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Brigham Young Football Team History


Brigham Young Cougars
Brigham Young University
 Provo, UT
Founded: 1875
Stadium: Cougar Stadium
Capacity: 65,000
Colors: Navy Blue, Gold & White
Coach: Edwin R. Eddie Kimball
Conference: Rocky Mountain Athletic-

Team Home Summary  Coaches Games by Year Opponents Rankings Bowls Conference


Select Year:    
1922  <-- 1936 <- 1937 -> 1938 --> 2024

1937 Season Highlights
 Edwin R. Eddie Kimball enters his 1st season as Head Coach at Brigham Young.
 
1937 Season
 Date   Opponent  Score   
 Sat., Sep. 25  vs. Northern Colorado  7   0   W       
 Sat., Oct. 2  @ Utah  0   14   L       
 Sat., Oct. 9  vs. California-Davis  34   0   W       
 Sat., Oct. 16  @ Colorado  0   14   L       
 Sat., Oct. 23  @ Portland  10   13   L       
 Sat., Oct. 30  vs. Western State  21   0   W       
 Sat., Nov. 6  @ Wyoming  19   0   W       
 Sat., Nov. 13  @ Utah State  54   0   W       
 Sat., Nov. 20  vs. Montana State  19   0   W       
 
1937 Season Totals
  Record6-3
  Points Scored164
  Scoring Average18.2
  Points Allowed41
  Defense Average4.6
  Opponents Record18-13
  Conference Record0-0
  Home Record4-0
  Away Record2-3
1937 NCAA Final Rankings
 Rank   Record   Source 
  was not ranked.
  
1937 Rocky Mountain Athletic- Standings
  Season   Bowls   Conference 
 Team  W/L/T  PF  PA    W/L/T  PF  PA   Coach 
Brigham Young 6-316441   Edwin R. Eddie Kimball
Colorado State 1-76182   Harry W. Hughes
Colorado 8-126254Lost  14-28  Bernard F. Bunny Oakes
Utah 5-313352   Ike J. Armstrong
Wyoming 3-58692   Willard A. Dutch Witte
Utah State 2-4-247152   E. Lowell Dick Romney

1937 All American Awards
 Player   Position   Class   Ht.   Wt.   Award   Team   Source 
 Coming Someday 

1937 All Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Players
 Player   Position   Class   Ht.   Wt.   Team   Source 
 Coming Someday 


Some records may be incomplete.


Great Moments in College Football History

The Oklahoma Sooners hold the record for the longest winning streak in college football. The streak lasted 47 games, from 1954 until 1957.