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1950 Pittsburgh Panthers football team

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1950 Pittsburgh Panthers football
ConferenceIndependent
Record1–8
Head coach
Home stadiumPitt Stadium
Seasons
← 1949
1951 ⊟
1950 Eastern college football independents records
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
Franklin & Marshall     9 0 0
No. 6 Princeton     9 0 0
St. Lawrence     8 0 0
Thiel     7 0 0
No. 2 Army     8 1 0
Fordham     8 1 0
Carnegie Tech     7 1 0
Drexel     6 1 0
Cornell     7 2 0
Bucknell     6 3 0
Penn     6 3 0
Yale     6 3 0
Buffalo     5 3 0
Colgate     5 3 0
Penn State     5 3 1
Syracuse     5 5 0
Temple     4 4 1
Tufts     4 4 1
Columbia     4 5 0
Villanova     4 5 0
Holy Cross     4 5 1
Dartmouth     3 5 1
Boston University     3 5 0
Duquesne     2 6 1
Hofstra     2 6 0
NYU     1 5 1
CCNY     1 7 0
Harvard     1 7 0
Brown     1 8 0
Pittsburgh     1 8 0
Boston College     0 9 1
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1950 Pittsburgh Panthers football team represented the University of Pittsburgh in the 1950 college football season. The team compiled a 1–8 record under head coach Len Casanova.[1]

Schedule

[edit]
DateOpponentSiteResultAttendanceSource
September 30at No. 16 DukeL 14–2825,000[2]
October 7at Ohio StateL 7–4173,137[3]
October 14No. 15 RiceL 7–1421,061[4]
October 21at No. 20 NorthwesternL 23–2835,000[5]
October 28No. 11 Miami (FL)
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA
L 0–2824,537[6]
November 4West Virginia
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA (rivalry)
W 21–76,125[7]
November 11at Notre DameL 7–1856,966[8]
November 18No. 10 Michigan State
  • Pitt Stadium
  • Pittsburgh, PA
L 0–1928,679[9]
December 2Penn State
L 20–217,000[10]
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game

Preseason

[edit]

On January 27, The Pittsburgh Press reported that Pitt head coach Mike Milligan resigned. His initial three-year contract expired, and he was offered a one-year renewal. He negotiated for a multi-year offer similar to his initial deal, but the Athletic Department did not grant his request.[11]

On February 16, the executive committee of Pitt's Board of Trustees approved the hiring of Len Casanova as the head football coach, plus Herman Meister and Jack Roche as assistants. Casanova received a four-year deal at $12,000 per year. Coach Casanova was a proponent of the T-formation, which was different from the single wing offense run by Coach Milligan.[12]

On March 9, 160 prospects met with Coach Casanova for the start of spring drills. The varsity and freshmen candidates reported on March 22.[13] The spring session ended on May 13 with an intra-squad game. The Blues beat the Golds 54–6 in front of 1,000 fans.[14] On September 3, 57 Panthers bussed to fall camp at Allegheny College in Meadville, PA for two weeks of pre-season training. On September 16, after a morning intra-squad scrimmage, the team returned to Pittsburgh. Coach Casanova continued two-a-days for the next week on Trees Field in preparation for their opening game on September 30 at Duke.[15]

Coaching staff

[edit]
1950 Pittsburgh Panthers football staff
Coaching staff
  • Len Casanova – head coach
  • Herman Meister – line coach
  • Jack Roche – backfield coach
  • Robert Timmons – assistant end coach
  • Steve Petro – jayvee coach
  • Wilbur Forsythe – assistant freshman coach
  • John Chickerneo– freshman coach
  Support staff
  • Thomas J. Hamilton – director of athletics and physical education
  • Frank Carver – graduate manager
  • Bill Heyman – publicity director
  • Dr. Ralph Shanor – team physician
  • Dr. Dan Dickinson – team physician
  • Howard Waite – trainer
  • Bill Haines – equipment manager
  • Jim Ventura– student manager

Roster

[edit]

Game summaries

[edit]

at Duke

[edit]
Week 1: Pitt at Duke
1 234Total
Pitt 0 077 14
• Duke 0 01414 28
  • Date: September 30, 1950
  • Location: Duke Stadium
    Durham, NC
  • Game start: 2:30 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 25,000
  • Game weather: partly cloudy and mild
  • Referee: Paul Swaffield (Brown)

