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1949 Pittsburgh Panthers football team

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1949 Pittsburgh Panthers football
ConferenceIndependent
Record6–3
Head coach
Home stadiumPitt Stadium
Seasons
← 1948
1950 →
1949 Eastern college football independents records
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
Saint Vincent     10 0 0
No. 4 Army     9 0 0
Trinity (CT)     8 0 0
Brown     8 1 0
No. 12 Cornell     8 1 0
No. 13 Villanova     8 1 0
Bucknell     6 2 0
Dartmouth     6 2 0
Buffalo     6 3 0
Pittsburgh     6 3 0
Princeton     6 3 0
Fordham     5 3 0
Tufts     5 3 1
Carnegie Tech     5 3 1
Penn State     5 4 0
Temple     5 4 0
Penn     4 4 0
Yale     4 4 0
Boston College     4 4 1
Syracuse     4 5 0
Drexel     3 3 1
Duquesne     3 6 0
Franklin & Marshall     2 5 2
CCNY     2 5 1
NYU     3 6 0
Columbia     2 7 0
Hofstra     1 5 1
Colgate     1 8 0
Harvard     1 8 0
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1949 Pittsburgh Panthers football team represented the University of Pittsburgh in the 1949 college football season. The team compiled a 6–3 record under head coach Mike Milligan.[1]

Schedule[edit]

DateOpponentRankSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 24William & MaryW 13–721,506[2]
October 1at NorthwesternW 16–741,000[3]
October 8at West VirginiaNo. 19W 20–731,005[4]
October 15Miami (OH)No. 15
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA
W 35–2620,893[5]
October 22at IndianaNo. 16L 14–4816,000[6]
October 29at No. 9 PennW 22–2142,663[7]
November 5No. 11 Ohio State
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA
L 10–1454,789[8]
November 12No. 9 Minnesota
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA
L 7–2442,515[9]
November 19Penn State
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA (rivalry)
W 19–044,571[10]
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game

Rankings[edit]

Ranking movements
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking
— = Not ranked
Week
Poll12345678Final
AP191516

Preseason[edit]

Since Coach Mike Milligan, who led the Panthers to a 6–3 record in 1948 was back for another season, and Tom Hamilton was installed as Athletic Director, the Pitt faithful were upbeat for the 1949 season.

Spring drills began on March 29. Head Coach Milligan welcomed 116 candidates, including 26 lettermen. The Athletic Department funded a jayvee team that would play a 4 or 5 game schedule, in addition to the usual freshmen squad. Initially, assistant Coach Ed Shedloskey was in charge of the Jayvees with assistance from Don Fisher, Leo Skladany and John Chickerneo. Paul Sager was later hired to coach the Jayvees. Forty-one students came to the initial tryouts.[11] On April 30, the varsity traveled to New Brunswick, NJ to scrimmage against Rutgers. A week later they held a Blue versus White intra-squad game for fans at Pitt Stadium to close the spring session.[12][13]

Fall practice commenced August 31 in Meadville, PA on the campus of Allegheny College. Fifty-five Panthers were invited. They spent two weeks at camp, and then returned to campus to finish training for their opening game against William & Mary College.[14]

Coaching staff[edit]

1949 Pittsburgh Panthers football staff
Coaching staff   Support staff
  • Thomas J. Hamilton – director of athletics and physical education
  • Frank Carver – graduate manager
  • Don Giffen – publicity director
  • Dr. Ralph Shanor – team physician
  • Howard Waite – trainer
  • Bill Haines – equipment manager
  • Joe Percovich– student manager

Roster[edit]

Game summaries[edit]

William & Mary[edit]

Week 1: William & Mary at Pitt
1 234Total
William & Mary 0 007 7
• Pitt 6 007 13
  • Date: September 25, 1949
  • Location: Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 21,506
  • Game weather: partly cloudy
  • Referee: Francis P. Brennan (Canisius)

