan Lewis | 2015-11-11 | 23,784 | 371,559 | UM cornerback 2013-2016 |
9 | DeAndré Washington | 2015-11-18 | 25,284 | 270,238 | Texas Tech running back 2011-2015 |
10 | List of NCAA major college football yearly rushing leaders | 2015-10-21 | 51,295 | 228,331 | Yearly rushing leaders |
11 | Brian Hill | 2015-11-18 | 21,445 | 213,064 | Wyoming RB 2014-2016, FL/CFL 2017-2022 |
12 | De'Veon Smith | 2014-08-30 | 17,352 | 195,012 | UM running back 2013-2016 |
13 | Mason Cole | 2014-09-01 | 15,087 | 199,327 | UM center 2014-2017 |
14 | Jehu Chesson* | 2015-11-14 | 17,390 | 159,628 | WR (2013-2015) |
15 | Chicago–Michigan football rivalry | 2014-08-25 | 94,307 | 26,502 | Football rivalry 1892-1939 |
17 | Jon Horford* | 2013-04-06 | 25,572 | 244,968 | UM basketball player 2010-14 |
18 | Mary Ann (Ray Charles song)* | 2013-10-20 | 2,664 | 180,073 | Ray Charles song 1956 |
19 | Willie Louis* | 2013-07-27 | 10,924 | 171,673 | Witness to murder of Emmett Till |
20 | Clarence Chesterfield Howerton]* | 8/16 | 23,731 | 145,313 | 2'4" circus performer known as "Major Mite" |
21 | Sierra Romero* | 2013-07-08 | 28,140 | 139,218 | UM softball player 2013-2016 |
Expanded
[edit]The following shows articles substantially expanded in 2015 with the most page views.
Rank | Title | Creation date |
Article Size |
Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Death by coconut | 2013 exp | 37,660 | 5,038,112 | Deaths by falling coconuts |
2 | Tom Harmon | 2015 exp | 60,833 | 2,311,245 | UM back 1938-1940, 1940 Heisman Trophy |
3 | Michigan–Michigan State football rivalry | 71,244 | 1,817,340 | Rivalry | |
4 | Amani Toomer | 2015 exp | 33,569 | 461,073 | Michigan wide receiver 1992-1995 |
5 | Michigan Wolverines football statistical leaders | 91,204 | 323,054 | ||
6 | Anthony Thomas | 2015 exp | 15,364 | 256,440 | Michigan running back 1997-2000 |
7 | Ron Johnson | 2015 exp | 25,717 | 156,832 | UM halfback 1965-1968, set UM career rushing record |
8 | Jumbo Elliott | 2015 exp | 13,716 | 155,570 | Michigan offensive tackle 1984-1987, All-American 1985, 1986 |
9 | Rick Leach | 2015 exp | 19,471 | 154,482 | Michigan quarterback 1975-1978 |
10 | Leroy Hoard | 2015 exp | 15,422 | 131,876 | Michigan running back 1987-1989 |
11 | Jim Mandich | 2015 exp | 17,872 | 128,148 | Tight end (1967-1969) |
12 | Sam Thompson | 2014 exp | 36,529 | 119,984 | Right fielder (1885-1898), .331 career batting average, 166 RBIs in 1887 (127 games), Baseball HOF |
13 | Tip O'Neill | 2014 exp | 28,244 | 107,893 | Left fielder (1883-1892), 1887 triple crown (.435 batting average), Baseball HOF |
14 | Martin Manulis | 2014 exp | 25,860 | 97,736 | Producer Playhouse 90 (1956-1958) |
15 | Ned Hanlon | 2014 exp | 57,326 | 75,981 | Outfielder (1880-1892), Baseball HOF |
16 | Len Ford | 2014 exp | 54,907 | 61,578 | Defensive end at UM and in pros (1948-1958), Pro Football HOF |
17 | Nig Clarke | 2014 exp | 20,899 | 60,098 | Catcher (1905-1920) |
18 | Will White | 2014 exp | 34,526 | 55,213 | Pitcher (1877-1886), first MLB player to wear glasses |
19 | Charlie Bennett | 2014 exp | 48,297 | 37,641 | Catcher (1878-1893), career ended in 1894 when train crushed his legs |
20 | Dave Orr | 2014 exp | 25,934 | 44,729 | First baseman (1883-1890), .342 career batting average, stroke ended career 1890 |
21 | Deacon McGuire | 2014 exp | 63,995 | 36,815 | Catcher (1884-1912), set MLB record for games caught |
American football
[edit]Michigan
[edit]Created
[edit]Rank | Title | Date | Size | Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jake Butt* | 2015-09-10 | 26,525 | 834,557 | Tight end (2013-2016), AA (2016) |
2 | Jourdan Lewis* | 2015-11-11 | 23,784 | 371,559 | CB at Michigan, AA (2015-2016) |
3 | De'Veon Smith* | 2014-08-30 | 17,532 | 195,087 | UM running back 2013-2016 |
4 | Mason Cole* | 2014-08-31 | 15,087 | 199,523 | UM center 2014-2017 |
5 | Jehu Chesson* | 2015-11-14 | 17,390 | 159,628 | WR (2013-2015) |
6 | Chicago–Michigan football rivalry* | 2014-08-24 | 94,307 | 26,533 | Rivalry, 1892-1939 |
7 | Illinois–Michigan football series* | 2015-10-12 | 85,557 | 73,506 | |
8 | Derrick Green (American football)* | 2013-08-17 | 16,624 | 70,164 | UM running back 2013-15, rated as No. running back recruit in country |
9 | History of Michigan Wolverines football in the early years | 2013-03-23 | 146,100 | 36,808 | History of UM football pre-1901 |
10 | Joe Bolden* | 2015-06-25 | 8,007 | 29,762 | UM LB (2012-15) |
11 | History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Yost era* | 2013-03-07 | 116,905 | 22,576 | UM football under Fielding H. Yost |
12 | Demetrius Brown* | 2015-11-23 | 9,427 | 17,814 | UM QB (1985-89) |
13 | Mike Gillette* | 2015-11-23 | 8,656 | 17,206 | UM placekicker, punter (1985-88) |
14 | Rick Bay* | 2013-08-22 | 23,631 | 15,400 | UM QB (1961-64) |
15 | History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Elliott years* | 2013-03-20 | 55,330 | 8,493 | UM football under Bump Eliott |
16 | B. J. Dickey* | 2015-11-22 | 4,584 | 8,365 | UM QB (1977-81) |
17 | John Greene* | 15,945 | 8,163 | UM QB/T/E (1941-43) | |
18 | Dave Fisher* | 2015-11-11 | 5,548 | 8,130 | UM fullback (1964-66) |
19 | History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Kipke years* | 2013-03-12 | 51,856 | 6,467 | UM football under coach Kipke |
20 | Ben Needham* | 2015-04-15 | 6,921 | 6,352 | UM LB (1978-78, 1981) |
21 | Bob Bergeron* | 2015-03-19 | 4,276 | 5,336 | UM PK (1980-84) |
22 | History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Crisler years* | 2013-03-16 | 30,725 | 5,306 | UM football under Fritz Crisler |
23 | History of Michigan Wolverines football in the Oosterbaan years* | 2013-03-18 | 22,416 | 4,795 | UM football under Bennie Oosterbaan |
24 | Phil Seymour* | 2015-03-27 | 5,726 | 2,703 | UM DE (1968-70) |
25 | James Raynsford* | 2015-11-04 | 7,478 | 1,117 | UM center (1912–1915) |
26 | Norm Purucker* | 2015-11-04 | 4,733 | 1,098 | UM halfback (1936–1938) |
Expanded
[edit]Rank | Title | Page views |
Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tom Harmon | 2,100,999 | HB (1938–1940), Heisman (1940) | ||
2 | Michigan–Michigan State football rivalry | 1,740,807 | Rivalry | ||
3 | Amani Toomer | 461,073 | WR at UM (1992-1995), NY Giants (1996-2008) | ||
4 | Anthony Thomas | 208,976 | RB (1997-2000), MVP (2000) | ||
5 | Ron Johnson | 146,883 | RB (1966-1968) | ||
6 | Jumbo Elliott | 138,257 | OT, AA (1986-87), CFHOF | ||
7 | Rick Leach | 134,473 | QB (1975-1978) | ||
8 | Jim Mandich | 113,974 | Tight end (1967-1969) | ||
9 | Leroy Hoard | 112,758 | RB/FB (1987-1989) | ||
10 | Rob Lytle | 103,285 | Tailback (1973-1976) | ||
11 | Ali Haji-Sheikh | 101,175 | PK (1979-82) | ||
12 | Tom Mack | 93,727 | OG (1963-1965) | ||
13 | Ron Kramer | 83,832 | End (1954-1956), CFHOF | ||
14 | Jim Herrmann | 82,959 | Defensive coordinator (1997-2005) | ||
15 | Reggie McKenzie | 79,454 | Guard (1968-1971) | ||
16 | Dave Brown | 73,029 | Cornerback (1972-1974), CFHOF | ||
17 | Derrick Walker | 63,590 | Tight end (1986-1989) | ||
18 | Jarrod Bunch | 70,981 | |||
19 | Ian Gold | 61,701 | |||
20 | Mike Kenn | 59,325 | |||
21 | Mike Harden | 58,030 | |||
22 | Tom Keating | 51,238 | |||
23 | Scott Dreisbach | 50,474 | |||
24 | Jim Smith | 49,000 | Flanker and wingback (1974-1976) | ||
25 | 1981 Michigan Wolverines football team | 45,803 | |||
26 | Mike Bass | 44,120 | |||
27 | Steve Smith (quarterback) | 42,418 | |||
28 | John Anderson | 41,876 | |||
29 | 1974 Michigan Wolverines football team | 41,745 | |||
30 | Chris Calloway | 41,468 | |||
31 | Matt Elliott | 41,013 | |||
32 | Stefan Humphries | 38,255 | |||
33 | Steve Everitt | 21,133 | UM center (1989-1992) | ||
34 | Kurt Becker | 12,017 | UM guard, AA (1981) | ||
35 | Tony McGee | 10,783 | |||
36 | 1968 Michigan Wolverines football team | 10,741 | |||
37 | Mark Campbell | 10,390 | |||
38 | Greg McMurtry | 9,800 | |||
39 | Erick Anderson | 9,690 | |||
40 | Bob Perryman | 9,342 | |||
41 | Chris Hutchinson | 9,137 | Michigan defensive tackle and linebacker, All-American 1992 | ||
42 | Mark Messner | 8,890 | |||
43 | Tripp Welborne | 8,683 | |||
44 | Russell Davis | 8,222 | |||
45 | Paul Seymour | 8,104 | |||
46 | Terry Barr | 7,565 | |||
47 | Kevin Brooks | 7,514 | |||
48 | Sam Sword | 7,509 | |||
49 | Bobby Abrams | 7,147 | |||
50 | Chris Floyd | 7,112 | |||
51 | Mel Owens | 7,027 | |||
52 | 1940 Michigan Wolverines football team | 6,299 | |||
53 | Frank Nunley | 5,773 | |||
54 | Jerald Ingram | 5,664 | |||
55 | 1945 Michigan Wolverines football team | 5,350 | |||
56 | 1944 Michigan Wolverines football team | 5,341 | |||
57 | Jon Giesler | 5,291 | |||
58 | Joe Cocozzo | 5,053 | |||
59 | 1938 Michigan Wolverines football team | 4,802 | |||
60 | 1941 Michigan Wolverines football team | 4,789 | |||
61 | 1946 Michigan Wolverines football team | 4,744 | |||
62 | Randy Logan | 4,656 | |||
63 | Dave Raimey | 4,644 | |||
64 | Mike Boren | 4,582 | |||
65 | 1931 Michigan Wolverines football team | 4,561 | |||
66 | Mike Hammerstein | 4,361 | |||
67 | 1939 Michigan Wolverines football team | 4,343 | |||
68 | Don Bracken | 4,326 | |||
69 | Mike Teeter | 4,182 | |||
70 | Bennie McRae | 4,133 | |||
71 | Tommy Hendricks | 4,095 | |||
72 | Matt Dyson | 4,067 | |||
79 | John Morrow | 4,055 | |||
80 | 1927 Michigan Wolverines football team | 4,014 | |||
81 | John Vitale | 4,000 | |||
82 | Brad Cochran | 3,775 | |||
83 | Evan Cooper | 3,678 | |||
84 | Ron Simpkins | 3,642 | |||
85 | Paul Seal | 3,591 | |||
86 | John Henderson (wide receiver) | 3,561 | |||
87 | Bill Laskey | 3,543 | |||
88 | Steve Smith (offensive lineman) | 3,487 | |||
89 | John Rowser | 3,377 | |||
90 | 1921 Michigan Wolverines football team | 3,307 | |||
92 | Bob Ptacek | 3,260 | |||
93 | 1916 Michigan Wolverines football team | 3,235 | |||
94 | Jim Coode | 3,230 | |||
95 | David Arnold | 3,170 | |||
96 | Brian Carpenter | 3,128 | |||
97 | 1917 Michigan Wolverines football team | 2,992 | |||
98 | Bo Rather | 2,932 | |||
99 | Tom Stincic | 2,850 | |||
100 | Eric Wilson | 2,835 | |||
101 | 1914 Michigan Wolverines football team | 2,821 | |||
102 | Craig Dunaway | 2,788 | |||
104 | Lawrence Ricks | 2,642 | |||
105 | Larry Cipa | 2,565 | |||
106 | Ralph Clayton | 2,489 | |||
110 | Tom Dixon | 1,845 | |||
111 | Paul Staroba | 1,786 | |||
112 | David Key | 1,765 | |||
113 | Tod Rockwell | 1,695 | |||
114 | Rick Rogers | 2016 exp | 3,747 | 7,522 | UM RB (1981-84) |