Len Casanova's Panthers opened their season against Wallace Wade's Duke Blue Devils in Durham, NC. Duke led the all-time series 4–3 and was a 12-point favorite to win this game. The Blue Devils were 1–0, having beaten South Carolina in their opening game.[19] Duke end, Blaine Earon, was named AP Defense first team All-American and back Billy Cox received first team honors from Colliers.[20]

Pitt tackle, Flint Greene, was the first African-American to play in a game against the Blue Devils at Duke.[21]

After a scoreless first half, the Panthers managed to score two touchdowns in the second half, but they gave up four and lost to the Blue Devils 28–14. Pitt halfback, Bill Sichko, returned the second half kick-off 85 yards to put the Panthers on the scoreboard first. Nick Bolkovac added the extra point and Pitt led 7–0. Duke countered with two third quarter touchdowns. A Billy Cox 22-yard touchdown pass to Tom Powers was followed by a Glenn Wild 8-yard touchdown pass to Powers. Mike Souchak (brother of former Panther Frank Souchak) converted both placements. Early in the fourth quarter, the Panthers tied the game on a 7-yard run by Armand DiFonso and Bolkovac kick. The Devils again countered with two scores. A 59-yard drive ended with a 1-yard touchdown plunge by Jack Mounie. Then Bob Bicket intercepted a Bob Bestwick pass and raced 60 yards for the final score. Souchak added the extra points.[22]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Duke was Ted Geremsky (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Rudy Andabaker (left guard), George Radosevich (center), Mike Boldin (right guard), Charles Yost (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bob Bestwick (quarterback), Bill Sichko (left halfback), Bill Reynolds (right halfback) and John Huzvar (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Chris Warriner, George Glagola, Flint Greene, Bob Brennen, Charles Thomas, Gabe Gembarosky, Robert Mihm, John Dazio, Don Karanovich, Merle DeLuca, Bill Gasparovic, Joseph Bozek, John Masarick, Fred Botti, Armand DiFonso, Anthony Simile, James Campbell and Joe Schmidt.[22]

at Ohio State

[edit]
Week 2: Pitt at Ohio State
1 234Total
Pitt 0 007 7
• Ohio State 21 2000 41
  • Date: October 7, 1950
  • Location: Ohio Stadium
    Columbus, OH
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 73,137
  • Game weather: cloudy and warm
  • Referee: Lyle M. Clarno (Bradley)

On October 7, the Panthers traveled west to Columbus, OH to play the Ohio State Buckeyes. Ohio State led the all-time series 10–3–1.[23] Wes Fesler's squad was 0–1, after losing to SMU (32–27) in their home opener.[24] The Buckeyes had talent: Heisman Trophy winner, Vic Janowicz at halfback; All-American linemen Bob Momsen and Bob McCullough; plus All-Big Ten linemen John Biltz and Bill Trautwein.[25]

Coach Casanova altered the line-up: Right tackle Charles Yost, injured against Duke and lost for the season, was replaced by Bill Gasparovic; Injured left end Ted Geremsky was replaced by Chris Warriner; Armand DiFonso started at quarterback, and Joe Schmidt started at fullback.[26]

In front of 73,137 fans, Ohio State routed the Panthers 41–7. The Panthers defense could not stop Heisman Trophy winner Vic Janowicz. In his one half of playing time, he threw six passes, completed them all, and four went for touchdowns. He converted three extra points. Buckeye halfbacks Walt Klevay and Richard Doyle each added a rushing touchdown and Richard Momsen blocked a punt out of the end zone for a safety. Ohio State led 41–0 at halftime, and Coach Fesler used his reserves in the second half. The Panthers scored in the final two minutes on an 86-yard march. Bob Bestwick completed four straight passes for the score: 47 yards to Nick DeRosa, 5 yards to Bill Reynolds, 22 yards to Bill Sichko and 12 yards to George Glagola. Nick Bolkovac kicked the extra point.[26][27]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Ohio State was Chris Warriner (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Rudy Andabaker (left guard), John Dazio (center), Mike Boldin (right guard), Bill Gasparovic (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Armand DiFonso (quarterback), Bill Sichko (left halfback), Bill Reynolds (right halfback) and Joe Schmidt (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were George Glagola, Flint Greene, John Stoken, Bob Brennen, Gabe Gembarosky, Robert Mihm, Don Karanovich, Merle DeLuca, Joseph Bozek, John Masarick, Fred Botti, Anthony Simile, James Campbell, John Huzvar, Larry Pierce, Anthony Romantino, George Radosevich, William Ewing, Stuart Kline, Frank DiLeo, Bob Bestwick, Bob Osterhout, James Jennings, Joseph Capp and David Fyock.[26]