The Pitt Panthers opened the season against the William & Mary Indians of the Southern Conference. This was the first meeting between these schools. Coach Rube McCray's squad opened their season the week before, beating Houston 14–13. [18] All-America halfback Jack Cloud led the Indians backfield and Lou Creekmur, future Pro Football Hall-of-Fame tackle, anchored the line.[19][20] The Indians squad arrived in Pittsburgh by plane and was housed on campus at Webster Hall.[21]

Coach Milligan had lettermen returning at most positions. He told The Pittsburgh Press: " I don't care what the score is if we've got the most points. We're not looking for an easy afternoon." The Panthers were favored by a touchdown.[22]

The Panthers won their opening game for the first time in 5 years by beating William & Mary 13–7. On fourth down, after the opening kick-off, Indians center George Davis hiked the ball past the punter, Buddy Lex, into the end zone. It was recovered by Panther Nick DeRosa for a touchdown. Nick Bolkovac missed the extra point, and Pitt led 6–0 four minutes into the game. Fumbles, interceptions and defense were the highlights for the rest of the first three quarters. The Panthers offense had possession of the ball on their 32-yard line to start the final period. On the seventh play, Jimmy Joe Robinson handed the ball to Bimbo Cecconi on a reverse. He stopped and threw a 24-yard touchdown pass to John Masarik. Bolkovac made the extra point for a 13–0 lead. Late in the game, William & Mary drove 61-yards and scored on an 8-yard pass from Lex to Vito Ragasso. Lex's point after made the final 13–7.[23]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against William & Mary was Ted Geremsky (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Bernie Barkouskie (left guard), Len Radnor (center), Mike Boldin (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bobby Lee (quarterback), Louis 'Bimbo” Cecconi (left halfback), Jimmy Joe Robinsoon (right halfback) and Carl DePasqua (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Earl Sumpter, Flint Greene, Rudy Andabaker, John Dazio, Donald Karanovich, Charles Yost, William Samer, Chris Warriner, John Masarik, Robert Brennen, William Hardisty, William Sichko, Emil Rader, Lindaro Lauro, Armand DiFonso, James Campbell and Bill Abraham.[23]

at Northwestern[edit]

Week 2: Pitt at Northwestern
1 234Total
• Pitt 7 306 16
Northwestern 0 007 7
  • Date: October 1, 1949
  • Location: Dyche Stadium
    Evanston, IL
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 41,000
  • Game weather: clear and cool
  • Referee: Jay Berwanger (Chicago)

On October 1, the Panthers traveled to Evanston, IL to play the Northwestern Wildcats for the first time. The 1949 Rose Bowl champs were favored by three touchdowns. Coach Robert Voigts' club won their opener over Purdue 20–6.[24]

Thirty-six Panthers and three coaches flew into Glenview Naval Air Station and were housed in the Sovereign Hotel near Evanston, IL. This was the Panthers first road game flight since the 1939 trip to Seattle to play Washington. Coach Milligan's squad was healthy, and he made no changes to the starting lineup.[25] The game was televised live back to Pittsburgh by WDTV.[26]