115 | Mike Taylor | 1,588 | |||
116 | John Arbeznik | 1,494 | |||
119 | Reuben Kelto | 1,432 | |||
120 | Herbert Huebel | 1,282 | |||
122 | Ray Baer | 983 | |||
123 | Carlton Rose | 960 | |||
124 | Tom Huiskens | 718 | |||
3 | Len Ford | 54,688 | DE Michigan and Browns, PFHOF | ||
5 | Roy W. Johnson (coach) | 19,946 | 9,915 | UM center, guard (1916, 1919) | |
6 | Jerry Quaerna | 3,137 | UM and Detroit Lions offensive line (1980s) |
- 1924 Michigan Wolverines football team
- Harvey Emery*
- Frank L. Hayes
- John Ghindia
- Gib Holgate
- Ondre Pipkins
Yearly leaders
[edit]Rank | Title | Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | NCAA yearly rushing leaders* | 209,125 | |
2 | NCAA yearly passing leaders* | 187,182 | |
3 | NCAA yearly receiving leaders* | 85,492 | |
4 | NCAA yearly total offense leaders* | 49,929 | |
5 | NCAA yearly scoring leaders* | 42,983 | |
6 | NCAA yearly punt/kickoff return leaders* | 34,989 |
Ivy League
[edit]Rank | Title | Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Alex Moffat | 10,463 | Football pioneer, CFHOF |
2 | 1889 Yale Bulldogs football team* | 6,826 | Compiled 15–1 record, Walter Camp as coach, Amos Alonzo Stagg at end, Pudge Heffelfinger at guard |
3 | 1890 Yale Bulldogs football team* | 6,808 | 13–1 record, Walter Camp as coach, Thomas McClung at halfback, Pudge Heffelfinger at guard |
4 | 1873–74 Harvard Crimson football team* | 6,542 | Harvard team played two games with McGill from Montreal |
5 | John Charlesworth* | 6,224 (5,509 + 715) | Yale center |
6 | 1878 Yale Bulldogs football team* | 5,006 | |
7 | 1873 Yale Bulldogs football team* | 4,936 | |
8 | 1885 Yale Bulldogs football team* | 4,824 | |
9 | 1876 Princeton Tigers football team* | 4,752 | 3–2 record, A. J. McCosh captain, lost to Harvard and Yale |
10 | 1876 Princeton Tigers football team* | 4,747 | |
11 | Dave Campbell | 4,507 | Harvard end |
12 | Clinton Black* | 4,399 | Yale guard |
13 | 1914 Harvard Crimson football team* | 4,369 | 7–0–2 record, Percy Haughton coach, four All-Americans (Huntington Hardwick, Walter Trumbull, Stan Pennock, Eddie Mahan) |
14 | Tim Callahan* | 4,352 | Yale guard |
15 | 1882 Princeton Tigers football team* | 4,119 | 7–2 record, lost to Harvard and Yale |
16 | 1890 Princeton Tigers football team* | 4,057 | 11–1–1, lost to national champion Yale, included All-Americans Sheppard Homans, Jr., Ralph Warren, Jesse Riggs |
17 | 1897 Harvard Crimson football team* | 3,925 | 10–1–1 record, lost by 15-6 score to national champion Penn, All-Americans Allan Doucette and Benamin Dibblee |
18 | Emerson Carey* | 3,921 | Cornell guard |
19 | 1876–77 Harvard Crimson football team | 3,881 | 3–1 record, lost by 1-0 score to national champion Yale |
20 | 1888 Princeton Tigers football team* | 3,754 | 11–1 record, lost to national champion Yale, players included Knowlton "Snake" Ames, Jesse Riggs, and Hector Cowan |
21 | 1887 Princeton Tigers football team* | 3,743 | 7–2 record, lost to Harvard and Yale |
22 | 1883 Princeton Tigers football team* | 3,720 | 7–1 record, Alex Moffat captain, lost by 6-0 score to national champion Yale |
23 | 1934 Princeton Tigers football team* | 3,666 | 7–1 under Fritz Crisler, outscored their opponents, 280 to 38 |
24 | Edwin Harlan* | 3,527 | Princeton HB |
25 | 1902 Harvard Crimson football team* | 3,510 | 11–1 record, All-Americans [[Edward Bowditch, Thomas Graydon |
26 | 1887 Harvard Crimson football team | 3,483 | 10–1 record, lost by 17-8 score to national champion Yale |
27 | Hamilton Corbett* | 3,480 | Harvard FB |
28 | 1888 Harvard Crimson football team* | 3,458 | 12–1 record |
29 | 1915 Harvard Crimson football team* | 3,441 | 8–1 record, Percy Haughton coach, Eddie Mahan (fullback, captain, All-American) |
30 | 1900 Harvard Crimson football team* | 3,393 | 10–1 record, All-Americans Charles Dudley Daly, John Hallowell, Dave Campbell |
31 | 1881 Harvard Crimson football team | 3,299 | 6–1–1 record, lost by 1-0 score to national champion Yale |
32 | Tom Woods* | 3,224 | Harvard guard |
33 | 1877 Harvard Crimson football team* | 3,216 | 3–1 record, lost 1-0 to national champion Princeton |
34 | 1882 Harvard Crimson football team | 3,137 | 8–1 record, lost by 1-0 score to national champion Yale |
35 | James P. Lee* | 2,947 | Harvard HB |
36 | 1892 Harvard Crimson football team* | 2,934 | 10–1 record, lost by 6-0 score to national champion Yale, All-Americans Frank Hallowell, Marshall Newell, Bert Waters, William H. Lewis, Charley Brewer |
37 | 1891 Princeton Tigers football team* | 2,924 | 12–1, lost to national champion Yale, included All-Americans Philip King, Sheppard Homans, Jr., Jesse Riggs |
38 | Roy Randall* | 2,900 | Brown QB |
39 | 1891 Harvard Crimson football team* | 2,881 | 13–1 record, Bernard Trafford captain, All-Americans Marshall Newell, Everett J. Lake |
40 | 1893 Harvard Crimson football team* | 2,875 | 12–1 record, All-Americans Marshall Newell, William H. Lewis (first African-American All-American), Charley Brewer |
41 | Ed McMillan* | 2,673 | Princeton center |
42 | Eugene Neely* | 2,528 | Dartmouth guard |
43 | John A. Hall* | 2,506 | Yale end |
44 | 1906 Harvard Crimson football team* | 2,488 | 10–1 record, All-Americans Francis Burr and Charles Osborne |
45 | Phillip Stillman* | 2,431 | Yale center |
46 | Hal Broda* | 2,338 | Brown end |
47 | Richard Luman* | 2,286 | Yale end |
48 | Bill Webster* | 2,143 | Yale guard |
49 | William Goebel* | 2,110 | Yale guard |
50 | 1932 Princeton Tigers football team* | 2,061 | First season under Fritz Crisler (2–2–3) |
51 | George Thayer* | 1,912 | Penn end |
52 | Fiske Brown* | 1,892 | Harvard guard |
53 | Ed Hake* | 1,749 | Penn tackle |
54 | Charles Nourse* | 1,638 | Harvard center |
55 | Dave Mishel* | 1,603 | Brown HB |
56 | George Lee* | 1,594 | Harvard guard |
57 | Bernard O'Rourke* | 1,568 | Cornell guard |
58 | Joseph Gilman* | 1,453 | Harvard tackle |
59 | Frederick Tibbott* | 1,451 | Princeton HB |
60 | Lew Palmer* | 1,449 | Princeton end |
61 | Armant Legendre* | 1,420 | Princeton end |
62 | John Wendell* | 1,354 | Harvard HB |
63 | Joseph Gilman* | 1,317 | Dartmouth guard |
64 | Patrick Grant* | 1,288 | Harvard center |
65 | Frank T. Hogg* | 1,200 | Princeton guard |
- Harvard: 1873, 1876-1884, 1886-1889, 1891-1897, 1900, 1902-1907, 1911, 1914-1918, 1921-1922
- Princeton: 1876, 1882-1883, 1887-1888, 1890-1892, 1895, 1897, 1900-1902, 1904-1905, 1907-1910, 1912-1919, 1921, 1923-1932, 1934
- Yale: 1873, 1875, 1878, 1885, 1889, 1890, 1896, 1898-1899, 1903-1904, 1908, 1910-1917, 1919-1926, 1928
Players
[edit]Rank | Title | Page views |
Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nick Mullens* | 1,904,311 | Southern Miss QB 2013-2016 | ||
2 | C. J. Beathard* | 1,572,986 | Iowa QB 2012-2016 | ||
3 | Jordan Howard* | 1,123,079 | Indiana RB 2015 | ||
4 | Ryan Switzer* | 1,057,552 | NC QB 2013-2016 | ||
5 | Justin Jackson* | 398,833 | Northwestern RB 2014-2017, NFL 2018-2022 | ||
6 | DeAndré Washington* | 260,792 | Texas Tech running back 2011-2015 | ||
7 | Brian Hill | 201,775 | Wyoming RB 2014-2016, FL/CFL 2017-2022 | ||
8 | Tyler Ervin* | 156,251 | San Jose State RB 2011-2015, NFL 2016-2020 | ||
9 | Roger Lewis* | 132,335 | Bowling Green WR 2014-2019 | ||
10 | Dane Evans* | 125,918 | Tulsa QB 2013-2016 | ||
11 | Matt Johnson* | 97,301 | Bowling Green QB 2013-2015 | ||
12 | Jordan Westerkamp* | 97,477 | Nebraska WR 2012-2016 | ||
13 | Daniel Braverman* | 96,580 | Western Michigan WR 2012-2015 | ||
14 | Josh Wallwork* | 81,181 | NCAA passing and total offense leader (1996), Wyoming | ||
15 | Kermit Whitfield* | 80,522 | Florida State WR 2013-2016 | ||
16 | Mike Pruitt | 68,779 | Purdue FB 1973-1975 | ||
17 | William Likely* | 45,998 | Maryland CB 2013-2016 | ||
18 | Keyarris Garrett* | 36,475 | Tulsa WR, led NCAA Division I with 1,588 receiving yards 2015 | ||
19 | Jordan Canzeri* | 24,843 | Iowa RB 2011-2015, 984 yards in 2015 | ||
20 | Bob Novogratz* | 24,377 | All-American guard for Army in 1958 | ||
21 | Jug Girard | 16,723 | Detroit Lions end (1952-56) | ||
22 | Cody Ledbetter* | 15,795 | NCAA total offense leader (1995) | ||
23 | Eric Allen | 15,581 | Michigan State HB 1969-1971 | ||
24 | Griffin Oakes* | 13,220 | Indiana PK 2015-2017 | ||
25 | Billy Marek* | 13,092 | Wisconsin RB 1972-1975, All-Big Ten 1974, 1975 | ||
26 | Jim Bakhtiar* | 13,759 | Virginia FB/PK, 1955-1957; All-American 1957 | ||
27 | Aubrey Devine | 11,430 | Iowa QB, AA 1921 | ||
28 | Alex Ketzko* | 9,523 | Michigan State tackle 1938-39 | ||
29 | Herb Joesting | 9,424 | Minnesota HB, AA 1926-1927 | ||
30 | Jay Wilkinson | 9,151 | AA HB at Duke 1963 | ||
31 | Dick Tamburo | 8,884 | Michigan State center 1950-52, All-American in 1952 | ||
32 | Preacher Pilot* | 8,560 | NCAA rushing leader, 1961 & 1962 | ||
33 | Dave Schnell | 8,299 | Indiana QB 1987-89 | ||
34 | Bob Newman* | 7,891 | NCAA passing leader 1957, Washington State | ||
35 | Art Luppino8 | 7,733 | Arizona RB, NCAA rushing leader 1954 and 1955 | ||
36 | Stan Williams* | 7,043 | Baylor E/DB, AA 1951 | ||
37 | Chuck Kyle | 6,394 | Purdue LB 1966-68 | ||
38 | Gideon Smith | 6,348 | Michigan State T 1915, African-American | ||
39 | Casey Fitzgerald* | 6,000 | NCAA receiving leader (2008), North Texas | ||
40 | Nick Mumley | 5,967 | Purdue tackle 1956-1959 | ||
41 | Dave Diehl | 5,793 | Michigan State end, Detroit Lions (1939-45) | ||
42 | Hugh Pitts* | 5,666 | TCU C/LB, 2x AA (1954-55) | ||
43 | Mike Ford* | 5,616 | NCAA passing leader 1978, SMU | ||
44 | Bill Austin* | 5,595[1] | Rutgers FB, AA 1958 | ||
45 | Matt Snorton | 5,506 | MSU tight end, Denver Broncos (1964) | ||
46 | Bill Sewell* | 5,419 | Washington State QB (1940-1941) | ||
47 | Jesse Thomas | 5,295 | MSU defensive back, Baltimore Colts (1955-1957) | ||
48 | Ray Kubala | 5,250 | Texas A&M center, Denver Broncos (1964-67) | ||
49 | Don Schaefer* | 5,179 | Notre Dame FB, AA (1955) | ||
50 | Leroy Bolden | 5,176 | Michigan State RB 1952-1953 | ||
51 | Wallace Winter* | 5,165 | Yale tackle, AA 1891 | ||
52 | Tommy Ford | 4,997 | AA RB 1963, Texas | ||
53 | Tom Topping* | 4,981 | Duke tackle, AA (1957) | ||
54 | Nathan Parker* | 4,943 | Dartmouth tackle, AA (1925) | ||
55 | Fred Wendt* | 4,935 | NCAA rushing leader 1948, UTEP | ||
56 | Larry Vargo | 4,895 | Led NCAA in receiving touchdowns 1961, Detroit Titans | ||
