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Paperback Undefeated, Untied and Uninvited: A Documentary of the 1951 University of San Francisco Dons Football Team Book

ISBN: 1500626066

ISBN13: 9781500626068

Undefeated, Untied and Uninvited: A Documentary of the 1951 University of San Francisco Dons Football Team

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

The 1951 University of San Francisco Dons football team was one of the greatest, if not the greatest, college football teams to ever play the game. This book documents the 1951 Dons story, from how it... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great quality writing!!

Very impressed with her thorough knowledge of the University of San Francisco and her love of telling this story. I would definitely recommend this book (and have) to anyone who loves USF or loves the history or collegiate sports.

Standing Tall and United

This book has a "Field of Dreams" and "It's a Wonderful Life" feel to it due to the courageous selflessness and undaunting unity displayed by the players on the unbeaten University of San Francisco gridiron juggernaut. I am also delighted to see a book about some of the great and often unheralded teams of the old Catholic Conference of California. My cousin Fran Hare played three times against USF, including the brilliant 1951 squad led by the running heroics of the incomparable Ollie Matson and the defensive excellence of Gino Marchetti and Bob St. Clair. Fran's older brother, the late Vern Hare, was on the 1948 Santa Clara team which upset Oklahoma in 1948. He was a teammate of the great Hall of Fame end Tom Fears, who played both at Santa Clara and UCLA. When I lived in Los Angeles and was a sports editor I talked to all kinds of people associated with Loyola football, a school which put on the field stellar future pros such as Gene Brito, Skippy Gincanelli and Don Klosterman. Loyola had a great team in 1950 which lost only one game, a 28-26 upset at home in Gilmore Stadium against Santa Clara.Yes, and there was also St. Mary's located in the San Francisco suburb of Moraga. In the thirties the Gaels had one of the nation's premier football coaches in Slip Madigan. In perhaps the school's finest gridiron hour, the Gaels defeated USC in 1931 at the L.A. Coliseum, 13-7, the only blemish on Howard Jones's team's record as the Trojans recovered from that reversal to win the national title with what historians called one of the premier college teams of the early era.The competition was intense and many of the players from these schools went on to National Football League glory. What galled a lot of us was that many of these players and their schools failed to receive the national credit they deserved. This fine book detailing a superb team from a richly endowed grid era corrects that aforementioned deficiency. The recognition is highly deserved!

Labor of Love

Run - don't walk - to the nearest bookstore and get your copy of this dream of a book. Kristine Setting Clark's latest is not only a great read, it's an inspiration...and a reminder to all of us living in these troubled times that each moment one of us bravely steps forward and takes that seemingly lonely High Road, that he or she not only models the heroic, they relight the fire in our hearts that events in this world so often extinguish; even 51 years down the road. A must-read.

A MEMORABLE STORY

Kris Clark wrote a sincere and truthful version of a story that has been told to me numerous times by my husband, Gino Marchetti.The loyalty of these teammates is something to be admired, and that loyalty exists to this day. When Gino and the guys meet----the years melt away. It is wonderful to see their story in print and to remember the football years at USF.

Definitely one of the best books of the year!

I read this book in one sitting. I could not put it down. It covers the end of a forgotten and lightly regarded era of college football. In the 16 years between 1936 and 1951 five independent California colleges (Santa Clara, St. Mary's, College of the Pacific, University of San Francisco, and Loyola University of Los Angeles) ranked in the Associated Press top 20 a total of 11 times. Santa Clara won two Sugar Bowls, an Orange Bowl and was the only team to defeat Bud Wilkinson's 1948 Oklahoma juggernaught. The 1949 COP team had a backfield of 3 future pro players (Eddie Le Baron, Eddie Macon, and Tom McCormick), was undefeated over an 11 game schedule, and averaged 52 points a game. The 1950 Loyola team put 7 players into the pros including Gene Brito (a defensive end for the Redskins, Richard Nixon's favorite football player, and an NFL Hall of Famer). But the crowning achievement of the era was the 1951 USF team. And this book is about them.No other college team in history even comes close. Ten players made it to the NFL. Three are in the NFL Hall of Fame: Ollie Matson of the Cardinals and Rams and the only man other than Jim Thorpe to achieve All-American in football and win an Olympic Medal in Track and Field, Gino Marchetti of the Colts - the greatest defensive end of all time, and Bob St. Clair the greatest tackle in the history of 49er football. If this team had been named Oklahoma, Notre Dame, or Florida State they would still be singing songs about them.But the real story in the book is about courage and integrity.The football program at USF was in danger of being discontinued because the small Jesuit school could not afford the cost of maintaining a big time football enterprise. A bowl bid might have saved the program. But even though the team was undefeated and untied no bowl bids were going to be offered unless the two black players on the team stayed home. This involved the contemporary racial politics of the South. The school and the team declined the condition and the next year USF dropped the sport. Kris Clark has done an absolutely beautiful job putting this book together. It is well written, wonderfully researched, and engaging. I really recommend this book even if you are not much of a sports fan. The story and the characters will stay with you forever.
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