The 20-point underdog Panthers upset the Wildcats 16–7 to extend their win streak to 4 games. The Panthers scored in the first period on a 5-play, 64-yard drive that ended with a 13-yard pass from Bimbo Cecconi to Jimmy Joe Robinson. Nick Bolkovac added the extra point. In the second quarter, after the Panthers offense stalled at the Wildcats 15-yard line, Bolkovac booted a field goal to put the Panthers up 10–0 at halftime. Late in the third quarter, Pitt end Nick DeRosa tipped a Wildcat pass into teammate Rudy Andabaker's hands at the Northwestern 24-yard line. On the second play of the final period, Robinson raced 12-yards around end for the score. Bolkovac's kick missed. Late in the game Panthers halfback Bill Sichko fumbled and Northwestern recovered on their own 30-yard line. It took three plays for the Wildcats to score against the Panthers subs. Johnny Miller ran 10-yards for the score. Johnny Nemeth added the placement.[27]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Northwestern was Ted Geremsky (left end), Nick Balkovac (left tackle), Bernie Barkouskie (left guard), Len Radnor (center), Mike Boldin (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bobby Lee (quarterback), Bimbo Cecconi (left halfback), Jimmy Joe Robinson (right halfback) and Carl DePasqua (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Chris Warriner, Flint Greene, Robert Mihm, Rudy Andabaker, John Dazio, George Radosevich, Donald Kranovich, Charles Yost, William Gasparovic, William Samer, John Masarik, Robert Brennen, William Sichko, Lindaro Lauro, Armand DiFonso, William Hardisty, Robert Bestwick, James Campbell, William Abraham and Bob Becker.[28]

at West Virginia[edit]

Week 3: Pitt at West Virginia
1 234Total
• Pitt 0 0137 20
West Virginia 0 700 7
  • Date: October 8, 1948
  • Location: Mountaineer Field
    Morgantown, WV
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 31,005
  • Game weather: sunny and hot
  • Referee: Albert Booth (Yale)

On October 9, the Panthers played the Mountaineers in West Virginia for only the sixth time in the 42- game series. The Panthers won the previous 5 contests in Morgantown. The Panthers led the “Backyard Brawl” series 31–9–1.[29] Like Pitt's first two opponents, West Virginia was a reigning Bowl Champion. The Mountaineers beat the Texas Mines Miners 21–12 in the 1949 Sun Bowl. Second-year Coach Dudley DeGroot's squad was 2–1 on the season. They beat Waynesburg and Washington & Lee, but lost to Ohio U.[30]

Friday, thirty-nine Panthers squad members bussed to Uniontown, PA to spend the night at the Summit Hotel. Flint Greene, backup tackle, was injured in the Northwestern game and did not make the trip. Coach Milligan went with the same starting lineup for the third straight game.[31] Pitt fans bought more than 2,000 tickets. The Baltimore & Ohio railroad ran a special train to Morgantown, priced at $3.25 on game day, that left Pittsburgh 9:15 a.m and arrived at 12:55 p.m. The return trip left at 5:25 p.m. and arrived back in Pittsburgh at 9:10 p.m.[32]

The Panthers overcame a first half deficit, and beat the Mountaineers 20–7 to extend their winning streak to 5 games. West Virginia threatened to score three times in the first half and finally succeeded with less than a minute to play. The Mountaineers drove 66 yards and scored on a 19-yard pass from Jimmy Walthall to Bernie Huntz. Gene Simmons kicked the extra point and West Virginia led at halftime 7–0. Bimbo Cecconi scored on two touchdown runs (19 and 26 yards), as he totaled 99 yards of offense in the third quarter. Lindaro Lauro added another touchdown on a 7-yard run late in the game. Nick Bolkovac was good on 2 of 3 placements.[33]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against West Virginia was Ted Geremsky (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Bernie Barkouskie (left guard), Len Radnor (center),Mike Boldin (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bobby Lee (quarterback), Bimbo Cecconi (left halfback), Jimmy Joe Robinson (right halfback) and Carl DePasqua (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were John Masarik, Chris Warriner, Harry Hollihan, Robert Mihm, William Gasparovic, Sam Defede, Rudy Andabaker, Donald Karanovich, Charles Yost, George Radosevich, John Dazio, Louis Melillo, Robert Brennen, Lindaro Lauro, William Sichko, William Hardisty, Armand DiFonso, James Campbell, William Abraham and Bob Becker.[33]

Miami (OH)[edit]

Week 4: Miami (OH) at Pitt
1 234Total
Miami (OH) 0 7127 26
• Pitt 14 777 35
  • Date: October 15, 1949
  • Location: Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 20,893
  • Game weather: cloudy
  • Referee: John H. Coles (Westminster)