57 | Sal Olivas* | 4,881 | NCAA passing leader (1967), NM State | ||
58 | Dave Casinelli* | 4,864 | NCAA rushing leader 1963, Memphis State | ||
59 | Bob Novogratz* | 4,563 | Army G/LB, AA (1958) | ||
60 | Ralph Wenzel* | 4,534 | |||
61 | Brian Baima* | 4,439 | |||
62 | Lawrence Fairfax Reifsnider* | 4,296 | Navy end, second-team AA (1908), vice admiral | ||
63 | Aaron Turner* | 4,276 | |||
64 | Elmer Ward* | 4,236 | Utah State center, Lions (1935) | ||
65 | Red Chesbro* | 4,202 | |||
66 | Henry Toczylowski* | 4,169 | Boston College QB, AA (1940) | ||
67 | Bob Stransky* | 4,063 | |||
68 | Tramaine Thompson* | 3,969 | |||
69 | John H. Brown Jr. | 3,852 | Navy guard, AA 1913 | ||
70 | Blake Miller | 3,840 | |||
71 | Ken Hebert* | 3,830 | |||
72 | Clyde Johnson* | 3,710 | Kentucky tackle, AA (1942) | ||
73 | Howard Parker Talman* | 3,705 | Rutgers HB/G/FB (1912-1915) | ||
74 | Jerry Hendren* | 3,654 | |||
75 | Hogan Wharton* | 3,653 | |||
76 | Jim Wood* | 3,654 | |||
77 | Garrett Arbelbide | 3,632 | |||
78 | Dave Petzke* | 3,580 | |||
79 | Hugh Blacklock | 3,529 | |||
80 | Walter Matuszczak* | 3,493 | |||
81 | Gene Selawski* | 3,378 | Purdue tackle, AA (1958) | ||
82 | Monk Gafford* | 3,349 | |||
83 | Elmer Stout* | 3,347 | Oklahoma A&M LB, AA (1950) | ||
84 | Sam Valentine* | 3,334 | Penn State guard, AA (1956) | ||
85 | Jim Steen* | 3,317 | Syracuse tackle, Lions (1935-36) | ||
86 | David Rankin* | 3,200 | Purdue end, AA (1940) | ||
87 | Dwight Nichols* | 3,179 | Iowa State HB, AA (1959) | ||
88 | Britain Patterson* | 3,135 | Wash & Jeff tackle, AA (1914) | ||
89 | Ray Wagner* | 3,094 | Columbia end, NFL (1929-1931) | ||
90 | Orville Mohler* | 3,078 | USC QB (1930-32) | ||
91 | Rudy Mobley* | 3,069 | |||
92 | Carl Charon* | 3,012 | |||
93 | Charles Rosenfelder* | 3,011 | Tennessee OG, AA (1968) | ||
94 | Rip Bachor* | 2,855 | |||
95 | Bud Toscani* | 2,848 | St. Mary's HB, NFL (1932) | ||
96 | Dave Nisbet* | 2,827 | Washington end, AA (1932) | ||
97 | John Polanski* | 2,796 | |||
98 | Tom Forrestal | 2,704 | Navy QB, AA 1957 | ||
99 | Paul Severin* | 2,622 | North Carolina end, 2x AA (1939-1940) | ||
100 | Wayne Williams* | 2,622 | |||
101 | George Melinkovich* | 2,513 | Notre Dame FB/HB (1932, 1934) | ||
102 | Bob Davenport* | 2,408 | UCLA FB, AA 1954 | ||
103 | Edward K. Hall | 2,388 | Dartmouth end (1889-1891), CFHOF | ||
104 | Harold Griffin* | 2,360 | |||
105 | Al Ghesquiere* | 2,359 | |||
106 | Abe Shires* | 2,316 | Tennessee tackle, All-SEC (1940), NFL (1945) | ||
107 | Maurice Doke* | 2,284 | Texas G/LB, AA 1959 | ||
108 | Cornelius Murphy* | 2,284 | Fordham tackle AA (1930) | ||
109 | Paul Larson* | 2,281 | Cal QB, AA (1954), NFL (1954-60) | ||
110 | Homer Hazel | 2,279 | Ole Miss E/HB, 2x AA (1923-24), CFHOF | ||
111 | Joe Stanowicz* | 2,274 | Army guard, AA (1944) | ||
112 | Dewey McConnell* | 2,252 | Wyoming end, AA (1951) | ||
113 | Jim Bakhtiar* | 2,243 | Virginia FB, AA 1957 | ||
114 | Daniel Pullen* | 2,235 | Army tackle, AA (1906, 1908) | ||
115 | Jay Miller* | 2,212 | |||
116 | Dave Schnell* | 2,209 | Indiana QB (1987), died of leukemia | ||
117 | Junie Hovious* | 2,149 | |||
118 | Izzy Weinstock* | 2,149 | |||
119 | Bud Kerr* | 2,067 | Notre Dame end, AA (1939) | ||
120 | Harry Stella* | 2,039 | Army tackle, AA (1939) | ||
121 | Johnny Knolla* | 2,017 | |||
122 | Jose Martinez-Zorilla* | 2,015 | Cornell end, AA (1932) | ||
123 | Bill Vohaska* | 2,011 | |||
124 | Walt Slater* | 2,003 | |||
125 | Les Walters* | 2,000 | |||
126 | Paul Rickards* | 1,985 | |||
127 | Reid Moseley* | 1,955 | |||
128 | James Russell McKay* | 1,910 | Brown HB, AA (1910) | ||
129 | John Matsko* | 1,900 | Michigan State center, All-Big Ten (1956) | ||
130 | Ted Rosequist* | 1,893 | Ohio State tackle, NFL (1934-37) | ||
131 | Ed Withers* | 1,783 | |||
132 | Wallace Philoon* | 1,749 | |||
133 | Ted Sloane* | 1,732 | Drake end, AA (1925) | ||
134 | Dick Sprague* | 1,727 | Washington DB, AA (1950) | ||
135 | Aurealius Thomas | 1,711 | Ohio State guard, AA (1957), CFHOF | ||
136 | Roy McKasson* | 1,699 | Washington center, All-PCC (1960) | ||
137 | Leon Hardeman* | 1,694 | Georgia Tech HB, AA (1952) | ||
138 | Scott Suber | 1,674 | Mississippi State guard, AA (1955) | ||
139 | Frank McDonald* | 1,659 | Miami (FL) end, AA (1954) | ||
140 | Henry Wisniewski* | 1,622 | |||
141 | Ken Ormiston* | 1,618 | Pitt guard (1932-1934) | ||
142 | Hank Stanton* | 1,617 | |||
143 | Frank D'Agostino* | 1,589 | Auburn T/G, AA 1955 | ||
144 | Carl Nery* | 1,589 | Duquesne guard, NFL (1940-1941) | ||
145 | Chris Schlachter* | 1,574 | |||
146 | Jacob Slagle* | 1,545 | Princeton HB/FB/QB, AA (1925) | ||
147 | Broughton Williams* | 1,545 | |||
148 | Bob Stephenson* | 1,534 | Indiana TE (1979-1981), All-Big Ten (1981) | ||
149 | Tommy Ford* | 1,530 | Texas tailback, AA 1963 | ||
150 | Redmond Finney* | 1,519 | Princeton center, AA 1950 | ||
151 | Marv McFadden* | 1,519 | |||
152 | Bob Suci* | 1,513 | Michigan State DB, NFL (1962-63) | ||
153 | Chick Agnew* | 1,511 | |||
154 | Vard Stockton* | 1,491 | Cal guard, AA (1937) | ||
155 | Al Goldstein* | 1,490 | North Carolina end, AA (1958) | ||
156 | Bart Viviano* | 1,480 | |||
157 | Mike Gulian* | 1,477 | Brown tackle, AA (1922), NFL (1923-27) | ||
158 | Overton Curtis* | 1,470 | |||
159 | Jack Shanafelt* | 1,467 | Penn tackle, AA (1953) | ||
160 | Helge Pukema* | 1,457 | |||
161 | Bill Steiger* | 1,455 | Washington State end AA (1956) | ||
162 | Charles Buell* | 1,450 | Harvard QB 1922 | ||
163 | Win Pederson* | 1,420 | |||
164 | Wilton Davis | 1,417 | |||
165 | Dave Hibbert* | 1,407 | |||
166 | Derace Moser* | 1,366 | Texas A&M HB, AA (1941) | ||
167 | Johnny Supulski* | 1,362 | |||
168 | Jim Reeder* | 1,356 | Illinois tackle, AA (1939) | ||
169 | Joe Boyd* | 1,346 | Texas A&M tackle AA 1939 | ||
170 | Frank Slingluff Jr.* | 1,325 | |||
171 | Napoleon Riley* | 1,303 | |||
172 | Beryl Clark* | 1,276 | Oklahoma HB second-team AA 1939 | ||
173 | Thomas Sterck* | 1,236 | Wash & Jeff center, AA (1918) | ||
174 | Joseph McAndrew* | 1,230 | Army end, AA (1902) | ||
175 | John Yezerski* | 1,227 | |||
176 | Frank Mincevich* | 1,215 | South Carolina guard, AA (1954) | ||
177 | Marion Flanagan* | 1,187 | |||
178 | Dana Carey* | 1,185 | California guard, AA 1925 | ||
179 | Jack Kurkowski* | 1,183 | |||
180 | Paul Copoulos* | 1,160 | |||
181 | Fred Mautino* | 1,141 | Syracuse end, AA (1959) | ||
182 | Tom Stankard | 1,086 | |||
183 | Boyd Cherry* | 1,084 | |||
184 | Buddy Elrod* | 1,084 | Mississippi State E, AA 1940 | ||
185 | Bill Johnson* | 1,046 | Tennessee guard, AA (1957) | ||
186 | Alexander Jerrems* | 1,026 | Yale FB/HB (1893-95), Minnesota HC (1896-97) | ||
187 | Kosse Johnson* | 1,005 | Rice FB, AA (1953) | ||
188 | Dean Dugger* | 986 | Ohio State end, AA 1954 | ||
189 | Stuart Vaughan* | 986 | |||
190 | Ed Brown* | 984 | |||
191 | Cary Cox* | 981 | Alabama center AA 1939 | ||
192 | Bob Foxx* | 945 | Tennessee HB,second-team AA 1940 | ||
193 | Buddy Cruze* | 941 | Tennessee end, AA 1956 | ||
194 | Edward Farnsworth* | 931 | Army HB/T/G 1899-1903 | ||
195 | Alexander Garfield Gillespie* | 912 | Army E, second-team AA (1904) | ||
196 | Don Heap* | 900 | Northwestern HB, AA (1936) | ||
197 | Lloyd Pixley* | 898 | |||
198 | Ron Hull* | 876 | UCLA center (1959-61), AA (1961) | ||
199 | Campbell Dickson* | 842 | Chicago end (1921-24), Michigan asst coach (1938-39) | ||
200 | Henry Bjorkman* | 838 | Dartmouth end, AA 1924 | ||
201 | Joe Blalock* | 834 | Clemson end, AA 1941 | ||
202 | Bob Momsen* | 830 | Ohio Sate G/LB, AA (1950), NFL (1951-52) | ||
203 | Mel Brewer* | 824 | Illinois G, second-team AA 1939 | ||
204 | Chal Daniel* | 813 | Texas guard, AA 1941 | ||
205 | Ralph Fife* | 811 | Pitt guard, AA 1941 | ||
206 | Irving Holdash* | 796 | North Carolina C/LB (1950) | ||
207 | Stephen Barchet* | 790 | Navy HB 1921-1922, admiral during WWII | ||
208 | Pat Cannamela* | 778 | USC OG/LB, AA 1951 | ||
209 | Jesse Thomas* | 771 | Michigan State DE, NFL (1955-57, 1960) | ||
210 | Jim Kisselburgh* | 769 | Oregon State HB/FB (1938-1940) | ||
211 | Alex Drobnitch* | 759 | Denver guard, AA 1936 | ||
212 | Don Ridler* | 755 | Tackle Michigan State, NFL (1931) | ||
213 | Hugh Rhea* | 726 | Nebraska G/T, AA (1930) | ||
214 | Pat Bisceglia* | 724 | Notre Dame G/LB, AA 1955 | ||
215 | Dave Hoppmann* | 723 | Iowa State HB, AA (1962) | ||
216 | Dom Principe* | 716 | Fordham FB/LB, NFL (1940-42, 1946) | ||
217 | Phil Moffatt* | 714 | Stanford HB, AA (1930) | ||
218 | Rex Boggan* | 711 | Ole Miss DT 1954 | ||
219 | Jimmie Cain* | 701 | Washington HB 1936 | ||
220 | Nick Liotta* | 695 | Villanova G/LB, AA (1951) | ||
221 | Jack Haman* | 682 | Northwestern center, AA (1939), NFL (1940-41) | ||
222 | Don Branby* | 667 | Colorado end 1952 | ||
223 | Bill Leeka* | 660 | UCLA tackle, AA (1958) | ||
224 | Merwin Mitterwallner* | 659 | |||
225 | George Kinard* | 650 | Ole Miss guard, NFL (1941-42, 1946) | ||
226 | Leon Gajecki* | 649 | Penn State center, AA 1940 | ||
227 | Ted Daffer* | 640 | Tennessee guard, AA 1950-1951 | ||
228 | Bob Jewett* | 638 | Michigan State end, NFL (1958) | ||
229 | Red Matal* | 634 | Columbia end, AA (1933) | ||
230 | Henry Cronkite* | 626 | Kansas State end, AA 1931 | ||
231 | Spencer Moseley* | 615 | Yale center, AA (1942) | ||
232 | Ed Lindenmeyer* | 606 | Missouri tackle, AA (1925) | ||
233 | Lawrence Ely* | 592 | Nebraska center, AA 1932 | ||
234 | Clyde Flowers* | 592 | TCU guard, AA 1944 | ||
235 | George A. Sawin* | 579 | |||
236 | Henry Mazur* | 578 | Army HB, second-team AA (1942) | ||
237 | George E. Julian* | 563 | Michigan Agricultural FB, AA 1913 | ||
238 | Harlan Gustafson* | 562 | Penn end AA (1939), NFL (1940) | ||
239 | Bob Friedlund* | 555 | End Michigan State, NFL (1946) | ||
240 | Ralph Chesnauskas* | 546 | Army guard AA 1954 | ||
241 | Charles Ceppi* | 542 | Princeton T, AA 1933 | ||
242 | Hal Easterwood* | 538 | Mississippi State C, AA 1954 | ||
243 | Bob Karch* | 532 | Ohio State tackle, AA (1916) | ||
244 | Jackie Fellows* | 524 | Fresno State HB, AA 1942 | ||
245 | Osborne Helveston* | 522 | LSU guard, AA (1935) | ||
246 | Bernie Barkouskie* | 518 | Pittsburgh guard, AA 1948 | ||
247 | Adam Casad* | 515 | Army HB/QB 1899-1901 | ||
248 | Pug Pearman* | 501 | Tennessee tackle, AA (1951) | ||
249 | Bill Ciaravino* | 466 | Lehigh G/LB, AA 1950 | ||
