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Marshall Mills, West Virginia (AP-2) Tackles. Al Krevis, Boston College (AP-1; UPI-1) ... Ed Jones, Rutgers (AP-1) Glenn Hodge, Pittsburgh (AP-2; UPI-1)
The 1973 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team represented Rutgers University in the 1973 NCAA Division I football season. In their first season under head coach Frank R. Burns , the Scarlet Knights compiled a 6–5 record.
The 1972 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team represented Rutgers University in the 1972 NCAA University Division football season. In their 13th and final season under head coach John F. Bateman, the Scarlet Knights compiled a 7–4 record. The team outscored its opponents 290 to 171.
Marshall Jones may refer to: Marshall "Rock" Jones (1941–2016), American musician; Marshall G. Jones, American mechanical engineer; See also.
Rutgers competes as a member of the Big Ten Conference. Prior to joining the Big Ten, the Scarlet Knights were a member of the American Athletic Conference (formerly the Big East Conference) from 1991 to 2013. Rutgers plays its home games at SHI Stadium, in Piscataway, New Jersey. The team is currently led by head coach Greg Schiano.
Louis Marshall Jones, the youngest of 10 children, was born Oct. 20, 1913, to Arcadia and David Clinton Jones on a sharecropper farm in Henderson County, Kentucky, near the Ohio River.
Miami and Rutgers had the most individual winners of the award, with three. Terry Shea of Rutgers is the only winner after a losing season, [8] while Walt Harris was 6–6 in 1997. [9] The award was shared twice; both times, Strong was one of the recipients. He shared the award with Randy Edsall in 2010 and Kyle Flood in 2012.
The 1995 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team represented Rutgers University in the 1995 NCAA Division I-A football season.In their sixth and final season under head coach Doug Graber, the Scarlet Knights compiled a 4–7 record, were outscored by opponents 412 to 304, and finished in sixth place in the Big East Conference.