On October 15, the unbeaten Panthers and the Miami (OH) Redskins met on the gridiron for the second and final time. In 1931 the Panthers beat the Redskins 61–0. First-year head coach Woody Hayes' squad beat Wichita in the season opener, and then lost to Virginia and Xavier.[34]

Coach Milligan named the same line-up that started against West Virginia. This game was labelled High School Day, and the fans were treated to a band concert prior to kick-off. The Wilmerding, Charleroi and Springdale High School bands performed along with the 150-piece Panther ensemble. The National Air Guard of Pennsylvania performed at halftime.[34]

The Panthers ran their record to 4–0 with a hard-fought 35–26 victory over the Miami eleven. The Panthers raced to a first quarter 14–0 lead on a 4-yard dash by Bimbo Cecconi and a 75-yard run by Jimmy Joe Robinson. The teams traded scores in the second quarter. Miami's halfback John Pont scored the first of his 3 touchdowns on a 36-yard pass from Mel Olix. George Galat added the extra point to cut the lead to 14–7. Pitt answered with a 13-yard run score by Cecconi for a 21–7 halftime lead. Jack Bickell opened the second half with a 79-yard dash to cut the lead to 21–13, as the extra point was wide. Pitt answered with a 65-yard, 7-play march ending with a 26-yard pass from Cecconi to Robinson. Miami then closed the gap to 28–26 on two straight drives ending with John Pont touchdown runs of 9-yards and 8-yards. Galat converted one of the placements. Pitt, then managed to drive 39-yards, and score on a 19-yard pass from Carl DePasqua to Ted Geremsky. Nick Bolkovac was 5 of 5 for the game on his extra points.[35]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Miami (OH) was Ted Geremsky (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Bernie Barkouskie (left guard), Len Radnor (center),Mike Boldin (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bobby Lee (quarterback), Bimbo Cecconi (left halfback), Jimmy Joe Robinson (right halfback) and Carl DePasqua (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were William Samer, Flint Greene, Ralph Short, Rudy Andabaker, George Radosevich, Donald Karanovich, Charles Yost, Chris Warriner, John Masarik, Frank Capello, Robert Brennen, Louis Melillo, William Hardisty, William Sichko, Lindaro Lauro, Armand DiFonso, Bill Abraham, Bob Becker and James Campbell.[35]

at Indiana[edit]

Week 5: Pitt at Indiana
1 234Total
Pitt 0 770 14
• Indiana 7 131414 48
  • Date: October 22, 1949
  • Location: Memorial Stadium
    Bloomington, IN
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 16,000
  • Game weather: cloudy and cool
  • Referee: Rollie A. Barnum (Wisconsin)

On October 22, the Panthers travelled to Bloomington, IN to play the Indiana Hoosiers. The Hoosiers led the series 5–1, but they were on an 11-game losing streak. The Panthers won the 1948 meeting, to start them on their current 6-game winning streak.[36][37]

The Panthers squad flew into Indianapolis and bussed to Bloomington. They were housed at the Graham Hotel. Coach Milligan's team was a two-touchdown favorite, even though they had never won in Bloomington. The starting line-up remained the same for the fifth straight game.[38][39]