250 | Michael Kinek* | 463 | Michigan State end, NFL (1940) | ||
251 | Johnny Joss* | 454 | Yale tackle, AA (1925) | ||
252 | Tommy Bell* | 449 | Army HB, AA (1954) | ||
253 | Ed Schwager* | 395 | Whitewater State football coach (1942-55), AD (1942-1971) | ||
254 | Koester Christensen* | 387 | End Michigan State, NFL (1930) | ||
255 | Les Bruckner* | 325 | Fullback Michigan State, NFL (1945) | ||
256 | Art Beckley* | 318 | Back Michigan Agr. (1921-24), NFL (1926) | ||
257 | Paul Podmajersky* | 305 | Guard Michigan State, NFL (1944) | ||
258 | Fred Danziger* | 291 | Fullback Michigan State, NFL (1931) | ||
259 | Tom Connell* | 269 | Detroit HB, captain undefeated 1928 team | ||
260 | Stephen Sieradzki* | 246 | Michigan State FB, NFL (1948) | ||
261 | Stevens Gould* | 233 | Wisconsin end/HB, All-Big Ten (1921) | ||
1 | Mayes McLain | 2013-01-18 | 30,757 | 13,754 | All-American football player and later a professional wrestler |
2 | Frank Hudson (American football) | 2013-01-21 | 18,306 | 8,671 | Carlisle football player and All-American 1898 and 1899 |
3 | Mel Groomes | 2013-08-21 | 14,838 | 10,113 | First African-American player signed by the Detroit Lions |
4 | John Hallowell | 2013-01-23 | 6,597 | 6,645 | Harvard football player and consensus All-American 1900 |
5 | Sanford White | 6,400 | |||
6 | Elmer Schwartz | 2013-01-19 | 8,458 | 5,570 | Washington State football player, captain of 1930 Rose Bowl team |
7 | Robert McKay (American football) | 2013-02-02 | 5,414 | 4,345 | All-American tackle at Harvard 1908-1910 |
8 | Henry Hooper | 3,915 | |||
9 | William Fincke | 3,595 | |||
10 | Henry Hobbs | 2,930 | |||
11 | Robert Kernan | 2,920 | |||
12 | Edward Bowditch | 2,865 | |||
13 | Adrian Regnier| | 2,843 | |||
14 | Walter Smith | 2,757 | |||
15 | Stephen Philbin | 2,729 | |||
16 | James Walker | 2,374 | |||
17 | Crawford Blagden | 2,345 | |||
18 | Howard Henry | 2,339 | |||
19 | James Bloomer | 2,218 | |||
20 | Hamlin Andrus | 2,156 | |||
21 | Carroll Cooney | 2,088 | |||
22 | Edgar Glass | 1,954 | |||
23 | Daniel Knowlton | 1,860 | |||
24 | Henry Holt | 1,744 | |||
25 | Robert Hogsett | 1,675 | |||
26 | Ralph Tipton Davis | 1,635 | |||
27 | Ralph Kinney | 1,383 | |||
28 | Clark Tobin | 1,380 | |||
29 | Wayland Minot | 1,315 | |||
30 | Dana Kafer | 1,254 | |||
31 | Williamson Pell | 1,094 | |||
32 | Andrew Marshall |
Rank | Title | Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Bum Day | 19,124 | Georgia Tech center |
2 | Edgar Garbisch | 17,964 | Army center |
3 | Kelan Luker | 16,882 | AfD (SMU QB, bass guitarist) |
4 | Mike Anderson* | 16,378 | LSU linebacker, All-American 1970 |
5 | Dick Bumpas* | 16,166 | Arkansas defensive tackle 1967-1970 |
6 | Brian Robinson* | 15,459 (12,292 + 3,167) | Auburn safety, consensus AA (1994) |
7 | Vince Banonis | 10,918 | Detroit center |
8 | Peter Hauser* | 10,191 | Fullback at Haskell and Carlisle, All-American 1907 |
9 | Chris Smith* | 10,184 | BYU tight end, 2x AA (1989-1990) |
10 | Zygmont Czarobski | 9,601 | Notre Dame tackle, AA (1947) |
11 | Buck Flowers | 9,134 | Georgia Tech HB |
12 | Peter Demmerle* | 8,884 | Notre Dame wide receiver, All-American in 1974 |
13 | Peter Anderson* | 7,383 | Georgia center, All-American in 1985 |
14 | Eddie Tryon* | 7,097 | Colgate halfback, 1925 All-American, CFHOF |
15 | John Provost* | 6,629 | Holy Cross DB |
16 | Brian Ottney | 6,510 | AfD rescue (MSU center 2000-2002) |
17 | Jeff Beard* | 6,211 | Auburn athletic director 1951-1972 |
18 | Esco Sarkkinen* | 6,071 | Ohio State end, All-American in 1939 |
19 | Carlton McDonald* | 5,861 | All-American defensive back at Air Force 1992 |
20 | John Roush* | 5,739 | All-American offensive guard at Oklahoma 1974 |
21 | Ted Payseur* | 5,598 | Athletic director at Northwestern 1945-56 |
22 | Lee Hayley* | 5,532 | Athletic director at Auburn 1972-81 |
23 | Frank Larson* | 5,367 | All-American end at Minnesota 1934 |
24 | Marty Below | 5,273 | Wisconsin tackle |
25 | Tom Brzoza* | 4,992 | All-American center at Pitt 1977 |
26 | Neno DaPrato* | 4,545 | Michigan Agr. FB |
27 | Tony Blazine | 4,467 | NFL OT (1935-41) |
28 | Phil White* | 4,436 | Oklahoma HB |
29 | Joe Kristosik* | 3,913 | UNLV punter, AA (1998) |
30 | Chalmers Tschappat | 3,872 | AfD rescue (Dayton tackle 1921) |
31 | Dick Hightower* | 3,848 | SMU center |
32 | Brian Lee* | 3,822 | Wyoming DB, AA (1997) |
33 | Gene Goodreault | 3,708 | |
34 | Bill Adamaitis | 3,480 | AfD rescue (Catholic U 1933-1936) |
35 | Elmer Wilhoite* | 3,440 | USC guard |
36 | Andy Bershak* | 3,412 | North Carolina end |
37 | Charles Bolen* | 3,214 | Ohio St. end |
38 | David Rankin* | 3,200 | Purdue end |
39 | Herdis McCrary* | 3,155 | Georgia FB, Packers (1929-33) |
40 | Lester Lautenschlaeger | 3,117 | Tulane QB (1922-1925) |
41 | Bill Bevan* | 3,033 | Minnesota guard |
42 | Peggy Flournoy* | 3,023 | Tulane HB |
43 | Charlie Guy | 2,916 | NFL G/C (1920-1924) |
44 | Jack Robinson* | 2,759 | Notre Dame center |
45 | George Bogue* | 2,631 | Stanford HB |
46 | Lyman Perry* | 2,629 | Navy guard |
47 | Ted Beckett* | 2,567 | Cal guard |
48 | Paul Geisler* | 2,510 | Centenary end |
49 | Dallas Marvil* | 2,507 | Northwestern tackle |
50 | Ed Hess* | 2,486 | Ohio St. guard |
51 | Polly Wallace* | 2,396 | Iowa St. center |
52 | Warner Mizell* | 2,388 | Georgia Tech HB (1927-1928) |
53 | Chuck Hartwig* | 2,377 | Pitt guard |
54 | Arthur Tipton* | 2,175 | Army center |
55 | Don Dohoney* | 2,048 | Michigan St. end |
56 | Carl Bacchus* | 1,894 | Missouri end |
57 | Milton Summerfelt* | 1,814 | Army guard |
58 | Irvine Phillips* | 1,689 | Cal end |
59 | Wendell Taylor* | 1,687 | Navy end |
60 | Charles Romeyn* | 1,553 | Army FB |
61 | Orland Smith* | 1,460 | |
62 | Waddy Kuehl* | 1,430 | NFL back (1920-1924) |
63 | Harry Connaughton* | 1,403 | Georgetown center |
64 | Joe Pondelik* | 1,223 | Chicago guard |
65 | Redman Hume* | 1,123 | SMU HB |
William Erwin* | Kansas guard | ||
Ed Lange* | Navy QB | ||
Charles Carpenter* | Wisconsin center | ||
Leonard Hilty* | Pitt tackle | ||
Ray Keeler* | Wisconsin guard | ||
John Logan* | |||
Edward Burke* | Navy | ||
Jim Dixon* | Oregon St. tackle | ||
Bertrand Gulick* | Syracuse tackle | ||
Danny McMullen* | Nebraska guard | ||
Pete MacRae* | Syracuse end | ||
Jim Barnes* | Arkansas guard | ||
Robert Popelka* | SMU WR | ||
Don Popplewell* | Colorado center | ||
Ron Rusnak* | North Carolina OG | ||
Bill Wyman* | Texas center | ||
Keith English* | All-American punter at Colorado 1988 |
- Category:American football guards*
- Category:American football tackles*
- Category:American football ends*
Detroit NFL
[edit]Rank | Title | Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1920 Detroit Heralds season | 9,619 | First NFL season in Detroit |
2 | Russ Finsterwald* | 5,010 | Detroit Heralds 1920 |
3 | Hugh Lowery* | 3,701 | Detroit Heralds tackle (1920) |
4 | Steamer Horning | 3,320 | Detroit/Buffalo/Toledo (1920-1923), All-Pro (1922) |
5 | Pryor Williams* | 2,267 | Vanderbilt G/C, All-Souuthern (195-16), Detroit NFL (1921) |
6 | Joe Fitzgerald* | 2,176 | Detroit Heralds end (1920) |
7 | Charlie Carman | 2,008 | Detroit NFL G (1920-21) |
8 | Ray Whipple* | 1,908 | Notre Dame end, Detroit NFL (1920) |
9 | Eddie Moegle* | 1,612 | UD HB, Detroit NFL (1920-21) |
10 | Perce Wilson | 1,611 | Detroit Heralds QB (1913-1920) |
11 | Butch Brandau* | 1,310 | Detroit Tigers FB (1921) |
12 | Ty Krentler* | 891 | UD FB Detroit NFL (1920-21) |
Season articles
[edit]Rank | Title | Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1982 UCLA Bruins football team | 28,776 | Pac-10 and Rose Bowl champion, AP/UPI No. 5, 10-1-1 |
2 | 1985 UCLA Bruins football team | 25,150 | Pac-10 and Rose Bowl champion, AP/UPI No. 7, 9-2-1 |
3 | 1967 USC Trojans football team* | 22,876 | PCC and Rose Bowl champion, AP/UPI No. 1, 10-1 |
4 | 1984 UCLA Bruins football team* | 16,980 | AP No. 9, 9-3, defeated Miami in Fiesta Bowl |
5 | 1979 USC Trojans football team* | 15,385 | Pac-10 and Rose Bowl champion, AP/UPI No. 2, 11-0-1 |
6 | 1968 USC Trojans football team* | 15,315 | Pac-8 champion, lost to OSU in Rose Bowl, UPI No. 2, O. J. Simpson Heisman, 9-1-1 |
7 | 1887 Notre Dame football team* | 13,778 | First Notre Dame team; lost first game to Michigan |
8 | 1980 UCLA Bruins football team | 13,674 | AP No. 13, 9-2 |
9 | 1974 USC Trojans football team* | 12,931 | PCC and Rose Bowl champion, UPI No. 1, 10-1-1 |
10 | 1974 Central Michigan Chippewas football team* | 12,570 | NCAA Division II champion, 12-1 |
11 | 1960 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team* | 12,188 | Big Ten co-champion, AP/UPI No. 1, lost Rose Bowl, Sandy Stephens QB |
12 | 1966 UCLA Bruins football team* | 12,098 | 9-1, AP No. 5 |
13 | 1960 Washington Huskies football team* | 11,924 | AAWU and Rose Bowl champion, UPI No. 5, 10-1 |
14 | 1966 Florida Gators football team | 11,357 | Orange Bowl champion, UPI No. 11, Steve Spurrier Heisman |
15 | 1939 UCLA Bruins football team* | 11,242 | 6-0-4, AP No. 7 |
16 | 1953 UCLA Bruins football team* | 11,111 | PCC champion, UP No. 4, 8-2 |
17 | 1970 Toledo Rockets football team* | 10,769 | MAC and Tangerine Bowl champion, AP No. 12, 12-0 |
18 | 1973 Miami Redskins football team* | 10,746 | MAC and Tangerine Bowl champion (vs Florida), AP No. 15, 11-0 |
19 | 1962 USC Trojans football team* | 10,727 | AAWU and Rose Bowl champion, AP/UPI No. 1, 11-0 |
20 | 1971 Toledo Rockets football team* | 10,584 | MAC and Tangerine Bowl champion, UPI No. 13, 12-0 |
21 | 1969 Toledo Rockets football team* | 9,855 | MAC and Tangerine Bowl champion, 11-0, first of three consecutive undefeated seasons |
22 | 1992 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team* | 9,851 | Independence Bowl champion, AP No. 25, 8-4 |
23 | 1962 Northwestern Wildcats football team* | 9,819 | AP No. 16, 7-2, Ara Parseghian, defeated Ohio State and Notre Dame |
24 | 1976 USC Trojans football team* | 9,750 | Pac-8 and Rose Bowl champion, AP/UPI No. 2, 11-1 |
25 | 1969 USC Trojans football team* | 8,615 | Pac-8 and Rose Bowl champion, AP No. 3, 10-0-1 |
26 | 1998 Miami RedHawks football team* | 8,264 | MAC East co-champion, 10-1 |
27 | 1979 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team* | 8,050 | Lost Tangerine Bowl to LSU, 8-4 |
28 | 1977 Washington Huskies football team* | 7,614 | Pac-8 and Rose Bowl champion, UPI No. 9, Warren Moon QB |