Rice

[edit]
Week 3: Rice at Pitt
1 234Total
• Rice 0 770 14
Pitt 0 700 7

For their home opener, the Panthers scheduled Jeff Neely's, 1950 Cotton Bowl and 1949 Southwest Conference, champion Rice Owls. Rice was on an 11-game win streak and was a two touchdown favorite over the Panthers.[28]

Pitt coach Len Casanova decided to utilize the two-platoon system. He told The Pitt News: "Instead of dividing up the players practice time between offense and defense, we can concentrate on defense with one group and offense with another. We expect to have an offensive and defensive line to throw against Rice, but we don't have the backfield material to be exclusively a two-platoon team."[29]

On a rainy day in Pittsburgh, the Panthers jumped out to a 7–0 lead in the second quarter, but could not contain the Rice aerial game and lost to the Owls 14–7. The Panthers recovered a Rice fumble in the first quarter on the Owls 13-yard line. The offense had to settle for a Nick Bolkovac field goal try that missed. Late in the period, Panther halfback Bill Reynolds intercepted a Vernon Glass pass and returned it to the Rice 27-yard line. On the third play of the second quarter, Bob Bestwick scored from the 3-yard line and Bolkovac added the extra point. The Owls answered with a touchdown right before halftime. They received the second half kick-off and scored again. The Panthers threatened 5 times in the final half, but the Owl defense kept them out of the end zone. Halfback Bill Sichko (concussion) and quarterback Bob Bestwick (knee) did not play in the second half.[30][31][32]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Rice was Chris Warriner (left end), Flint Greene (left tackle), Rudy Andabaker (left guard), John Dazio (center), Merle DeLuca (right guard), Bob Brennen (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bob Bestwick (quarterback), Bill Sichko (left halfback), Bill Reynolds (right halfback) and Joseph Capp (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were George Glagola, Ted Geremsky, Nick Bolkovac, Charles Thomas, Gabe Gembarosky, Don Karanovich, Mike Boldin, Joseph Bozek, Fred Botti, Anthony Simile, James Campbell, John Huzvar, Anthony Romantino, George Radosevich, William Ewing, Stuart Kline, Bob Osterhout, Bill Gasparovic, James Jennings, Armand DiFonso and Joseph Schmidt.[33]

at Northwestern

[edit]
Week 4: Pitt at Northwestern
1 234Total
Pitt 0 0023 23
• Northwestern 7 1470 28
  • Date: October 21, 1950
  • Location: Dyche Stadium
    Evanston, IL
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 30,000
  • Game weather: fair and warm
  • Referee: Mike Layden (Notre Dame)

The Panthers fourth game of the season was against the Northwestern Wildcats at Evanston, IL. The Wildcats were undefeated (3–0), and on a five-game win streak.[34] Wildcat Don Stonesifer was named first team end on the Associated Press-Offense All-American squad.[35]

Coach Casanova had to deal with injuries and military assignments. Mike Boldin and Don Karanovich, army reservists, were given their physicals by the Army and were awaiting orders. The Marines updated their orders for Chris Warriner and Bill Gasparovic. They were able to stay in school until mid-November. James Campbell failed his Marine physical. Bob Bestwick's knee did not respond to treatment and he did not play. Joe Schmidt hurt his shoulder in the Rice game. Joe Capp was nursing a sore ankle. Bill Sichko was back in the lineup.[36]