The winless Indiana Hoosiers took out their frustrations on the Pitt Panthers and won by a score of 48–14. The Hoosiers scored three touchdowns in the first half before Pitt was able to get on the scoreboard. Late in the first period, Jerry Van Ooyen ran 5-yards for the first score. Bob Robertson and Jim Gomory scored touchdowns in the second quarter and Donald Henkle made 2 of 3 extra points to put Indiana ahead 20–0. Before halftime, the Panther offense went on a 72-yard touchdown drive that ended with a 1-yard plunge by Carl DePasqua. Nick Bolkovac added the placement. After halftime, the Panthers cut the lead to 20–14 with an 8-play, 55-yard drive, culminating with an 8-yard scamper by Jimmy Joe Robinson. Bolkovac's kick was good. Indiana answered with 2 touchdowns in both the third and fourth quarter. The Panthers offense had one more sustained drive to the Hoosiers 29-yard line, but lost the ball on downs.[40] The Hoosiers finished the season with a 1–8 record.[36]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Indiana was Ted Geremsky (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Bernie Barkouskie (left guard), Len Radnor (center),Mike Boldin (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bobby Lee (quarterback), Bimbo Cecconi (left halfback), Jimmy Joe Robinson (right halfback) and Carl DePasqua (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Earl Sumpter, Flint Greene, Ralph Short, Rudy Andabaker, Andy Kisaday, George Radosevich, Donald Karanovich, Charles Yost, William Gasparovic, Chris Warriner, John Masarik, Robert Brennen, Louis Melillo, William Hardisty, William Sichko, Lindaro Lauro, Armand DiFonso, Bill Abraham, Bob Becker, Robert Bestwick and James Campbell.[41]

at Penn[edit]

Week 6: Pitt at Penn
1 234Total
• Pitt 6 772 22
Penn 0 1470 21
  • Date: October 29, 1948
  • Location: Franklin Field
    Philadelphia, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 42,663
  • Game weather: cloudy
  • Referee: Harry O. Dayoff (Bucknell)

On October 29, the Panthers played their fourth road game of the season in Philadelphia against the Penn Quakers. The Panthers led the intrastate series 9–1–1, but had not played the Quakers since 1932.[42] Coach George Munger's Quakers were 4–0 on the season and ranked #9 by the AP poll.[43] Guard John Schweder received first team AP All-American honors.[44]

The Panthers 39-man traveling squad flew to Philadelphia and housed at the Warwick Hotel. Pitt was an 8-point underdog. Coach Milligan made two changes to the starting lineup. William Gasparovic replaced Robert Plotz at right tackle, and Robert Brennen replaced Bobby Lee at quarterback.[45]

The Panthers dropped the Quakers from the undefeated ranks with a stunning come-from-behind 22–21 victory. Pitt scored in the opening quarter on a 48-yd pass from Bimbo Cecconi to Jimmy Joe Robinson. Nick Bolkovac's extra point sailed wide left. Early in the second quarter, Pitt scored again on a Jim Campbell 1-yard plunge to culminate a 71-yard march. Bolkovac added the point for a 13–0 Pitt lead. Penn quickly answered with a 13-play, 80-yard drive. Raymond Dooney ran in from the nine. Late in the half, William Rhoads caught a 51-yard touchdown pass from Francis Bagnell. Herbert Agocs converted both placements and Penn led 14–13. Early in the third period, the Penn offense added another score. Penn tackle, Doug Reichenbach, intercepted a Cecconi pass on the Panther 38-yard line. On the 13th play Dooney scored from the 1, and Agocs' extra point upped the score to 21–13 in favor of Penn. After an exchange of punts, the Panthers recovered a Snakey Graham fumble on the Penn 30-yard line. Four plays later, Carl DePasqua scored from the 1-yard line, and Bolkovac added the placement to narrow the score to 21–20 at the end of three periods. The final period was a series of fumbles and punts. Late in the game Cecconi returned a punt 50-yards to the Penn 29-yard line. The Panthers advanced the ball to the 1-yard line, and lost the ball on downs. On second down, with 35 seconds remaining, the Quakers' punt was blocked out of the end zone by Bernie Barkouskie, and Pitt was awarded a 2 point safety. Pitt 22 to Penn 21.[46][47]