29 | 1974 Miami Redskins football team* | 7,471 | MAC and Tangerine Bowl champion (vs Georgia), AP/UPI No. 10, 10-0-1 |
30 | 1975 Miami Redskins football team* | 7,355 | MAC and Tangerine Bowl champion, AP No. 12, 11-1 |
31 | 1949 Pacific Tigers football team* | 7,291 | AP No. 10, 11-0, outscored opponents 575-66, defeated Utah and SD State |
32 | 1933 Columbia Lions football team* | 7,195 | Rose Bowl champion, 8-1, defeated Penn State, Navy, Syracuse, Stanford |
33 | 1979 Arkansas Razorbacks football team* | 7,168 | SWC co-champion, AP No. 8 |
34 | 1966 USC Trojans football team* | 7,103 | AAWU champion, 7-4, UPI No. 18 |
35 | 1965 Arkansas Razorbacks football team* | 6,996 | SWC champion, UPI No. 2, 10-1 |
36 | 1945 Saint Mary's Gaels football team* | 6,743 | AP No. 7, lost Sugar Bowl, 7-2 |
37 | 1936 Santa Clara Broncos football team* | 6,733 | Sugar Bowl champion, AP No. 6, 8-1 |
38 | 1912 Army Cadets football team* | 6,634 | Dwight D. Eisenhower, Owen Bradley, and Vernon Prichard |
39 | 1941 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team* | 6,614 | AP No. 1, Bob Sweiger MVP |
40 | 1873–74 Harvard Crimson football team | 6,542 | First Harvard team, two games vs. McGill |
41 | 1982 UCLA Bruins football team* | 6,322 | Pac-10 and Rose Bowl champion, AP No. 5 |
42 | 1975 Arkansas Razorbacks football team* | 6,170 | SWC co-champion, UPI No. 6, 10-2 |
43 | 1949 Santa Clara Broncos football team* | 6,145 | Orange Bowl champion, AP No. 15, 8-2-1 |
44 | 1949 Oklahoma Sooners football team* | 6,002 | Big 7 and Sugar Bowl champion, 11-0, AP No. 2 |
45 | 1981 Washington Huskies football team* | 5,972 | Pac-10 and Rose Bowl champion, UPI No. 7 |
46 | 1946 UCLA Bruins football team* | 5,508 | PCC champion, 10-1, AP No. 4 |
47 | 1906 Ohio State Buckeyes football team* | 5,441 | OAC champion, 8-1, lost to Michigan, Herrnstein head coach |
48 | 1903 Notre Dame football team* | 5,415 | 8-0-1, outscored opponents 291-0 |
49 | 1987 UCLA Bruins football team* | 5,393 | Pac-10 co-champion, AP No 9, 10-2 |
50 | 1964 USC Trojans football team* | 5,201 | AAWU co-champion, 7-3, AP/UPI No. 10 |
51 | 1936 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team* | 5,163 | AP No. 1, Ed Widseth MVP |
52 | 1968 Arkansas Razorbacks football team* | 5,150 | SWC co-champion, Sugar Bowl champion, AP No. 6, 10-1 |
53 | 1955 Michigan State Spartans football team* | 5,145 | Rose Bowl champion, AP/UP No. 2, 9-1 |
54 | 1979 Central Michigan Chippewas football team* | 5,142 | MAC champion, 10-0-1, Gary Hogeboom MVP |
55 | 1938 Saint Mary's Gaels football team* | 5,114 | Cotton Bowl champion, 6-2 |
56 | 1980 Washington Huskies football team* | 5,066 | Pac-10 champion, lost to Michigan in Rose Bowl |
57 | 1940 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team* | 5,062 | AP No. 1, 8-0 |
58 | 1901 Notre Dame football team* | 4,995 | 8-1-1 |
59 | 1947 Penn Quakers football team* | 4,995 | AP No. 7, 7-0-1 |
60 | 1950 Miami Redskins football team* | 4,836 | MAC champion, 9-1, Woody Hayes |
61 | 1937 Santa Clara Broncos football team* | 4,831 | Sugar Bowl champion, AP No. 9, 9-0 |
62 | 1957 UCLA Bruins football team* | 4,811 | AP No. 19, 8-2 |
63 | 1967 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team* | 4,759 | Big Ten co-champion, UPI No. 14 |
64 | 1976 Akron Zips football team* | 4,513 | AP No. 3, 10-3 |
65 | 1967 Purdue Boilermakers football team* | 4,467 | Big Ten co-champion, AP No. 6 |
66 | 1945 Indiana Hoosiers football team* | 4,387 | 9–0–1, Big Ten champion, AP No. 4 |
67 | 1952 UCLA Bruins football team* | 4,336 | AP/UP No. 6, 8-1 |
68 | 1935 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team* | 4,278 | National champion, 8-0, Pug Lund MVP |
69 | 1952 USC Trojans football team* | 4,099 | PCC and Rose Bowl champion, UPI No. 4, 10-1 |
70 | 1977 Miami Redskins football team* | 4,008 | MAC champion, 10-1 |
71 | 1944 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team* | 4,023 | 8-1 |
72 | 1963 Illinois Fighting Illini football team* | 3,942 | Big Ten champion, AP No. 3 |
73 | 1935 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team* | 3,856 | National champion, 8-0, Babe LeVoir MVP |
74 | 1955 Miami Redskins football team* | 3,799 | MAC champion, 9-0, AP No. 15, Ara Parseghian |
75 | 1951 Illinois Fighting Illini football team* | 3,732 | Big Ten champion, UPI No. 3 |
76 | 1957 Michigan State Spartans football team* | 3,588 | AP/UP No. 3, 8-1, Dan Currie MVP |
77 | 1935 UCLA Bruins football team* | 3,588 | PCC champion, 8-2 |
78 | 1904 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team* | 3,557 | Western Conference co-champion, 13-0, Billingsley national champion |
79 | 1959 USC Trojans football team* | 3,491 | AAWU co-champion, 8-2, UPI No. 13 |
80 | 1927 UCLA Grizzlies football team* | 3,408 | 6-2-1 |
81 | 1923 Quantico Marines Devil Dogs football team* | 3,394 | 7-2-1, lost to Michigan |
82 | 1966 Miami Redskins football team* | 3,312 | MAC co-champion, 9-1, Bo Schembechler |
83 | 1947 Oklahoma Sooners football team* | 3,288 | Big 6 co-champion, 7-2-1, AP No. 16 |
84 | 1947 Miami Redskins football team* | 3,021 | Sun Bowl champion, 9-0-1, Sid Gillman |
85 | 1929 USC Trojans football team* | 2,949 | PCC and co-national champion, 10-2 |
86 | 1955 UCLA Bruins football team | 2,733 | PCC champion, AP No. 4 |
87 | 1963 Miami Redskins football team* | 2,600 | Bo Schembechler first year as a head coach, 5-3-2 |
88 | 1914 Army Cadets football team* | 2,546 | 9-0, national champion |
89 | 1949 Miami Redskins football team* | 2,530 | Woody Hayes first year as a head coach, 5-4 |
90 | 1938 USC Trojans football team* | 2,503 | PCC co-champion, AP No. 7, 9-2 |
91 | 1950 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team* | 2,501 | 6-1-2 |
92 | 1938 Oklahoma Sooners football team* | 2,502 | Big 6 champion, 10-1 AP No. 4 |
93 | 1936 Washington Huskies football team* | 2,478 | PCC champion, AP No. 5 |
94 | 1943 Army Cadets football team* | 2,471 | 7-2-1, AP No. 11 |
95 | 1943 Purdue Boilermakers football team* | 2,391 | Big Ten champion, 9-0, AP No. 5 |
96 | 1900 Stanford football team | 2,346 | Yost, 7–2–1 |
97 | 1928 Detroit Titans football team* | 2,229 | Undefeated national champion |
98 | 1927 USC Trojans football team* | 2,166 | PCC co-champion, 8-1-1 |
99 | 1945 Columbia Lions football team* | 2,073 | AP No. 20, 8-1, Lou Little |
100 | 1944 USC Trojans football team* | 2,071 | PCC and Rose Bowl champion, AP No. 7, 8-0-2 |
101 | 1916 Army Cadets football team* | 2,003 | 9-0 |
102 | 1920 Oklahoma Sooners football team* | 1,873 | MVC champion, 6-0-1 |
103 | 1956 Central Michigan Chippewas football team | 1,711 | IIAC champion, 9-0 |
104 | 1899 Kansas Jayhawks football team* | 1,636 | Yost, 10–0 |
105 | 1926 Saint Mary's Gaels football team* | 1,626 | 9-0-1, defeated Cal |
106 | 1954 Army Cadets football team* | 1,624 | 7-2, AP/UP No. 7 |
107 | 1929 Purdue Boilermakers football team* | 1,529 | Big Ten champion, 8-0 |
108 | 1930 Saint Mary's Gaels football team* | 1,519 | 8-1, defeated UCLA, Fordham, Oregon |
109 | 1952 Purdue Boilermakers football team* | 1,491 | Big Ten co-champion, UP No 12, 4-3-2 |
110 | 1929 Saint Mary's Gaels football team* | 1,358 | 8-0-1, defeated UCLA, Oregon |
111 | 1940 Kent State Golden Flashes football team* | 1,249 | 8-1 |
112 | 1892 Purdue Boilermakers football team* | 1,165 | BAA champion, 8-0 |
113 | 1933 Army Cadets football team* | 1,157 | 9-1 |
114 | 1930 Army Cadets football team* | 1,147 | 9-1-1 |
115 | 1927 Army Cadets football team* | 1,016 | 9-1 |
116 | 1922 Army Cadets football team* | 982 | 8-0-2 |
117 | 1941 Western Michigan Broncos football team* | 870 | 8-0 |
118 | 1932 Purdue Boilermakers football team* | 848 | Big Ten co-champion, 7-0-1 |
119 | 1897 Ohio Wesleyan football team* | 801 | Yost, 7–1–1 |
120 | 1894 Purdue Boilermakers football team* | 608 | BAA champion, 9-1 |
121 | 1924 Saint Mary's Gaels football team* | 561 | 8-1, defeated USC |
- All-ACC: 1953-1964, Template:All-Atlantic Coast Conference football teams
- All-Big Eight: 1929, 1931-1964, Template:All-Big Eight Conference football teams
- All-Big Ten: 1898-1990, 1992-2014, 2015, Template:All-Western college football teams, Template:All-Big Ten Conference football teams
- All-Missouri Valley: 1925-1928, 1930
- All-Pacific Coast: 1916, 1919-1938, 1940-1978
- All-Southern: 1933-1935, 1937-1942, 1947-1952
- All-Southwest: 1930, 1935-1965, 1970, 1975
- Arkansas: 1899-1957, 1959-1979
- Army: 1890-1911, 1913-1916, 1917-1924, 1926-1927, 1930-1943, 1954-1957, 1959-1963, 1965-1968, 1970-1971, 1973-1974, 1978, 1980-1984, 1986-2003
- Central Michigan: 1956, 1974, 1977, 1979
- Chicago: 1892-1893, 1895-1897, 1899-1904, 1906-1907, 1909-1912, 1914-1921, 1923-1939
- Cornell: 1887, 1889-1907, 1909-1913, 1916-1917, 1919-1920, 1924-1938, 1940
- Detroit Titans: 1896-1904, 1906-1907, 1909-1942, 1945-1964, Template:Detroit Titans football navbox
- Illinois: 1892-1913, 1915-1918, 1920-1922, 1925-1926, 1928-1945, 1947-1963, 1966-1982, 1984-1988, 1990, 1992-1992
- Indiana: 1887-1889, 1891-1919
- Kent State: 1929, 1935, 1940, 1960, 1968
- Lafayette: 1895, 1897, 1899-1900, 1909
- Miami (OH): 1947, 1949-1950, 1955, 1963, 1966, 1973-1975, 1977, 1998
- Michigan State: 1896-1942, 1944-1950, 1954-1964, 1967-1968, 1970-1973, 1976, 1979-1982, 1984-1986
- Minnesota: 1890-1920, 1922-2003
- Navy: 1888, 1890, 1910-1911
- Northwestern: 1876, 1882, 1886, 1888-1892, 1901-1904, 1916, 1926, 1930-1931, 1936, 1940, 1950-1962
- Notre Dame: 1887-1889, 1892-1905
- Ohio State: 1901-1903, 1905-1911
- Oklahoma: 1920-1945, 1947, 1949
- Penn: 1890-1893, 1896, 1900-1903, 1905-1906, 1909, 1917, 1947
- Pitt: 1910
- Purdue: 1887, 1889-1930, 1932-1959, 1962-1964, 1967
- Rutgers: 1897, 1899, 1911
- Saint Mary's: 1921-1934, 1938, 1945, Template:Saint Mary's Gaels football navbox
- Toledo: 1925, 1927, 1947, 1969-1971
- UCLA: 1924-1928, 1930-1933, 1935-1937, 1939, 1942-1950, 1952, 1955-1964, 1966, 1968, 1970, 1980-1987, 1989
- USC: 1914-1927, 1929-1930, 1933-1938, 1940, 1942-1950, 1952-1971, 1974-1977, 1979-1984, 1986-1988, 1990-1996, 1998-2000
- Wake Forest: 1923-1925, 1937-1969, 1971-2005
- Washington: 1889-1890, 1892-1974, 1978-1989, 1992-1998, 2001-2004
- Western Michigan: 1909, 1914, 1922, 1926, 1932, 1941, 1965, 1982, 1988, 1997, 2000
Baseball and softball
[edit]Rank | Title | Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Megan Betsa* | 18,321 | Michigan pitcher (2014-2017) |
