1938 Southeastern Conference Standings
| Season | Conference | Coach | |||||||||
| Tennessee | 11-0 | 293 | 16 | # | 7-0 | 167 | 9 | Robert R. Bob Neyland | |||
| Alabama | 7-1-1 | 149 | 40 | 4-1 | 68 | 19 | Frank W. Thomas | ||||
| Vanderbilt | 6-3 | 86 | 49 | 4-3 | 54 | 49 | Ray Morrison | ||||
| Tulane | 7-2-1 | 211 | 53 | 3-1-1 | 69 | 9 | Lowell P. Red Dawson | ||||
| Auburn | 4-5-1 | 110 | 88 | 3-3-1 | 84 | 49 | John F. Jack Meagher | ||||
| Mississippi | 9-2 | 232 | 120 | 3-2 | 85 | 73 | Harry J. Mehre | ||||
| Louisiana State | 6-4 | 160 | 89 | 2-4 | 58 | 83 | Bernie H. Moore | ||||
| Florida | 4-6-1 | 112 | 149 | 2-2-1 | 25 | 54 | Josh C. Cody | ||||
| Georgia Tech | 3-4-3 | 72 | 84 | 2-1-3 | 47 | 51 | William A. Bill Alexander | ||||
| Georgia | 5-4-1 | 145 | 143 | 1-2-1 | 39 | 57 | Joel Hunt | ||||
| Mississippi State | 4-6 | 123 | 131 | 1-4 | 41 | 98 | Emerson W. Spike Nelson | ||||
| Kentucky | 2-7 | 150 | 160 | 0-4 | 31 | 105 | A.D. Kirwan | ||||
| Some records may be incomplete. |
Great Moments in College Football History
The forward pass first appeared in college football in 1906. It was introduced in an attempt to increase scoring and reduce injuries.
The forward pass first appeared in college football in 1906. It was introduced in an attempt to increase scoring and reduce injuries.