This was the last time the Panthers and Quakers would meet on the gridiron. The Quakers finished the season with a 4–4 record.[43]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Pennsylvania was Earl Sumpter (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Bernie Barkouskie (left guard), Len Radnor (center),Mike Boldin (right guard), William Gaspaovic (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Robert Brennen (quarterback), Bimbo Cecconi (left halfback), Jimmy Joe Robinson (right halfback) and Carl DePasqua (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Ted Geremsky, William Samer, Flint Greene, Ralph Short, Rudy Andabaker, Andy Kisaday, George Radosevich, John Dazio, Donald Karanovich, Charles Yost, Chris Warriner, John Masarik, Louis Melillo, William Hardisty, William Sichko, Lindaro Lauro, Armand DiFonso, Bill Abraham, Bob Becker, Bobby Lee, Robert Bestwick and James Campbell.[47]

Ohio State[edit]

Week 7: Ohio State at Pitt
1 234Total
• Ohio State 0 0140 14
Pitt 0 730 10
  • Date: November 5, 1949
  • Location: Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 54,789
  • Game weather: cloudy and cold
  • Referee: George Rennix (Minnesota)

On November 5, Pitt played Wes Fesler's #11 ranked Ohio State Buckeyes. They were 4–1–1 on the season. A loss to #5 Minnesota and a tie with USC were the only blemishes on their record.[48] The Buckeyes led the all-time series with Pitt 9–3–1.[49]

Both teams were missing offensive threats. Ohio sophomore halfback, Vic Janowicz, was injured and did not play. Pitt halfback, Jimmie Robinson was injured in the Penn game and did not play. He was replaced by Armand DiFonso in the starting lineup.[50]

With 54,789 fans looking on, Pitt led 10–0 early in the second half, but the Buckeyes rallied and gave the Panthers their second loss 14–10. The Panthers dominated the first half, but only managed to score one touchdown. Late in the second quarter, Panthers halfback, Bill Sichko returned a punt to the Ohio State 42-yard line. It took the Panthers 8-plays to score, with a 17-yard pass from Carl DePasqua to Earl Sumpter the clincher. Nick Bolkovac added the extra point and Pitt led 7–0 at halftime. The Panthers offense drove to the Ohio State 21-yard line to start the third period. The Buckeyes defense held, and Bolkovac kicked a 28-yard field goal for a 10–0 Pitt lead. The Panthers defense held and forced a punt. Sichko fumbled and the Buckeyes recovered on the Pitt 12-yard line. On the seventh play, Ohio Statecquarterback Pandel Savic scored through the middle from the 1-yard line. James Hague booted the placement to cut the lead to 10–7. State regained possession when halfback Bill Newell intercepted a DePasqua pass on the Ohio 30-yard line. Seven plays later the Buckeyes led 14–10. The fourth quarter was scoreless, as Pitt's offense was kept at bay by the Ohio State defense.[51]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Ohio State was Earl Sumpter (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Bernie Barkouskie (left guard), Len Radnor (center),Mike Boldin (right guard), William Gaspaovic (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Robert Brennen (quarterback), Bimbo Cecconi (left halfback), Armand DiFonso (right halfback) and Carl DePasqua (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Ted Geremsky, William Samer, Robert Mihm, Larry Pierce, Rudy Andabaker, George Radosevich, Robert Plotz, Donald Karanovich, Chris Warriner, Frank Capello, William Hardisty, William Sichko, Bill Abraham, Bobby Lee, Emil Rader, Robert Bestwick and James Campbell.[51]

Minnesota[edit]

Week 8: Minnesota at Pitt
1 234Total
• Minnesota 0 14010 24
Pitt 0 070 7
  • Date: November 12, 1949
  • Location: Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 42,515
  • Game weather: warm
  • Referee: Mike Layden (Notre Dame)

Bernie Bierman's Minnesota Golden Gophers came to Pittsburgh as 14-point favorites. The Gophers and Panthers had identical 5–2 records, but the AP ranked the Gophers #9 in the country.[52] The Gopher lineup had future Pro Football Hall-of-Famers: end, Bud Grant and tackle, Leo Nomellini, plus consensus All-American center, Clayton Tonnemaker.[53] The Gophers led the all-time series with the Panthers 5–0, and had outscored Pitt 138–17.[54]