Pitt suffered their fourth loss in a row, 28–23. After three quarters, the Panthers were behind 28–0. In the final quarter, Pitt guard, Mke Boldin recovered a Northwestern fumble on the Wildcat 18-yard line. Third-string quarterback, Bob Osterhout scored from the 1-yard line. Nick Bolkovac kicked the extra point. After a second exchange of punts, Northwestern had possession on their 17-yard line. A penalty moved them back to their 2-yard line. On first down, Pitt end George Galoga tackled Wildcat Johnny Miller in the end zone, and the score was 28–9. Northwestern kicked off from the 20-yard line and Pitt gained possession on the Wildcat 47-yard line. On the third play, Osterhout threw a 33-yard touchdown pass to Chris Warriner. Bolkovac kicked the extra point to make it 28–16. Less than 3 minutes remained in the game. George Galoga recovered the on-sides kick for the Panthers on the Northwestern 45-yard line. Osterhout completed 2 passes to move the ball to the 3-yard line. He threw an incompletion, and then he passed to Nick DeRosa for the score. Bolkovac made it 28–23 with 30 seconds to go. The Wildcats recovered the on-sides kick and ran out the clock.[5]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Northwestern was Chris Warriner (left end), Flint Greene (left tackle), Charles Thomas (left guard), John Dazio (center), Mike Boldin (right guard), Bob Brennen (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Fred Botti (quarterback), Bill Sichko (left halfback), Bill Reynolds (right halfback) and Joseph Capp (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were George Glagola, Ted Geremsky, Larry Pierce, John Stoken, Nick Bolkovac, Rudy Andabaker, Anthony Romantino, Gabe Gembarosky, George Radosevich, Stuart Kline, Don Karanovich, Merle DeLuca, Frank DiLeo, Bill Gasparovic, Sam DeFede, Joseph Bozek, John Masarick, Bob Osterhout, Armand DiFonso, David Fyock, Anthony Simile, James Campbell, James Jennings and Joe Schmidt.[37]

Miami

[edit]
Week 5: Miami at Pitt
1 234Total
• Miami 0 7714 28
Pitt 0 000 0

The Panthers second home game was against the #11 ranked Miami Hurricanes, coached by former Pitt running back Andy Gustafson (1923–25). The Canes were 4–0, and led by All-America first team AP defensive tackle Al Carapella, .[38][39] 15 Hurricanes were from the Pittsburgh area.[40]

Miami ruined Pitt's Homecoming by defeating the Panthers 28–0. The Hurricane defense kept the Panthers out of their territory for the entire first half. The Miami offense scored late in the second quarter on a 38-yard drive. Jack DelBello scored on a quarterback sneak and Gordon Watson booted the extra point for a 7–0 halftime lead. Miami halfback Frank Smith added a 15-yard touchdown run in the third quarter. McKeesport, PA natives, quarterback Jack Hackett and end Ed Lutes, connected for two touchdown passes in the final period to cement the Miami victory. Watson converted the placements. The Panthers penetrated to the Miami 18-yard line late in the game, but the Hurricanes intercepted a Panther pass to stop the drive.[41]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Miami was Chris Warriner (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Rudy Andabaker (left guard), John Dazio (center), Merle DeLuca (right guard), Bob Brennen (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Fred Botti (quarterback), Bill Sichko (left halfback), Bill Reynolds (right halfback) and Joe Schmidt (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were George Glagola, Ted Geremsky, Larry Pierce, Flint Greene, Charles Thomas, Gabe Gembarosky, George Radosevich, Don Karanovich, Mike Boldin, Bill Gasparovic, Sam DeFede, Joseph Bozek, Bob Osterhout, Armand DiFonso, David Fyock, Anthony Simile, Bob Bestwick, Frank Guadagnino, James Campbell, James Jennings and Joseph Capp.[42]

West Virginia

[edit]
Week 6: West Virginia at Pitt
1 234Total
West Virginia 0 007 7
• Pitt 14 070 21
  • Date: November 4, 1950
  • Location: Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 6,125
  • Game weather: torrential rain

On November 4, first-year coach Art Lewis's West Virginia Mountaineers played the Panthers for the forty-third time. Pitt led the series 32–9–1. The Mountaineers had a 2–4 record and were a 13-point underdog.[43]

