1948 College Football All-America Team


The 1948 College Football All-America team is composed of college football players who were selected as All-Americans by various organizations and writers that chose College Football All-America Teams in 1948. The seven selectors recognized by the NCAA as "official" for the 1948 season are the Associated Press, the United Press, the American Football Coaches Association, the Football Writers Association of America, the International News Service, the Newspaper Enterprise Association and The Sporting News.
SMU quarterback Doak Walker and Penn center Chuck Bednarik were the only players unanimously named by all seven official selectors as first-team All-Americans. Walker also won the 1948 Heisman Trophy.

Competition among the All-American selectors

Collier's Weekly, which began picking All-American football teams in 1888, had employed Grantland Rice to select its All-American team for 22 years. After Rice wrote a feature story about college football for Look magazine, Collier's replaced Rice in 1948, hiring eight college coaches and billing them as the "Supreme Court of Football." The eight coaches were Frank Leahy, Matty Bell, Tuss McLaughry, Bernie Bierman, Wally Butts, Jeff Cravath, Harvey Harman, and Lou Little. One of the innovations touted by Collier's for 1948 was the use of news reels provided by Warner Pathe and university athletic departments to study each player. Collier's circulated an initial round of ballots to members of the American Football Coaches Association, with their votes narrowing the selections to a group of 55 finalists. The panel of eight then studied the "motion pictures of the players in action" and selected the Collier's All-American team.
Collier's new affiliation with the AFCA ended the Saturday Evening Post's association with the group as its All-American selectors. The competition for All-American selectors led Time to write an article in September 1948 about the "scrimmage" between the magazines: "No college football star hoping to make All-America takes it more seriously than the magazines which pick them. To the magazines All-Americas are a deadly business, an important piece of promotion involving the prestige of the magazines as well as their hired experts."
The Associated Press based its selections on a poll of several hundred staff writers, newspaper sports editors and broadcasters. The AP reported that its voters overwhelming agreed on five of the first-team selections -- Dick Rifenberg of Michigan at end, Buddy Burris of Oklahoma at guard, Charlie Justice of North Carolina at back, Doak Walker at quarterback, and Bill Fischer of Notre Dame at tackle.

The first selection of separate offensive and defensive All-American squads

The biggest controversy in the 1948 All-American selection process concerned the widespread use of offensive and defensive specialists, resulting from the adoption of an unlimited substitution rule. The Associated Press considered selecting separate offensive and defensive teams, but opted to continue the tradition of picking a single squad of 11 All-Americans. The AP reported on its decision as follows:
"Sharpest argument this year over bestowing All-America honors centered on the merit of recognizing men who played only offense or defense under the spreading 'two platoon' system. Separate defensive and offensive All-America first teams were proposed. Should the present cleavage widen this could become a possibility."

In the end, the AP named only three platoon players to its All-American teams—offensive specialists, Rifenberg, Justice and Bobby Stuart.
The Central Press Association noted that its 1948 All-American eleven "is not necessarily a true All-American team because of the present-day system of using two teams, an offensive and a defensive unit."
It was the International News Service that in 1948 became the first to break with tradition by naming separate All-American teams on offense and defense. The INS described its decision in its article announcing the selections:
"The days of selecting 11 men on an All-American first team are over, until such time as the unlimited substitution rules are altered. INS thus picks its All-America as the game is now played with the 22 man squad divided into an offensive team and a defensive team."

INS sports editor, Lawton Carver, wrote that the "era of the iron man in football is rapidly passing," as an increasing number of players were being "tutored and geared to specialize for offense or defense and must be recognized for the part they play."

Consensus All-Americans

For the year 1948, the NCAA recognizes seven published All-American teams as "official" designations for purposes of its consensus determinations. The following chart identifies the NCAA-recognized consensus All-Americans and displays which first-team designations they received. The chart also reflects the published point total from the UP poll.
NamePositionSchoolUP votesNumberOfficialOther
Doak WalkerHalfbackSMU2,8207/7AFCA, AP, FW, INS, NEA, TSN, UPCP, CT, LK, NYS, WC
Leo NomelliniTackleMinnesota2,0347/7AFCA, AP, FW, INS, NEA, TSN, UPCP, CT, LK, NYS, WC
Chuck BednarikCenterPenn2,5147/7AFCA, AP, FW, INS, NEA, TSN, UPCP, CT, LK, WC
Charlie JusticeHalfbackN. Carolina2,7406/7AFCA, AP, INS, NEA, TSN, UPCO, CP, CT, WC
Jackie JensenHalfbackCalifornia2,1186/7AFCA, FW, INS, NEA, TSN, UPCP, LK, WC
Dick RifenbergEndMichigan1,7906/7AP, FW, INS, NEA, TSN, UPCP, LK, NYS, WC
Bill FischerGuardNotre Dame2,3355/7AP, INS, NEA, TSN, UPCP, WC
Buddy BurrisGuardOklahoma1,5125/7AFCA, AP, INS, NEA, UPCT, WC
Leon HartEndNotre Dame1,9264/7FW, INS, TSN UPCP, CT, LK, NYS, WC
Al WistertTackleMichigan1,6893/7AFCA, TSN, UPCP, CT, WC
Emil SitkoBackNotre Damena2/7FW, TSNLK, NYS

All-American selections for 1948

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