In front of 42,515 fans, the Minnesota Gophers extended their win streak to six over the Panthers, as they won 24–7. Minnesota scored two touchdowns in the second period on runs by Bill Bye. Gordon Soltau added the extra points to make the half-time score 14–0. In the third quarter the Panthers managed to score a touchdown that cut the lead to 14–7. The Panthers gained possession on the Gophers 45-yard line, and ran six straight passing plays. Nick DeRosa caught a 21-yard pass from Bimbo Cecconi for the touchdown. Nick Bolkovac booted the placement. In the final quarter, Pitt fumbled on their 16-yard line and Minnesota scored in 2 plays. Bye tossed a 21-yard touchdown pass to Jim Molosky and Soltau added the point. Late in the game, Soltau capped the scoring with a 15-yard field goal.[55]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Minnesota was Earl Sumpter (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Bernie Barkouskie (left guard), George Radosevich, (center),Mike Boldin (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Robert Brennen (quarterback), Bimbo Cecconi (left halfback), Armand DiFonso (right halfback) and Carl DePasqua (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Ted Geremsky, Robert Mihm, William Samer, Flint Greene, Rudy Andabaker, Len Radnor, John Dazio, Donald Karanovich, William Gasparovic, John Masarik, William Sichko, Lindaro Lauro, Bill Doziski, Jimmy Joe Robinson, Paul Chess, Bill Abraham, Bobby Lee, Robert Bestwick and James Campbell.[55]

Penn State[edit]

Week 9: Penn State at Pitt
1 234Total
Penn State 0 000 0
• Pitt 6 076 19
  • Date: November 19, 1949
  • Location: Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 44,571
  • Game weather: cloudy and cold
  • Referee: Joseph H. Williams (Bucknell)

On November 19, the Panthers ended the season with their annual intrastate game against the Penn State Nittany Lions. Penn State, under the direction of first year coach Joe Bedenk, came to the Stadium with a 5–3 record.[56] Pitt led the all-time series 28–18–2.[57] Nineteen Panthers were ending their college football careers. Pitt was favored and wanted one more victory to match their 1948 record of 6–3.[58]

Pitt halfback Bimbo Cecconi starred, both offensively, as he ran for two touchdowns and passed for a third, and defensively, as he intercepted three State passes in a 19–0 shutout of Penn State. In the first quarter, Cecconi intercepted an Owen Dougherty pass on the Panther 5-yard line and returned it to the 23-yard line. Two first downs moved the ball to the State 35-yard line. Carl DePasqua ran through right guard for 10 yards and then lateraled to Cecconi, who did not stop until he crossed the goal line. Nick Bolkovac missed the placement and Pitt led 6–0. Late in the half, Cecconi intercepted a pass by Bill Luther and returned it to the State 14, but the Panthers could not score. After 10 minutes of the third period, the Panthers gained possession on their 29-yard line. On second down halfback Paul Chess caught a swing pass from DePasqua and raced 57-yards to the State 9-yard line. Bimbo scored around end on the next play, and Bolkovac booted the extra point for a 13–0 lead. In the final period, State answered with a drive that went to the Panther 8-yard line. Bimbo intercepted Luther's pass in the end zone for a touchback. Late in the game, Bernie Barkouskie recovered a State fumble on the Pitt 42-yard line. On first down, Cecconi threw a 58-yard touchdown pass to Jimmy Robinson. Bill Abraham missed the placement. Final score 19–0.[59][60]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Penn State was Earl Sumpter (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Bernie Barkouskie (left guard), Len Radnor (center), Mike Boldin (right guard), Robert Plotz (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), John Dazio (quarterback), Bimbo Cecconi (left halfback), Armand DiFonso (right halfback) and Carl DePasqua (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Ted Geremsky, William Samer, Flint Greene, Rudy Andabaker, Andrew Kisaday, Donald Karanovich, George Radosevich, William Gasparovic, Lindaro Lauro, William Hardisty, Jimmy Joe Robinson, Paul Chess, Bill Abraham, Bobby Lee, Robert Brennen, Joe O'Bara, Robert Bestwick and James Campbell.[59]

