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Stanford Football Team History


Stanford Cardinal
Stanford University
 Stanford, CA
Founded: 1885
Stadium: Stanford Stadium
Capacity: 50,000
Colors: Cardinal & White
Coach: Glenn Scobey Pop Warner
Conference: Pacific Coast-

Team Home Summary  Coaches Games by Year Opponents Rankings Bowls Conference


Select Year:    
1891  <-- 1924 <- 1925 -> 1926 --> 2024

1925 Season Highlights
 Glenn Scobey Pop Warner enters his 2nd season as Head Coach at Stanford.
 
1925 Season
 Date   Opponent  Score   
 Sat., Sep. 26  vs. Olympic Club  0   9   L       
 Sat., Oct. 3  vs. Santa Clara  20   3   W       
 Sat., Oct. 10  vs. Occidental  28   0   W       
 Sat., Oct. 17  @ Southern California  13   9   W       
 Sat., Oct. 24  vs. Oregon State  26   10   W       
 Sat., Oct. 31  vs. Oregon  35   13   W       
 Sat., Nov. 7  @ Washington  0   13   L       
 Sat., Nov. 14  vs. UCLA  82   0   W       
 Sat., Nov. 21  vs. California  27   14   W       
 
1925 Season Totals
  Record7-2
  Points Scored231
  Scoring Average25.7
  Points Allowed71
  Defense Average7.9
  Opponents Record40-16
  Conference Record4-1
  Home Record6-1
  Away Record1-1
1925 NCAA Final Rankings
 Rank   Record   Source 
  was not ranked.
  
1925 Pacific Coast- Standings
  Season   Bowls   Conference 
 Team  W/L/T  PF  PA    W/L/T  PF  PA   Coach 
Washington 10-1-138059Lost  19-204-05814  Enoch Bagshaw
Stanford 7-223171 4-110159  Glenn Scobey Pop Warner
California 6-319249 2-27734  Andrew L. Andy Smith
Southern California 11-245655 1-24930  Howard H. Jones
Oregon State 7-226881 1-23467  Paul J. Schissler
Washington State 3-4-167104 1-21770  Albert A. Al Exendine
Oregon 1-5-153108 0-440102  Richard Smith

1925 All American Awards
 Player   Position   Class   Ht.   Wt.   Award   Team   Source 
 Coming Someday 

1925 All Pacific Coast Conference Players
 Player   Position   Class   Ht.   Wt.   Team   Source 
 Coming Someday 


Some records may be incomplete.


Great Moments in College Football History

College football's largest margin of victory came in 1916, when Georgia Tech defeated Cumberland by a score of 222 to 0. The game was cut short by 15 minutes.