Due to inclement weather, Pitt relied on its running game and managed to tally three touchdowns to beat the Mountaineers 21–7. The Pitt offense spent the first period in West Virginia territory. They gained possession on the West Virginia 34-yard line. Three running plays advanced the ball to the 3-yard line. On first down, Bill Reynolds fumbled and the Mountaineers recovered. The Panthers forced a punt and regained possession on the Mountaineers 17-yard line. On first down, Bob Bestwick tossed a touchdown pass to Reynolds. Nick Bolkovac added the placement. Later in the period, Reynolds intercepted a West Virginia pass and raced to the Mountaineers 21-yard line. On the second play of the drive, Joe Capp scored from the 6-yard line. Bolkovac made the extra point and Pitt led 14–0 at halftime. The West Virginia offense did not get into Pitt territory until the middle of the third quarter. The Pitt defense stopped their drive on the 27-yard line. On first down Jim Campbell gained 17 yards, then Joe Capp ran 56 yards for a touchdown. Bolkovac's attempt was good and Pitt led 21–0. The Mountaineers engineered a late game drive of 68 yards. Al Purello capped the drive with a 10-yard run and Gene Simmons kicked the point after. The Panthers first (and only) win of the season was witnessed by only 6,125 rain-soaked fans.[44]

at Notre Dame

[edit]
Week 7: Pitt at Notre Dame
1 234Total
Pitt 0 070 7
• Notre Dame 6 606 18
  • Date: November 11, 1950
  • Location: Notre Dame Stadium
    South Bend, IN
  • Game start: 1:30 p. m.
  • Game attendance: 56,966
  • Game weather: cold with flurries
  • Referee: Russell Rupp (Lebanon Valley)

On November 11, the Panthers played their final road game against Notre Dame in South Bend, IN. Coach Frank Leahy's Irish, defending National Champions, were 3–3 for the season.[45] Quarterback Bobby Williams and center Jerry Groom received All-American recognition.[46] Notre Dame led the all-time series 11–5–1, and had out-scored the Panthers 251–15 on their current 6-game winning streak.[47]

The Panthers lost their seventh straight game to the Irish 18–7. Notre Dame quarterback Bob Williams threw two touchdown passes in the first half to give the Irish a 12–0 halftime edge. In the third quarter, Bob Bestwick connected with Nick DeRosa for a 15-yard touchdown pass to cut the lead to 12–7. Bestwick completed 19 of 24 passes for 252 yards, 16 of 18 in the second half. His first pass of the game was a touchdown toss that was negated due to a penalty. Notre Dame sealed the victory with an 81-yard touchdown drive in the final period. Jack Landry scored on a 1-yard plunge.[8][48]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Notre Dame was Chris Warriner (left end), Flint Greene (left tackle), Charles Thomas (left guard), John Dazio (center), Merle DeLuca (right guard), Ted Geremsky (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bob Bestwick (quarterback), David Fyock (left halfback), James Campbell (right halfback) and Joe Capp (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were George Glagola, Joseph Bozek, John Masarik, Nick Bolkovac, Bill Gasparovic, Rudy Andabaker, Mike Boldin, Dan Karanovich, George Radosevich, Gabe Gamborosky, Bob Osterhout, Bill Sichko, Frank Guadagnino, James Jennings and Joseph Schmidt.[49]

Michigan State

[edit]
Week 8: Michigan State at Pitt
1 234Total
• Michigan State 0 1360 19
Pitt 0 000 0
  • Date: November 18, 1950
  • Location: Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 2:00 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 28,679
  • Game weather: cloudy and mild
  • Referee: George W. Rennix (Minnesota)

On November 18, the Panthers played Michigan State for the second time. In 1945, the Spartans came to Pittsburgh and beat the Panthers 12–7.[50] This time the Spartans were the newest member of the Western Conference. Coach “Biggie” Munn's squad was 7–1 on the season and ranked #10 by the Associated Press.[51] State ends Dorne Dibble and Bob Carey, and fullback Sonny Grandelius received All-American honors.[52][53]