Individual scoring summary[edit]

1949 Pittsburgh Panthers scoring summary
Player Touchdowns Extra points Field goals Safety Points
Jimmie Joe Robinson 7 0 0 0 42
Louis Cecconi 6 0 0 0 36
Nick Bolkovac 0 16 2 0 22
Nick DeRosa 2 0 0 0 12
Carl DePasqua 2 0 0 0 12
John Masarik 1 0 0 0 6
Lindaro Lauro 1 0 0 0 6
Ted Geremsky 1 0 0 0 6
Earl Sumpter 1 0 0 0 6
James Campbell 1 0 0 0 6
Bernie Barkouskie 0 0 0 1 2
Totals 22 16 2 1 156

Postseason[edit]

Bernie Barkouskie was named to the 1949 Collier's and Newspaper Editors Association first team, and the Associated Press third team All-America squads.[61][62][63]

Carl DePasqua and Bernie Barkouskie were selected to play in the annual New Year's Day Blue-Gray Game in Montgomery, AL.[64]

On December 26, Louis 'Bimbo' Cecconi played in the North-South All-Star game in Miami, FL.[65]

On January 27, 1950, Coach Mike Milligan resigned as head coach of the University of Pittsburgh. The Panthers offered him a contract on a year-by-year basis, but he wanted a three-year deal. His three-year record was 13–14. After a 1–8 first season, his Panthers finished 6–3 the following two years.[66]

Team players drafted into the NFL[edit]

The following players were selected in the 1950 NFL draft.[67]

Player Position Round Pick NFL club
Jimmy Joe Robinson back 3 39 Cleveland Browns
Bob Plotz tackle 11 143 Cleveland Browns
Lou Cecconi back 13 167 San Francisco 49'ers
Bernie Barkouskie guard 16 204 Pittsburgh Steelers
Carl DePasqua back 29 372 Pittsburgh Steelers

References[edit]

  1. ^ "1949 Pittsburgh Panthers Stats". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. May 21, 2016.
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  3. ^ David Condon (October 2, 1949). "41,000 See Wildcats Hit By Panthers". Chicago Sunday Tribune. p. Part 2-1,5 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ Carl Hughes (October 9, 1949). "Cecconi's Two Touchdowns In Third Quarter Turn Tide". The Pittsburgh Press. p. 37 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ Carl Hughes (October 16, 1949). ""Breather Tilt" Turns Into Tight Battle". The Pittsburgh Press. p. 37 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ Jack K. Overmyer (October 23, 1949). "Crushes Panthers By 48–14". The Indianapolis Star. p. 1-Section 6 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ Smith, Chester L. (October 30, 1949). "Pitt Beats Penn, 22-21, on Safety". The Pittsburgh Press. Pittsburgh, Pa. p. 33 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ John Dietrich (November 6, 1949). "Bucks Rally, Score Twice In Three Minutes". Cleveland Plain Dealer. p. 1-B – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ Charles Johnson (November 13, 1949). "Minnesota Beats Scrappy Pitt 24–7". Minneapolis Sunday Tribune. p. Sports-1 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ Jack Sell (November 20, 1949). "Cecconi Winds Up College Career in Blaze of Glory". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. Section 3-1 – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ Will Doerge (April 1, 1949). "Footballers Granted Suffrage, Quickly Vote Selves Benefits". The Pitt News. Vol. 42, no. 45. p. 6. Retrieved May 19, 2024.
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  63. ^ "Irish Lead In A.P. All-Star Honors". The Southeast Missourian (AP story). December 1, 1949.
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