2 | Henry Killilea* | 15,520 | Michigan baseball (1883-1884), "Godfather of the American League" |
3 | Diane Ninemire* | 8,438 | Cal softball coach (1988-2020) |
4 | Donna J. Papa* | 7,947 | North Carolina softball coach (1986-2023) |
5 | Richard Finn* | 6,669 | Baseball coach at Ohio State (1976-1987) |
6 | Eugene Lenti* | 6,099 | DePaul softball coach (1979-2018) |
7 | Phil McSpadden* | 4,943 | Oklahoma City softball coach (1988-2023), winningest coach in college softball history |
8 | David V. Connelly* | 3,664 | Toledo baseball/basketball coach |
Detroit Wolverines
[edit]Rank | Title | Article Size |
Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sam Thompson | 32,359 | 104,717 | MLB 1885-1898, Baseball HOF |
2 | Ned Hanlon | 59,131 | 68,753 | MLB outfielder 1880-1892, Baseball HOF |
3 | Will White | 35,220 | 49,237 | MLB pitcher 1877-1886, first MLB player to wear glasses |
4 | Charlie Bennett | 49,607 | 33,848 | MLB catcher 1878-1893, career ended in 1894 when train crushed his legs |
5 | Deacon McGuire | 59,621 | 31,473 | Catcher 1884-1912, set MLB records for games caught |
6 | Chief Zimmer | 35,341 | 26,104 | MLB catcher 1884-1903, first president of Players' Protective Association |
7 | Dan Casey | 18,669 | 16,441 | MLB pitcher 1884-1890, claimed to be namesake of "Casey at the Bat" |
8 | Lady Baldwin | 14,395 | 16,259 | MLB pitcher 1884-1890, 42 wins for Detroit in 1886 |
9 | Pretzels Getzien | 29,696 | 15,342 | MLB pitcher (1884-1892), known for his pretzel pitch |
10 | Hardy Richardson | 32,107 | 14,034 | MLB 1879-1892, part of the "Big Four" hitters in 1880s |
11 | Bill Watkins | 51,787 | 11,474 (10,069 + 1,375) | Manager (1884-1899 |
12 | George Wood | 14,408 | 10,935 | Canadian-born MLB player 1880-1892 |
13 | Dick Burns | 26,595 | 9,801 | Pitcher/outfielder (1883-1885) |
14 | Charlie Ganzel | 15,691 | 9,216 | Catcher/infielder/outfielder (1884-1897) |
15 | Frederick K. Stearns | 4,333 | 8,848 | Team owner, pharmaceutical business, founder of Detroit symphony Orchestra |
16 | Sy Sutcliffe | 12,594 | 8,430 | Catcher (1884-1892) |
17 | Stump Weidman | 11,916 | 8,307 | Pitcher/outfielder (1880-1888), NL ERA leader (1881) |
18 | Phenomenal Smith | 14,737 | 7,629 | MLB pitcher 1884-1891 |
19 | Frank Ringo | 10,739 | 7,218 | Catcher (1883-1886) |
20 | Count Campau | 25,508 | 7,213 | Outfielder 1888-1890, led AA in home runs 1890 |
21 | Joe Gerhardt | 9,753 | 7,138 | Second baseman (1873-1891) |
22 | Larry Twitchell | 12,281 | 6,994 | Outfielder (1886-1894) |
23 | Dupee Shaw | 20,676 | 6,991 | Pitcher (1883-1888), 451 strikeouts in 1884 |
24 | Jack Rowe | 19,025 | 6,855 | MLB 1879-1890, part of the "Big Four" in 1880s |
25 | Joe Quest | 18,372 | 6,276 | 2B (1871-1886) |
26 | Mike McGeary | 17,751 | 5,705 | Infielder (1870-1882) |
27 | Art Whitney | 5,648 | ||
28 | Jim Donnelly | 5,644 | ||
29 | Jumping Jack Jones | 5,618 | ||
30 | Yank Robinson | 5,310 | ||
31 | Sadie Houck | 4,871 | ||
32 | Mike Dorgan | 4,811 | ||
33 | Henry Gruber | 4,737 | ||
34 | 1883 Detroit Wolverines season | 4,624 | 40–58 record | |
35 | Frank Mountain | 4,606 | ||
36 | George Derby | 4,546 | ||
37 | Dasher Troy | 4,260 | ||
38 | Frank Brill | 4,084 | ||
39 | Cal Broughton | 3,783 | ||
40 | Robert Leadley | 3,777 | ||
41 | Frank Scheibeck | 3,529 | ||
42 | Ed Beatin | 3,163 | ||
43 | Chub Collins | 2,961 | ||
44 | Bill Geiss | 2,938 | ||
45 | Sam Trott | 2,874 | ||
46 | Martin Powell | 2,640 | ||
47 | Mike Moynahan | 2,609 | ||
48 | Parson Nicholson | 2,419 | ||
49 | Walter Prince | 2,325 | ||
50 | Milt Scott | 2,193 | ||
51 | Joe Farrell | 2,137 | ||
52 | Ed Gastfield | 1,940 | ||
53 | Marr Phillips | 1,632 | ||
54 | Ted Scheffler | 1,628 | ||
55 | Billy Smith* | 1,552 | ||
56 | Frank Cox | 1,482 | ||
57 | Julius Willigrod | 1,296 | ||
58 | Edward Santry | 994 | ||
59 | Jim Manning |
Detroit Tigers
[edit]Rank | Title | Article Size |
Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nig Clarke | 20,789 | 52,510 | MLB catcher 1905-1920 |
2 | Pete Fox | 14,947 | 20,297 | MLB outfielder 1933-1945 |
3 | Joe Coleman (baseball, born 1947) | 27,575 | 53,227 | MLB pitcher 1965-1979, 23 wins in 1973 |
4 | Donie Bush | 27,553 | ||
5 | Prince Oana | 26,776 | 24,702 | Hawaiian outfielder, World Series in 1945 with Detroit |
6 | Baby Doll Jacobson | 23,414 | ||
7 | John Mohardt | 19,990 | ||
8 | Gary Sutherland | 16,281 | 18,577 | MLB second baseman 1966-1978 |
9 | Hooks Dauss | 18,225 | 16,377 | Detroit Tigers pitcher 1912-1916, holds Detroit record with 223 career wins |
10 | 1901 Detroit Tigers season | 16,269 | ||
11 | Bun Troy | 13,881 | ||
12 | Tom Timmermann | 8,252 | 13,808 | MLB pitcher 1969-1974 |
13 | Jimmy Outlaw | 18,884 | 12,165 | MLB 1937-1949, World Series champion 1945 with Detroit |
14 | Bill Armour | 29,473 | 9,418 | Detroit Tigers manager 1905-1906, Ty Cobb's first MLB manager |
15 | Slim Love | 23,414 | 9,305 | MLB pitcher 1913-1920 |
16 | Skeeter Webb | 9,277 | ||
17 | Doc Casey | 8,387 | ||
18 | George Caster | 7,899 | ||
19 | Bill Zepp | 7,265 | ||
20 | Topper Rigney | 6,701 | ||
21 | Joe Hoover | 6,451 | ||
22 | Tex Erwin | 6,227 | ||
23 | Flea Clifton | 5,855 | ||
24 | Samuel F. Angus | 4,905 | ||
25 | Heinie Beckendorf | 4,407 | ||
26 | Jackie Tavener | 4,211 | ||
27 | George Maisel | 4,172 | ||
28 | John Eubank | 3,429 | ||
29 | Suds Sutherland | 3,405 | ||
30 | Delos Drake | 3,286 | ||
31 | Scat Metha | 2,678 | ||
32 | Bill Lelivelt | 2,173 | ||
33 | Gus Hetling | 2,098 | ||
34 | Lou Schiappacasse | 1,954 | ||
35 | Erwin Renfer | 1,311 |
Others
[edit]Rank | Title | Article Size |
Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tip O'Neill | 28,124 | 98,859 | Left fielder (1883-1892), 1887 triple crown (.435 batting average), Baseball HOF |
2 | Dave Orr | 25,870 | 40,549 | First baseman (1883-1890), .342 career batting average, stroke ended career 1890 |
3 | Harry Glenn | 4,209 | 10,673 | One of eight in MLB to die while serving in military during WWI |
4 | Newt Halliday | 3,673 | 8,970 | One of eight in MLB to die while serving in military during WWI |
5 | Emil Gross | 7,920 | 7,087 | Catcher (1879-1884), set MLB record with 87 games at catcher (1880) |
6 | Cal Hawk | 4,035 | 2,674 | First baseball pitcher to receive a stated salary (1873) |
7 | Studs Bancker | 3,736 | 1,643 | Catcher (1875), jailed for "drinking-related offenses", died age 35 |
Michigan sports
[edit]Ice hockey
[edit]Rank | Title | Creation date |
Article Size |
Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Leonard Brumm | 2013-09-04 | 16,826 | 7,262 | UM hockey player 1947-1950 |
2 | Connie Hill | 2013-09-03 | 11,824 | 5,751 | UM hockey player 1945-1949 |
3 | 1947–48 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season | 2013-09-02 | 43,309 | 4,612 | National champion |
4 | 1963–64 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season | 3,101 | |||
5 | 1951–52 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season | 2,830 | |||
6 | 1955–56 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season | 2,769 | |||
7 | 1954–55 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season | 1,904 | |||
8 | 1952–53 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season | 1,838 | |||
9 | 1934–35 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season | 1,360 |
Basketball
[edit]Softball
[edit]Rank | Title | Creation date |
Article Size |
Page views |
Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sierra Romero | 2013-07-08 | 26,054 | 125,644 | UM softball player 2013-2016 | |
2 | Amanda Chidester | 2013-07-08 | 12,525 | 43,102 | UM softball player 2009-2011 | |
3 | Kelly Kovach Schoenly | 2013-07-09 | 13,394 | 22,293 | UM softball pitcher 1992-1995 | |
4 | Michelle Gardner | 2013-07-10 | 6,000 | 21,112 | UM softball player 1985-1988 | |
5 | Haylie Wagner | 2013-07-08 | 9,556 | 12,529 | UM softball pitcher 2012-2015 | |
6 | Samantha Findlay | 2013-07-08 | 10,977 | 10,313 | UM softball player 2005-2008 | |
7 | Sara Driesenga | 2013-07-08 | 8,027 | 9,306 | UM softball pitcher 2012-2016 | |
8 | Kelsey Kollen | 2013-07-10 | 6,263 | 9,162 | UM softball player 1999-2002 | |
9 | Bob De Carolis | 2013-07-10 | 6,415 | 8,802 | UM softball coach 1981-1984 | |
10 | Sara Griffin | 2013-07-09 | 8,704 | 7,716 | UM softball player 1995-1998 | |
11 | Jessica Merchant | 2013-07-09 | 10,527 | 6,490 | UM softball player 2002-2005 | |
12 | Traci Conrad | 2013-07-09 | 7,460 | 5,916 | UM softball player 1996-1998 | |
13 | Tiffany Haas | 2013-07-09 | 6,738 | 4,113 | UM softball player 2003-2006 | |
14 | Kellyn Tate | 2013-07-11 | 11,795 | 4,086 | UM softball player 1996-1998, .357 batting average | |
15 | Gloria Soluk | 2013-07-10 | 6,860 | 4,047 | UM softball coach 1978-1980 | |
Patti Townsend |
Other
[edit]Rank | Title | Creation date |
Article Size |
Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Michigan Wolverines women's volleyball | 2013-07-15 | 17,039 | 31,031 | |
2 | Rick Bay | 2013-08-23 | 23,347 | 13,291 | UM football player and wrestler 1961-1965, later an MLB executive |
3 | Mark Churella | 2013-08-20 | 7,233 | 11,835 | UM wrestler, 3x NCAA champion 1977-1979 |
4 | Randy Erskine | 2013-08-23 | 7,480 | 7,431 | UM golfer and 1970 Big Ten champion4 |
Miscellaneous
[edit]Create
[edit]Rank | Title | Date | Size | Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Shamir (musician)* | 2014-07-20 | 22,899 | 541,927 | |
2 | Mary Ann (Ray Charles song)* | 2013-10-20 | 2,665 | 180,354 | Ray Charles song 1956 |
3 | Willie Louis* | 2013-07-27 | 10,846 | 171,999 | Witness to murder of Emmett Till |
4 | Confession Blues* | 2013-10-20 | 2,921 | 19,943 | Ray Charles song 1949 |
5 | Northtown (EP)* | 2014-07-20 | 4,605 | 18,482 | Shamir EP |
6 | If It Wasn't True* | 2014-07-21 | 7,813 | 5,559 | Shamir single (2014) |
7 | Madelon Mason* | 2013-02-06 | 8,376 | 4,676 | World War II pinup girl |
8 | June Krauser* | 2014-08-15 | 6,490 | 4,306 | Swimmer |
9 | Gene Wettstone* | 2013-08-03 | 3,673 | 3,425 | Penn State gymnastics coach (9 NC) |
10 | Brinley Avenue Historic District* | 2014-02-09 | 6,300 | 2,395 | Yuma, AZ |
11 | Louis R. Douglass | 2013-02-24 | 10,503 | 1,334 | Civil engineer responsible for Hoover Dam |
Expanded
[edit]The following shows articles created in 2013 with the most page views. Page views are from the period 7/1/15 to 9/28/22.
