for^-
foot Ball
in the )Vortbwc9t Season 1902
By R. R. Rerdman, ^r.
H. H. CL Commiwfoncr for the fiortfnvcat
CHE football season of 1902 in
the Northwest has had many
elements which indicate progress in this, the greatest of
college games. In years gone
by there were comparatively few teams
in the field, and of these only two or
three played with any comprehension
of the finer points of the game. These
two or three, simply because they had
been coached by men who learned football where it has been known and played for years, so far outclassed the other
teams that there was little of interest in
the contests. It very often happened,
too, that the strongest teams did not
meet on the gridiron, but fought the
battle through the medium of the news-
BERT PILKINGTON, Fullback on the Oregon Agricultural College Eleven, Elected Captain
for 1903
papers. Moreover, some of the colleges seemed so possessed of the spirit to win that the games resulted in pitched battles, in which each side was deter- mined to win at any cost, by fair means or foul. This desire to win frequently led managers and captains to induce players of established reputations to enter college for the sole purpose of playing football, and with the under- standing that their expenses would be paid, that the rough road to knowledge would be smoothed for them, and that their sudden disappearance after the close of the season would call forth no comment. Thus the crying evil of pro- fessionalism made its way into a sport which should be kept totally untainted by its curse.
These are some of the disadvantages under which football has labored here in the Northwest. There are others — but, well, my space is limited. That most of them have been cried down — except in one college, rumor has it — the season just finished bears testi- mony. Whether or not they ever re- turn to college athletics depends, in the first place, on the many college stu- dents and alumni in this great North- west, and in the second place, on the faculties of the various institutions. Frankly, the secret of three-fourths of the trouble is just this: The faculties, especially the faculty committees on athletics, have failed to do their duty. They have been incompetent because they have not known pure athletics from impure, or because they have not taken the trouble to keep in close touch with the athletics, or because they have winked at certain violations of widely recognized rules^of athletics