1926 Detroit Panthers season

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The 1926 Detroit Panthers season was their second and final year in the league. Despite playing 9 of their 12 games at home, the team failed to improve on their previous output of 8–2–2, winning only 4 times and finishing 12th out of 22 teams[1]

Schedule

Game Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap Sources
1 September 19 at Green Bay Packers L 21–0 0–1 City Stadium 4,500 Recap
2 September 26 at Milwaukee Badgers L 6–0 0–2 Athletic Park 2,500 Recap
3 October 3 Chicago Bears L 10–7 0-3 Navin Field 10,000 Recap
4 October 10 Kansas City Cowboys W 10–0 1–3 Navin Field Recap
5 October 17 Louisville Colonels W 47–0 2–3 Navin Field Recap [2][3]
6 October 24 Akron Indians W 25–0 3–3 Navin Field Recap
7 October 31 Canton Bulldogs W 6–0 4–3 Navin Field Recap
8 November 7 Duluth Eskimos T 0–0 4–3–1 Navin Field 21,000 Recap
9 November 14 Dayton Triangles T 0–0 4–3–2 Navin Field Recap
10 November 25 Los Angeles Buccaneers L 9–6 4–4–2 Navin Field 7,000 Recap
11 November 27 at Frankford Yellow Jackets L 7–6 4–5–2 Frankford Stadium 6,000 Recap
12 November 28 Green Bay Packers L 7–0 4–6–2 Navin Field 1,000 Recap [4]
December 6 vs. Detroit Tigers Postponed due to snow. [5]
December 13 vs. Detroit Tigers W 9–0 Navin Field [6]
Note: Games in italics was against non-NFL team. Thanksgiving Day: November 25.

Standings

File:Packers-Panthers-program-260919.jpg
Program for the Panthers' September 19th season debut at Green Bay.

Template:1926 NFL standings

Roster

  • John Barrett, center, 11 games, 170 pounds, 5-6, Univ. of Detroit
  • John Cameron, guard, 8 games, 175 pounds, Kalamazoo, Central Michigan
  • Jimmy Conzelman, back, 12 games, 175 pounds, 6-0 Washington (MO)
  • Al Crook, center, 8 games, 190 pounds, 5-10, Washington & Jefferson
  • Dinger Doane, fullback, 12 games, 190 pounds, 5-10 Tufts
  • Tom Edwards, tackle, 12 games, 185 pounds, 5-11, Central Michigan, Michigan
  • Jack Fleischman, guard, 11 games, 184 pounds, 5-6, Purdue
  • Bruce Gregory, tailback, 12 games, 170 pounds, 5-10, Michigan
  • Charlie Grube, end, 2 games, 175 pounds, 5-10, Michigan
  • Al Hadden, wingback, 12 games, 186 pounds, 5-9, Washington & Jefferson
  • Norm Harvey, tackle, 8 games, 196 pounds, 6-0, Univ. of Detroit
  • Vivian Hultman, end, 10 games, 178 pounds, 5-8, Michigan St.
  • Dutch Lauer, end, 10 games, 185 pounds, 5-10, Univ. of Detroit
  • Eddie Lynch, end, 12 games, 191 pounds, 6-0, Catholic
  • Dutch Marion, fullback, 12 games, 180 pounds, 5-9, Washington & Jefferson, Michigan
  • Tom McNamara, guard, 11 games, 210 pounds, 5-10, Tufts, Univ. of Detroit
  • Eddie Scharer, back, 12 games, 165 pounds, 5-6, Univ. of Detroit, Notre Dame
  • Gus Sonnenberg, tackle, 12 games, 196 pounds, 5-6, Dartmouth, Univ. or Detroit
  • Dick Vick, wingback, 6 games, 167 pounds, 5-9, Washington & Jefferson

Post-Season

The Panthers concluded their 1926 season with a December 13 game against another local professional team, the Detroit Tigers, in an event billed as the city's professional championship. Originally scheduled for December 6, the game had to be delayed one week due to four inches of snow covering Navin Field, rendering it unplayable.[5] Things were little better on the 13th, with the track slippery and slow, but the Panthers managed a 9–0 win over a hapless opponent that failed to make even one first down during the contest.

Plans were made for a third campaign in 1927, with rumors circulating in April that the team had landed University of Michigan passing sensation Benny Friedman, with Friedman explicitly denying a report that he had agreed to terms with the club at a secret meeting in Cleveland.[7]

With the NFL attempting to pare down weak franchises in 1927 by raising the amount of each team's assurance money to the league office and forcing a commitment to play at least four home games with a visitors' guarantee of $3,000 per game, the Panthers ultimately were one of ten teams falling to the wayside and terminating operations.

The Cleveland-born Benny Friedman ultimately signed a contract that July to play with a new Cleveland Bulldogs franchise owned by a syndicate headed by Herbert Brandt.[8]

References

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  1. 1926 Detroit Panthers
  2. "Colonels Easy for Panthers: Detroit Pros Meet Little Opposition in Gaining Victory, 47 to 0," Detroit Free Press, Oct. 18, 1926; pp. 14-15.
  3. "Louisville Pros Defeated by Detroit," Louisville Courier-Journal, Oct. 18, 1926, p. 6.
  4. "Pro Football Gossip," Green Bay Press-Gazette, Dec. 3, 1927, pp. 28–29.
  5. a b "Snow Stops Game," Flint Journal, Dec. 6, 1926, p. 14.
  6. Associated Press, "Detroit Panthers Win From City Rivals," Lansing State Journal, Dec. 13, 1927, p. 16.
  7. "Friedman Denies He'll Turn Pro," Detroit Free Press, April 26, 1927, p. 17.
  8. "Friedman Joins Cleveland Pros: Famous Grid Star to Play Here with National Club This Fall," Cleveland Plain Dealer, July 17, 1927, p. 19.

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