Rank | Title | Creation date |
Article Size |
Page views |
Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Death by coconut | 7/26 | 34,965 | 4,120,698 | Deaths by falling coconuts |
3 | Michigan Wolverines football statistical leaders | 123,750 | |||
4 | Martin Manulis | 2014 exp | 25,860 | 97,736 | |
5 | Mayo Smith | 10/8-10/12 | 78,907 | Detroit Tigers manager 1967-1970 | |
6 | Clarence Chesterfield Howerton]* | 8/16 | 24,037 | 138,700 | 2'4" circus performer known as "Major Mite" |
7 | Berthold Beitz | 8/2 | 11,662 | 50,306 | German industrialist credited with saving 250 Jewish workers |
8 | Victor Orsatti | 2014 exp | 12,931 | 29,007 | |
10 | Donie Bush | 12/28-12/31 | 24,064 | Detroit Tigers shortstop 1908-1921 | |
11 | Wayne Comer | 10/8 | 19,438 | Detroit Tigers outfielder 1967-1968 | |
12 | Patricia Roberts (basketball) | 7/14-7/20 | 17,853 | 18,933 | UM basketball coach 1992-1996 |
13 | Animal furniture | 7/27 | 4,753 | 13,826 | Furniture made from animals |
14 | Tom Matchick | 10/7 | 7,185 | Detroit Tigers infielder 1967-69 | |
15 | Frederick Schule | 8/15 | 2013-08-15 | 6,444 | UM football player and athlete, won silver medal in 110 m hurdles at 1904 Olympics |
16 | John Greene (American football) | 8/20 | 15,196 | 6,165 | UM football player and wrestler 1940-1944 |
17 | Sanford White | 2/2 | 14,490 | 6,086 | All-American football end at Princeton 1910-1911 |
18 | Pretzels Getzien | 2/23-3/1 | 29,910 | 6,061 | MLB pitcher 1884-1892, known for the "pretzel curve" |
19 | Wesley Coe | 8/13 | 22,928 | 5,822 | UM athlete, won silver medal in shot put 1904 |
20 | Frank Meinke | 2014 exp | 4,812 | 1,877 | Detroit SS/P (1884-85) |
AfD rescue
[edit]DYK
[edit]Article (DYK date) | Image | DYK views | DYK hook |
---|---|---|---|
1076-1078. 1944, 1945, 1946 Michigan Wolverines football teams (8/1/15) | na | ... that at least 12 players from the 1944 Michigan Wolverines football team, 15 from the 1945 team, and 21 from the 1946 team were either drafted to play or actually played professional football in the NFL or AAFC? | |
1075. 1968 Michigan Wolverines football team (7/24/15) | na | ... that the 1968 Michigan Wolverines football team was ranked No. 12 in the final AP Poll in its last season under head coach Bump Elliott? | |
1074. Jug Girard (7/19/15) | na | ... that Wisconsin's Jug Girard, dubbed "Mr. Versatility", was a quarterback, end, halfback, punter, and kickoff returner in 10 years in the NFL? | |
1073. 1941 Michigan Wolverines football team (7/9/15) | na | ... that the 1941 Michigan Wolverines football team outscored opponents 147 to 41, losing only to the eventual champions, Minnesota? | |
1072. 1991 All-Big Ten Conference football team (6/27/15) | na | ... that the 1991 All-Big Ten Conference football team included Heisman Trophy winner Desmond Howard and conference rushing leader Vaughn Dunbar? | |
1071. Sam Sword (6/26/15) | na | ... that linebacker Sam Sword was the leading tackler on the undefeated 1997 Michigan football team? | |
1070. 1921 Michigan Wolverines football team (6/18/15) | na | ... that 1921 Michigan Wolverines football team (pictured) outscored its opponents by a combined score of 187 to 21? | |
1069. 1987 All-Big Ten Conference football team (6/1/15) | na | ... that the Michigan State Spartans, under Big Ten Coach of the Year George Perles, placed seven first-team players on the 1987 All-Big Ten Conference football team? | |
1068. 1984 All-Big Ten Conference football team (5/31/15) | na | ... that the 1984 All-Big Ten Conference football team included Heisman Trophy winner Keith Byars and national receiving leader David Williams? | |
1067. 1992 All-Big Ten Conference football team (5/26/15) | na | ... that the 1992 All-Big Ten Conference football team included rushing, receiving, and passing efficiency leaders Tyrone Wheatley, Lee Gissendaner and Elvis Grbac? | |
1066. Tommy Hendricks (5/25/15) | na | ... that Tommy Hendricks played free safety for the undefeated 1997 Michigan football team and was the Miami Dolphins' special teams captain from 2001 to 2003? | |
1065. Mike Teeter (5/21/15) | na | ... that American football player Mike Teeter won the Dick Katcher Award in 1989 and was named All-World while playing for the Frankfurt Galaxy in 1991? | |
1064. 1995 All-Big Ten Conference football team (5/18/15) | na | ... that the 1995 All-Big Ten Conference football team included two Heisman Trophy winners, Eddie George of Ohio State and Charles Woodson of Michigan? | |
1063. Joe Cocozzo (5/10/15) | na | ... that Joe Cocozzo played in the 1993 Rose Bowl, the 1993 Senior Bowl, and Super Bowl XXIX? | |
1062. Matt Elliott (4/26/15) | na | ... that Michigan's Matt Elliott went on to play four years in the NFL despite being "Mr. Irrelevant" in 1992? | |
1061. Paul Seal (4/16/15) | na | ... that tight end Paul Seal won the Most Valuable Player award on the 1973 Michigan football team and later had 1,586 receiving yards in the NFL? | |
1060. Randy Logan (4/16/15) | na | ... that Randy Logan (pictured) was a consensus All-American at Michigan and appeared in 159 consecutive games for the Philadelphia Eagles? | |
1056-1059. Tootie Perry, Goldy Goldstein, Red Bethea, Larry Dupree (11/24/14) | 3,095 (Perry) | ... that the American football players inducted into the University of Florida Athletic Hall of Fame as "Gator Greats" include "All-American Waterboy" Tootie Perry, attorney Goldy Goldstein, and halfbacks Red Bethea and Larry Dupree? | |
1055. Buck Flowers (10/11/14) | na | ... that after College Football Hall of Fame inductee Buck Flowers returned two punts for touchdowns, a writer suggested that the opposition Auburn Tigers made a dying request: "Please omit Flowers"? | |
1054. Len Ford (10/3/14) | 10,233 | ... that in his NFL debut season, Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee Len Ford (pictured) was injured so severely in a game he required plastic surgery to "virtually rebuild" his face? | |
1053. Martin Manulis (9/26/14) | na | ... that Martin Manulis was the producer of Playhouse 90, voted the greatest television series of all time in a 1970 poll of television editors? | |
1052. Dick Burns (9/20-9/21/14) | 3,781 | ... that the baseball player Dick Burns's "up-shoot" was called "a beauty"? | |
1051. Vince Banonis (9/19/14) | 2,888 | ... that College Football Hall of Fame inductee Vince Banonis (pictured) was an All-American center for the University of Detroit and All-NFL for the Chicago Cardinals? | |
1050. Charles Romeyn (9/14/14) | na | ... that Charles Romeyn, an All-American fullback for the Army football team, was sent to Montana in 1902 with the charge of "quieting" the Cheyenne Indians? | |
1049. Arthur Tipton (9/13/14) | na | ... that 1898 All-American football player Arthur Tipton prompted a rule change when he kicked a loose ball down the field and fell on it for a touchdown after it crossed the goal line? | |
1047-1048. If It Wasn't True, Shamir (9/1/14) | na | ... that "If It Wasn't True" from countertenor Shamir's 2014 Northtown EP was called "Your Favorite Breakup Song" by Vogue and "semidissonant pulses tickled by antsy snares and hi-hats" by Dazed? | |
1046. Will White (9/1/14) | 1,786 | ... that Will White, the first Major League Baseball player to wear glasses, holds the records of 75 complete games and 680 innings pitched in one season? | |
1045. Eugene Neeley (8/31/14) | 1,750 | ... that the one-armed football player Eugene Neeley became a consensus first-team All-American? | |
1044. Charlie Guy (8/30/14) | 1,232 | ... that Charlie Guy, who served in the Ambulance Corps during World War I, sent Cleveland's star halfback to the hospital with a broken shoulder and ribs in the first game of the 1920 NFL season? | |
1043. Neno DaPrato (8/26/14) | 1,700 | ... that Michigan State halfback Neno DaPrato was called "the greatest scoring machine of the year" after scoring 130 points, in just six games, during the 1915 season? | |
1042. Jim Manning (8/26/14) | 623 | ... that baseball's Jim Manning was one of the organizers of both the Western League and its successor the American League? | |
1041. Lynn Bomar (8/29/14) | 9,013 | ... that "The Blonde Bear" supervised the ransacking of black households in the 1946 Columbia Race Riot? | |
1040. Peter Hauser (8/27/14) | 3,700 | ... that Native American football player Peter Hauser has been credited with throwing the first spiral pass? | |
1039. Joe Quest (8/24/14) | 2,300 | ... that stories involving Joe Quest are among the many theories about the origin of the term "Charley horse"? | |
1038. Bill Watkins (8/24/14) | 545 | ... that Bill Watkins led Detroit to the 1887 World Series and by 1894 had won more pennants than any other manager? | |
1037. Steamer Horning (8/23/14) | 800 | ... that Steamer Horning was an All-American football player for Colgate and a two-time All-NFL player for Toledo? | |
1036. Jumping Jack Jones (8/23/14) | 3,900 | ... that baseball pitcher, dentist, and voice trainer Jumping Jack Jones (pictured) leapt into the air before throwing, making him "the twirling marvel of his time"? | |
1035. Dan Casey (8/21/14) | 3,500 | ... that in later life, baseball player Dan Casey claimed he was "Casey at the Bat"? | |
1034. Hugh Lowery (8/20/14) | 2,000 | ... that Hugh Lowery taught formation flying in World War I and later played in the National Football League's first season? | |
1033. Joe Fitzgerald (8/19/14) | 2,300 | ... that Joe Fitzgerald was the first player in NFL history to return an interception for a touchdown? | |
1032. June Krauser (8/16/14) | 1,700 | ... that swimmer June Krauser set 154 American records and 73 world records? August 16, 2014 | |
1031. Eddie Moegle (8/16/14) | 800 | ... that halfback Eddie Moegle scored the first touchdown for Detroit in the first season of the NFL? August 16, 2014 | |
1030. Cal Broughton (8/15/14) | 3,128 | ... that baseball catcher Cal Broughton later became a police chief who captured a gang of train robbers after a gun fight in Wisconsin? August 15, 2014 | |
1029. Bill Adamaitis (8/13/14) | 1,337 | ... that Catholic University's Bill Adamaitis was hailed as the "hero of the Orange Bowl" after both catching and throwing touchdown passes in the 1936 game? | |
1028. Frank Brill (8/9/14) | 554 | ... that Frank Brill was a pitcher in Major League Baseball and later won the United States' first national bowling championship? August 9, 2014 | |
1027. Tip O'Neill (8/7/14) | 5,200 | ... that Tip O'Neill won the triple crown and set at least eight Major League Baseball batting records? | |
1025-1026. Jack Rowe, Hardy Richardson (8/3-8/14/14) | 3,270 (JR only) | ... that baseball players Jack Rowe (pictured) and Hardy Richardson were two of the "Big Four", a group "regarded for many years as the greatest quartette in the history of the national pastime"? | |
1024. Ned Hanlon (7/28/14) | 6,628 | ... that "Foxy Ned" Hanlon (pictured), inventor of the "Baltimore chop", was "The Father of Modern Baseball"? July 28, 2014 | |
1023. Art Whitney (7/26/14) | na | ... that Art Whitney helped the New York Giants win the 1888 and 1889 World Series? July 26, 2014 | |
1022. Deacon McGuire (7/24/14) | 17,330 | ... that an x-ray of catcher Deacon McGuire's gnarled left hand (pictured) showed "36 breaks, twists or bumps all due to baseball accidents"? | |
1021. Emil Gross (7/23-7/24/14) | 25,861 | ... that Emil Gross set a Major League Baseball record by appearing in 87 games as catcher? | |
1020. Jim Donnelly (7/22/14) | na | ... that in 1896 The Sporting Life wrote of Baltimore Orioles third baseman Jim Donnelly that a "prettier or headier fielder ... would be difficult to find"? July 22, 2014 | |
1019. Charlie Bennett (7/15-7/16/14) | 20,537 | ... that the baseball career of Charlie Bennett (pictured), who reportedly invented the chest protector, ended when both legs were run over by a train? | |
1018. Mike McGeary (7/13/14) | na | ... that 19th century baseball player Mike McGeary was suspected of game-fixing and using a yellow umbrella to communicate with gamblers in the stands? July 13, 2014 | |
1017. Sy Sutcliffe (7/13/14) | na | ... that catcher Sy Sutcliffe, who reportedly "threw like a catapult", died of Bright's disease four months after his final major league game? | |
1016. Milt Scott (7/12/14) | na | ... that professional baseball player "Mikado Milt" Scott gained his nickname amid a "Mikado" craze that invaded the sport in 1886? | |
1015. Dasher Troy (7/11/14) | na | ... that in 1888 baseball player Dasher Troy hit a game-winning home run after his manager fulfilled his request for a beer from the bar beneath the field's grandstand?' July 11, 2014 | |
1014. Ed Beatin (7/10/14) | 2,959 | ... that pitcher Ed Beatin, who had "the most astonishing slow ball that was ever offered up to a batter", was twice a 20-game winner? July 10, 2014 | |
1013. Jerry Dorgan (7/10/14) | 4,774 | ... that professional baseball player Jerry Dorgan suffered from an "unconquerable appetite for liquor" and died after being discovered inebriated in a barn with an empty liquor bottle by his side? | |
1012. Frank Ringo (7/9/14) | 7,125 | ... that baseball player Frank Ringo, who was "inordinately fond" of whiskey, married in January 1889 and killed himself in April of that same year? July 9, 2014 | |
1011. Larry Twitchell (7/5/14) | na | ... that in 1889 Cleveland Spiders baseball player Larry Twitchell hit for the cycle, hitting a single, a double, three triples, and a home run in six at bats? | |
1010. Yank Robinson (7/2/14) | na | ... that Yank Robinson, who set a major league record for single-season walks, died of tuberculosis at 34? | |
1009. George Derby (6/30/14) | ... that in his first season playing Major League Baseball, Detroit Wolverines pitcher George Derby pitched 55 complete games, won 29 games, and led the National League in strikeouts? June 30, 2014 | ||
1008. Count Campau (6/25/14) | 3,485 | ... that 19th-century baseball player Count Campau could reportedly run the bases in 14 seconds, and once converted an infield popup into a home run? | |
1007. Martin Powell (6/25/14) | na | ... that rookie baseball player Martin Powell finished second to Cap Anson for the 1881 batting title, but retired three years later and died of consumption at age 31? | |
1006. Robert Leadley (6/22/14) | na | ... that Bob Leadley managed Major League Baseball teams in Detroit and Cleveland, and later lived in Mexico City as a fugitive from embezzlement charges? | |
1005. Chief Zimmer (6/21/14) | na | ... that Chief Zimmer set multiple catching records, was the first president of the Players' Protective Association, and invented a popular mechanical baseball game? | |
1004. Bun Troy (6/20/14) | 2,302 | ... that baseball pitcher Bun Troy, who won a doubleheader while pitching all nine innings of both games, was killed in action during World War I? | |