Coach Casanova had to adjust his backfield line-up. Halfback Bill Sichko injured his ribs, while halfback Bill Reynolds and fullback Joe Capp hurt their shoulders in the Notre Dame game. Dave Fyock and Jim Campbell started at halfback. Future college and pro football Hall-of-Famer Joe Schmidt started at fullback.[54]

The Michigan State defense rendered the Panthers offense inept, as they beat the Panthers 19–0. Pitt earned 6 first downs to State's 18, and ended the game with minus 11 total yards. Michigan State gained 333 total yards and would have scored more, but they fumbled 7 times and lost 4 of them. State quarterback Al Dorow threw 2 touchdown passes. In the second quarter, he connected with end Henry Minarik for a 23-yard touchdown. At the end of the first half, fullback Dick Panin scored from the 12-yard line. In the third quarter, Bob Carey caught a 23-yard pass for the final score. Carey made 1 of 3 extra points.[9]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Michigan State was Chris Warriner (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Charles Thomas (left guard), John Dazio (center), Merle DeLuca (right guard), Ted Geremsky (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bob Bestwick (quarterback), David Fyock (left halfback), James Campbell (right halfback) and Joe Schmidt (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were George Glagola, Joseph Bozek, John Masarik, Bob Brennen, Rudy Andabaker, Mike Boldin, Dan Karanovich, Anthony Romantino, George Radosevich, Gabe Gamborosky, Bob Osterhout, Bill Sichko, Frank Guadagnino, James Jennings, Bill Reynolds, Joe Kurtik and William Ewing.[9]

Penn State

[edit]
Week 9: Penn State at Pitt
1 234Total
• Penn State 14 700 21
Pitt 0 776 20
  • Date: December 2, 1950
  • Location: Pitt Stadium
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • Game start: 1:30 p.m.
  • Game attendance: 7,000
  • Game weather: cold and muddy
  • Referee: John Coles (Westminster)

The final game of the 1950 season had been scheduled for November 25. Twenty-three inches of snow brought the city to a standstill and caused the game to be postponed twice. The game was finally played on a muddy Forbes Field the following Saturday, December 2.[55] The start time was changed to 1:30. The Mayor banned automobile parking in the Oakland section of Pittsburgh, so the trolley-car was the main means of access to the stadium.[56]

Penn State, led by first-year coach Rip Engle, was 4–3–1.[57] The Panthers led the all-time series 29–18–2.[58] Pitt lost to the Lions 21–20, and ended their season with a 1–8 record. Early in the game, Pitt recovered a Penn State fumble on the Lion 28-yard line. On the third play, Lion back Bill Leonard intercepted Bob Bestwick's pass and ran 60 yards for the touchdown. Vince O'Bara booted the extra point. After an exchange of punts the Lions had control on the Panthers 30-yard line. Paul Anders scored from the five and O'Bara's placement made it 14–0 Penn State. At the start of the second period, the Lions missed a 21-yard field goal. The Panthers fumbled and State recovered on the Panthers 20-yard line. On second down Anders ran the final 12 yards for the score. O'Bara's kick made it 21–0. The Panther offense managed a 75-yard touchdown drive prior to halftime to cut the lead to 21–7. Bestwick connected with Chris Warriner for a 24-yard touchdown pass. Nick Bolkovac converted on his third attempt, after two offsides calls on the Lions. The Panthers drove 97-yards in the third quarter. Jim Campbell ran through the middle from the 1-yard line and Bolkovac's extra point narrowed the lead to 21–14. In the final quarter, Pitt back Bill Reynolds returned a punt to the State 14-yard line. A penalty moved the ball back to the 25-yard line. On second down, Bestwick threw to Nick DeRosa in the corner of the end zone to mmake the score 21–20. Bolkovac's placement was good but the Panthers had 12 men on the field. Bolkovac shanked his next attempt to seal the loss. That was his only miss of the season.[59][60]

The Pitt starting lineup for the game against Penn State was Chris Warriner (left end), Nick Bolkovac (left tackle), Rudy Andabaker (left guard), John Dazio (center), Dan Karanovich (right guard), Bill Gasparovic (right tackle), Nick DeRosa (right end), Bob Bestwick (quarterback), Bill Sichko (left halfback), Bill Reynolds (right halfback) and Joe Capp (fullback). Substitutes appearing in the game for Pitt were Ted Geremsky, Joseph Bozek, Flint Greene, Bob Brennen, Merle DeLuca, Mike Boldin, Anthony Romantino, George Radosevich, Gabe Gamborosky, Joe Schmidt, James Campbell and Armand DiFonso.[61]

