Tennessee football history: 1896-1898

Tennessee football history: 1896-1898

KNOXVILLE — University of Tennessee football is rich in tradition and Vols Wire will explore the history of the program by examining each head coach’s tenure with the Volunteers.

This installment will look at Tennessee’s football program during the 1896 and 1897 seasons.

After an abysmal 1893 campaign, UT’s Athletic Association officially dropped varsity football. W.B. Stokely, a senior and transfer student from Wake Forest, persuaded some other athletes on campus to field a team. He was then elected captain.

For two seasons, the team competed but did not officially represent the school. The squad went 5-2-3 during those two years.

The Journal and Tribune, Oct. 22, 1896
The Journal and Tribune, Oct. 22, 1896

In 1896, varsity football officially returned to Tennessee and began competing in the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association. It remained in the conference until 1920.

Upon officially returning, the Vols went undefeated in 1896. Posting a 4-0 record, Tennessee had wins over Williamsburg Institute, Chattanooga Athletic Club, Virginia Tech and Central University.

UT had three games that year and played all of its games in-state, the lone road game was in Chattanooga.

In 1897, the Vols went 4-1, beating King College, Williamsburg Institute, Virginia Tech  and Bristol Athletic Club.

The Vols’ lone loss was to North Carolina in Knoxville where the Tar Heels won 16-0. Tennessee had shutouts in each of its four wins.

The program did not field a team in 1898 due to the Spanish-American War.

“Rudy” – Actual Story Sounds Better Than Hollywood Version

The man didn’t shack up in Notre Dame Stadium, instead he lived and worked in the Joyce Center where he’d mop floors and do janitorial work.  He appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated as a result and once gave Elvis a t-shirt that “The King” would often wear around Graceland.

I don’t care about the predictability of the movie, some of the inaccuricies or how much effort it took the man it’s about to have it made, I’m a “Rudy” apologist.

Work hard, keep working hard, don’t take “no” for an answer no matter how many times you hear it and prove your doubters wrong no matter how long it takes.  Since I saw it in theaters in the fall of 1993 I’ve been a fan and that hasn’t wavered.

The only thing I don’t like about the movie is how they throw Dan Devine in front of the bus, run him over, back him over, run him over again and again and again.  I know every movie needs a villain but my goodness that seemed excessive.

But I digress from Devine, back to actual “Rudy” we go.

Ryan McGee of ESPN caught up with the actual Daniel “Rudy” Ruettiger recently and wrote an extensive piece.

I won’t ruin the whole article for you, if you’ve got the ten or so minutes it takes to read at any point do yourself a favor and go read it.  I did have a few thoughts from it however.

The man didn’t shack up in Notre Dame Stadium, instead he lived and worked in the Joyce Center where he’d mop floors and do janitorial work.  He appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated as a result and once gave Elvis a t-shirt that “The King” would often wear around Graceland.

There was no jersey moment on Dan Devine’s desk and it wasn’t exactly the whole team that carried him off the field after-all.  But for a former Holy Cross student that spent time beating up Notre Dame football players in the annual Bengal Bouts on campus, that story sounds even better than the one Hollywood came up with.

His friend didn’t die in a steel-mill accident, instead he died in a coal power plant incident where Ruettiger tried saving his life, somehow more intense than how things go down in the film.

I’ll forever be a “Rudy” apologist and you can call me corny as much as you like, but after reading the piece the actual story of “Rudy” sounds more like “Forrest Gump” than it does of a walk-on football player and that’s perfectly OK.