1003. Dupee Shaw (6/16/14) | 4,520 | ... that Dupee Shaw's delivery may have been the first pitching wind-up, created "a genuine sensation" and led baseball writers of his day to call him "a monkey, a mountebank and other harsh names"? | |
1002. Jackie Tavener (6/15/14) | na | ... that Jackie Tavener is one of only four players in Major League Baseball history to steal second, third and home in the same inning on more than one occasion? June 15, 2014 | |
1001. Prince Oana (6/13/14) | 1,726 | ... that professional baseball player "Prince" Oana was falsely advertised by his promoters as a full-blooded Hawaiian royal? | |
1000. Sadie Houck (6/9/14) | 5,703 | ... that Sadie Houck was blacklisted by the National League for being "addicted to drink" despite being acknowledged as "one of the best short stops in the country and a thorough ball player"? | |
999. Baby Doll Jacobson (3/1/14) | 2,372 | ... that Baby Doll Jacobson (pictured) received his nickname after hitting a home run while a band played "Oh, You Beautiful Doll" on opening day of the 1912 season? | |
998. Bill Armour (1/29/14) | 3,488 | ... that Bill Armour (pictured) was manager of the Cleveland Bronchos when they signed Nap Lajoie to the most lucrative contract in baseball up to that time, and of the Detroit Tigers when they signed Ty Cobb? | |
997. John Mohardt (1/19/14) | na | ... that John Mohardt played baseball for the Detroit Tigers with Ty Cobb and football for the Chicago Bears with Red Grange? | |
996. Frank Scheibeck (1/16/14) | ... that Frank Scheibeck played professional baseball in Detroit in three different decades and three different leagues between 1888 and 1906? | ||
995. Gus Hetling (1/15/14) | na | ... that Gus Hetling was awarded an automobile in 1912 as the most valuable player in the Pacific Coast League? | |
991. Mayo Smith (11/2/13) | 2,387 | ... that ESPN.com ranked the decision by Mayo Smith (pictured) to move Mickey Stanley to shortstop for the 1968 World Series as the third "gutsiest call" in sports history? | |
990. 1947–48 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season (10/7/13) | ... that the 1947–48 Michigan Wolverines hockey team (pictured) won the first "Frozen Four" NCAA hockey championship in March 1948? | ||
989. Ed Gagnier (10/3/13) | ... that Ed Gagnier, the first gymnast to represent Canada at the Olympic games, later coached three NCAA national championship teams at Iowa State? | ||
988. Dave Barclay (9/30/13) | ... that Dave Barclay, winner of the 1947 NCAA golf championship, worked for more than 30 years at a gaseous diffusion plant that produced enriched uranium? | ||
987. Rick Bay (9/27/13) | ... that Rick Bay has served as COO of the New York Yankees, president of the Cleveland Indians, athletic director at Ohio State and Oregon, and wrestling coach at Michigan? | ||
986. 1943–44 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team (9/26/13) | ... that the 1943–44 Michigan basketball team included three athletes, "Crazy Legs" Hirsh, Don Lund, and Bob Wiese, who later played in the National Football League or Major League Baseball? | ||
985. 1955–56 Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey season (9/23/13) | ... that the 1955–56 Michigan Wolverines hockey team won the 1956 NCAA Tournament and took five of six places on the Associated Press All-Tournament Team? | ||
984. 1951–52 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team (9/22/13) | ... that 1951–52 Michigan Wolverines basketball team was integrated months after the Inter-Racial Association alleged "a deliberate and conscious policy of discrimination against Negro athletes"? | ||
983. Connie Hill (9/13/13) | 3,339 | ... that Connie Hill (pictured), captain of the first hockey team to win the Frozen Four, received a Ph.D. for his dissertation, "Mood, self-derogation and anomia as factors in response unreliability"? | |
982. Leonard Brumm (9/12/13) | ... that Leonard Brumm organized an inmate hockey team at a maximum security prison, coached the first professional female hockey player, and co-founded the Kuwait National Hockey League? | ||
981. Milt Mead (9/10/13) | ... that Michigan Wolverines basketball player Milt Mead won the 1953 NCAA Championship in the high jump? | ||
980. Chelso Tamagno (9/8/13) | ... that Chelso Tamagno played for the Akron Goodyear Wingfoots team that won the first National Basketball League championship in 1938? | ||
979. Tom Jorgensen (9/5/13) | ... that "Jorgy" Jorgensen was the second leading scorer on the Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team for three consecutive years? | ||
978. Mel Groomes (9/4/13) | 5,266 | ... that in April 1947, halfback Mel Groomes (pictured) became the first African-American player signed by the Detroit Lions? | |
977. Derrick Green (9/3/13) | 3,800 | ... that Derrick Green, rated the No. 1 running back in the college football recruiting Class of 2013, has been described as follows: "Look at him from the back and the side, he's a huge human being"? | |
976. Mark Churella (9/1/13) | ... that University of Michigan wrestler Mark Churella won NCAA national championships three straight years, from 1977 to 1979? | ||
975. Frederick Schule (9/1/13) | na | ... that Fred Schule (pictured) won a gold medal in the hurdles at the 1904 Olympics, and was a member of the 1903 Michigan football team that outscored opponents 565 to 6? | |
974. John Greene (8/30/13) | ... that Johnny Greene, a converted lineman, was nicknamed the "Cinderella Kid" when he became one of the leading pass receivers in the NFL in the late 1940s? | ||
973. Clarence Chesterfield Howerton (8/28/13) | 23,019 | ... that Clarence Chesterfield Howerton, aka Major Mite (pictured), was billed as the world's smallest man? | |
972. Roderick H. Cox (8/28/13) | ... that Roderick Cox, the 1933 NCAA Champion in the hammer throw, played college football with Gerald Ford at the University of Michigan? | ||
971. Howard Hoffman (8/21/13) | ... that Howard Hoffman, the 1922 NCAA Champion in the javelin throw, was posthumously inducted into the University of Michigan Track and Field Hall of Fame in 2012? | ||
970. Wesley Coe (8/18/13) | ... that American Wesley Coe set world records in the 8-pound, 12-pound, and 16-pound shot put events? | ||
969. Holly Campbell (8/17/13) | ... that Holly Campbell from Keweenaw Peninsula won the 1930 NCAA Championship in the hammer throw? | ||
968. Wilford Ketz (8/14/13) | ... that Wilford Ketz won an NCAA championship for throwing a hammer nearly 164 feet and later served as president of the IC4A? | ||
967. Bud VanDeWege (8/5/13) | ... that Bud VanDeWege coached the Michigan Wolverines women's basketball team to its first appearance in the NCAA Tournament in 1990? | ||
966. Berthold Beitz (8/5/13) | 4,300 | ... that businessman Berthold Beitz saved hundreds of Jews, including tailors, hairdressers and Talmudic scholars, by designating them as essential to Nazi Germany's war effort? | |
965. Willie Louis (8/4/13) | 1,600 | ... that Willie Louis has been called a hero of the Civil Rights Movement for testifying in 1955 against two white men accused of murdering 14-year-old Emmett Till? | |
964. Vonnie DeLong (8/2/13) | ... that Vonnie DeLong holds the Michigan Wolverines women's basketball single-season record with 156 assists during the 1987–88 season? | ||
963. Trish Andrew (8/1/13) | ... that Trish Andrew, nicknamed the "human eraser", holds the Michigan Wolverines women's basketball career and single-season records in both rebounds and blocks? | ||
962. Jennifer Smith (8/1/13) | ... that Jennifer Smith set the Michigan Wolverines women's basketball single-season scoring record with 659 points during the 2003–04 season? | ||
961. Carmel Borders (7/31/13) | ... that Carmel Borders led the Michigan Wolverines women's basketball team to its first winning record during the 1975–76 season? | ||
960. Kellyn Tate (7/30/13) | ... that former Michigan Wolverines softball outfielder Kellyn Tate won the Women's Pro Softball League batting title in 1999 with a .320 batting average? | ||
959. Anne Thorius (7/29/13) | ... that Danish basketball player Anne Thorius holds the Michigan Wolverines career record with 537 assists? | ||
958. Michigan Wolverines women's volleyball (7/28/13) | ... that the Michigan Wolverines women's volleyball team has advanced to the NCAA Tournament in 12 of the last 14 years since Mark Rosen became the head coach? | ||
957. Vic Katch (7/28/13) | ... that the first coach of the Michigan Wolverines women's basketball team was the son of Polish movie actor Kurt Katch? | ||
956. Death by coconut (7/28/13) | ... that according to an urban legend, coconuts kill more people than sharks each year? | ||
955. Patricia Roberts (7/26/13) | ... that Women's Basketball Hall of Fame inductee Trish Roberts played in the inaugural Olympic women's basketball game and scored a record 51 points in her first game for the Tennessee Lady Vols? J | ||
954. Cheryl Burnett (7/26/13) | ... that Cheryl Burnett compiled a record of 319–136 (.701) and twice advanced to the Final Four in 15 years as head coach of the Southwest Missouri State women's basketball team? | ||
953. Bob De Carolis (7/25/13) | ... that current Oregon State athletic director Bob De Carolis coached the Michigan Wolverines softball team from 1981 to 1984? | ||
952. Kelsey Kollen-Putz (7/25/13) | ... that All-American second baseman Kelsey Kollen-Putz and husband J. J. Putz met while both were student-athletes at the University of Michigan? | ||
951. Michelle Gardner (7/23/13) | ... that current Indiana softball coach Michelle Gardner was the Big Ten Player of the Year in 1988 while playing for Michigan? | ||
950. Pollyanna Johns Kimbrough (7/23/13) | ... that Jamaican-born Pollyanna Johns Kimbrough was the first Michigan Wolverines women's basketball player to be drafted by an American professional team? | ||
949. Patti Townsend (7/22/13) | ... that former Michigan Wolverines softball outfielder Patti Townsend was named MVP of the Women's Professional Softball League in 2000? | ||
948. Traci Conrad-Fischer (7/22/13) | ... that Traci Conrad-Fischer won two Big Ten batting titles and set the Michigan Wolverines softball career record with a .389 batting average? | ||
947. Kelly Kovach Schoenly (7/20/13) | ... that current Ohio State softball coach Kelly Kovach Schoenly was twice named Big Ten Pitcher of the Year while playing for Michigan? | ||
946. Sara Driesenga (7/20/13) | ... that Michigan Wolverines softball player Sara Driesenga compiled a 31–9 record in 2013 and pitched a complete-game shutout in the 2013 Women's College World Series? | ||
945. Jessica Merchant (7/19/13) | ... that Jessica Merchant was captain of Michigan Wolverines softball's 2005 national championship team and National Pro Fastpitch Offensive Player of the Year in 2006? | ||
944. Sara Griffin (7/19/13) | ... that Sara Griffin was thrice named a first-team All-American and compiled a 106–19 record as a pitcher for the Michigan Wolverines softball team? | ||
943. Samantha Findlay (7/18/13) | ... that Samantha Findlay led the Michigan softball team to a national championship with a home run in the 10th inning of the championship game at the 2005 Women's College World Series? | ||
942. Haylie Wagner (7/17/13) | ... that Haylie Wagner, a Michigan Wolverines softball player, was unanimously selected as the 2012 Big Ten Pitcher of the Year after compiling a 32–7 record and 1.53 ERA as a freshman? | ||
941. Gloria Soluk (7/16/13) | ... that Gloria Soluk was the first coach of the Michigan Wolverines softball team and the third coach of its women's basketball team? | ||
940. Tiffany Haas (7/15/13) | ... that All-American second baseman Tiffany Haas did not commit an error in her last 60 games for the Michigan Wolverines softball team? | ||
939. Amanda Chidester (7/15/13) | ... that former Michigan Wolverines softball player Amanda Chidester hit a grand slam to lead Team USA to a victory over Brazil in the 2012 World Cup of Softball? | ||
938. Sierra Romero (7/14/13) | ... that Michigan Wolverines softball's freshman shortstop Sierra Romero was named the 2013 Big Ten Player of the Year after compiling a .527 on-base percentage? | ||
937. Kipke years (4/13/13) | 1,250 | ... that Michigan Wolverines football in the Kipke years (Kipke pictured) included a four-year stretch in which the team won two national championships and had three undefeated seasons? | |
936. James Bond (4/1/13) | ... that James Bond played briefly in the National Football League after completing his military service? | ||
935. Charlie Getzein (3/14/13) | 5,493 | ... that Charlie Getzein (pictured), known for his "pretzel curve" pitch, won 59 games in 1886 and 1887, including four games in the 1887 World Series? | |
932-934. 1909 All-America team (2/25/13) | ... that the 1909 College Football All-America Team included Henry Hobbs, Hamlin Andrus and seven other players from an undefeated Yale team that outscored opponents 209–0? | ||
931. Elmer Schwartz (2/22/13) | ... that fullback "Elmer the Great" Schwartz led the 1930 Washington State Cougars football team to the 1931 Rose Bowl against Alabama? | ||
922-930. 1900/1901 All-America team (2/21/13) | ... that 27 of the 33 consensus members of the 1900 and 1901 College Football All-America Teams, including John Hallowell, Robert Kernan and Crawford Blagden of Harvard, James Bloomer and Henry Holt of Yale, Ralph Davis of Princeton and Sanford Hunt of Cornell, played for Ivy League teams? | ||
921. Walter Smith (2/2/13) | ... that Walter Smith, chief of staff of the U. S. Army's "All-American division" in the 1930s, was an actual All-American at West Point in 1900? February 2, 2013 | ||
920. Edward Bowditch (2/1/13) | na | ... that Edward Bowditch was an All-American football player, aide-de-camp to John Pershing, and member of the 1922 commission that concluded that Filipinos were not yet ready for independence? | |
919. William Fincke (1/31/13) | na | ... that William Fincke, an All-American quarterback at Yale in 1900, became a pacifist minister and founder of the Brookwood Labor College and Manumit School? | |
918. Mayes McLain (1/28/13) | 1,638 | .. that Cherokee Indian Mayes McLain held college football's single-season scoring record for more than 60 years and engaged in professional wrestling as the "Masked Manager"? | |
917. Frank Hudson (1/25/13) | 2,592 | ... that in 1898, Frank Hudson, a five-foot, three-inch quarterback from the Laguna Pueblo tribe, became the first Native American to be selected as an All-American football player? | |
916. Fritz Seyferth (1/4/13) | ... that Fritz Seyferth joined the University of Michigan football team as a walk-on and became the third-leading scorer in the Big Ten Conference in 1970? |
- ^ 1,856 prior to January 2018