Individual scoring summary

[edit]
1950 Pittsburgh Panthers scoring summary
Player Touchdowns Extra points Field goals Safety Points
Nick DeRosa 3 0 0 0 18
Nick Bolkovac 0 13 0 0 13
Chris Warriner 2 0 0 0 12
Joseph Capp 2 0 0 0 12
George Glagola 1 0 0 1 8
William Sichko 1 0 0 0 6
Armand DiFonso 1 0 0 0 6
Robert Bestwick 1 0 0 0 6
James Campbell 1 0 0 0 6
Robert Osterhout 1 0 0 0 6
William Reynolds 1 0 0 0 6
Totals 14 13 0 1 99

Postseason

[edit]

Tackle Nick Bolkovac was selected to play in the East – West Shrine Game in San Francisco. The game was played on December 30.[62]

Team players drafted into the NFL

[edit]

The following players were selected in the 1951 NFL draft.[63]

Player Position Round Pick NFL club
Ted Geremsky end 16 189 Detroit Lions
Nick Bolkovac tackle 30 354 Washington Redskins

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "1950 Pittsburgh Panthers Stats". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. May 21, 2016.
  2. ^ "Duke's passing attack beats Pittsburgh eleven by 28–14". The Baltimore Sun. October 1, 1950. Retrieved December 27, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "Janowicz One Man Show For Ohio". The Cincinnati Enquirer. October 8, 1950. Retrieved July 6, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ Jim Holton (October 15, 1950). "Undefeated Rice Owls Flog Pitt's Panthers, 14–7". The Paris News. Paris, TX. p. 11. Retrieved July 6, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ a b Charles Chamberlain (October 22, 1950). "Panthers Score All Points In Fourth Quarter". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 20. Retrieved July 16, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ Jim Holton (October 29, 1950). "Miami Passes to 28–0 Win Over Pittsburgh Eleven". Tampa Sunday Tribune. p. 1-C. Retrieved July 17, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ "Pitt wallops West Virginia for first win". The Portsmouth Star. November 5, 1950. Retrieved December 27, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ a b Paul Neville (November 12, 1950). "New Passing Record Set By Williams". The South Bend Tribune. p. Section 3-1. Retrieved July 21, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ a b c Carl Hughes (November 19, 1950). "Panthers Hit For Big Loss In Yardage". The Pittsburgh Press. p. 41. Retrieved July 22, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ Carl Hughes (December 3, 1950). "Lions Win When Bolkovac Fails To Kick Extra Point". The Pittsburgh Press. p. 41. Retrieved July 23, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ "Yearly Football Contract Offer Rejected". The Pittsburgh Press. January 27, 1950. p. 1. Retrieved June 30, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ Jack Henry (February 17, 1950). "Casanova Aides Plan Trip Here". Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 29. Retrieved June 30, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ Jack Henry (March 12, 1950). "Pitt, Dukes Change Grid Drill Plans". Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 2, part 3. Retrieved July 8, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ "Reserves Fail To Please Cas". The Pitt News. Vol. 43, no. 53. May 16, 1950. p. 5. Retrieved July 8, 2024.
  15. ^ "Panthers In Game". Pittsburgh Sun Telegraph. September 16, 1950. p. 9. Retrieved July 9, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  16. ^ Will Doerge (September 27, 1950). "Discards from the Sports Shuffle". The Pitt News. Vol. 44, no. 2. p. 5. Retrieved July 5, 2024.
  17. ^ "University of Pittsburgh 1950 Roster". Pitt vs. Rice Souvenir Program. University of Pittsburgh Athletic Department: 12. October 14, 1950.
  18. ^ "Football Lettermen". 2008 Pitt Football Media Guide. University of Pittsburgh. pp. 178–182. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  19. ^ Jack Henry (September 29, 1950). "Casanova Makes Debut As Coach". Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. p. 28. Retrieved July 7, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
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