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1926 Chicago Bears season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1926 Chicago Bears season
Head coachGeorge Halas
Home fieldWrigley Field, Soldier Field
Results
Record12–1–3
League place2nd NFL

The 1926 season was the Chicago Bears' 7th in the National Football League. The team was able to improve on their 9–5–3 record from 1925 and finished with a 12–1–3 record under head coach George Halas earning them a second-place finish in the team standings, their fifth showing in that place in the last seven years.

Regular season

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This year's Bears may have been the most talented to date, with most of their veterans still playing well and the addition of talented veteran Paddy Driscoll and hard-running rookie William Senn. The Bears opened their season with 13 undefeated games (11 wins and 2 ties). Since ties didn't count in the standings at that time, the Bears were in first place since their main competition, the Frankford Yellow Jackets, had lost an earlier game to the Providence Steam Roller.

The showdown came on December 4 at Frankford. Neither team scored for the first three-quarters of this game; the tie was broken when Senn burst through the Frankford line for a 62-yard touchdown run. Driscoll missed the PAT, leaving Frankford a chance. Frankford proceeded to complete two long passes, the second for a score. Their kicker, Ernest Hamer, made the point after and Frankford won the game. Due to more victories, Frankford was the champion. The Bears were second yet again.

Driscoll was easily Chicago's best player in 1926, scoring 5 TDs, kicking 11 field goals, and converting 14 PATs. Senn scored 7 rushing touchdowns and Frank Hanny had 4 touchdown catches to lead the Bears.

Schedule

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Game Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance Recap Sources
1 September 19 at Milwaukee Badgers W 10–7 1–0–0 Athletic Park Recap [1][2]
2 September 26 at Green Bay Packers T 6–6 1–0–1 City Stadium 7,000 Recap
3 October 3 at Detroit Panthers W 10–7 2–0–1 Navin Field 10,000 Recap
4 October 10 New York Giants W 7–0 3–0–1 Wrigley Field 8,000 Recap
5 October 17 at Chicago Cardinals W 16–0 4–0–1 Soldier Field 12,000 Recap
6 October 24 Duluth Eskimos W 24–6 5–0–1 Wrigley Field 12,000 Recap
7 October 31 Akron Indians W 17–0 6–0–1 Wrigley Field 6,500 Recap
8 November 7 Louisville Colonels W 34–0 7–0–1 Wrigley Field 7,000 Recap
9 November 11 Chicago Cardinals W 10–0 8–0–1 Wrigley Field 10,000 Recap
10 November 14 Milwaukee Badgers W 10–7 9–0–1 Wrigley Field 3,500 Recap
11 November 21 Green Bay Packers W 19–13 10–0–1 Wrigley Field 7,500 Recap
12 November 25 Chicago Cardinals T 0–0 10–0–2 Wrigley Field 8,000 Recap
13 November 28 Canton Bulldogs W 35–0 11–0–2 Wrigley Field 5,000 Recap
14 December 4 at Frankford Yellow Jackets L 6–7 11–1–2 Shibe Park 10,000 Recap
15 December 12 Pottsville Maroons W 9–7 12–1–2 Wrigley Field 5,500 Recap
16 December 19 Green Bay Packers T 3–3 12–1–3 Soldier Field 10,000 Recap
Note: Thanksgiving: November 25.

Standings

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NFL standings
W L T PCT PF PA STK
Frankford Yellow Jackets 14 1 2 .933 236 49 W6
Chicago Bears 12 1 3 .923 216 63 L1
Pottsville Maroons 10 2 2 .833 155 29 T1
Kansas City Cowboys 8 3 0 .727 76 53 W7
Green Bay Packers 7 3 3 .700 151 61 T1
New York Giants 8 4 1 .667 151 61 W3
Los Angeles Buccaneers 6 3 1 .667 67 57 L1
Duluth Eskimos 6 5 3 .545 113 81 L1
Buffalo Rangers 4 4 2 .500 53 62 T1
Chicago Cardinals 5 6 1 .455 74 98 L1
Providence Steam Roller 5 7 1 .417 89 103 L1
Detroit Panthers 4 6 2 .400 107 60 L3
Hartford Blues 3 7 0 .300 57 99 L1
Brooklyn Lions 3 8 0 .273 60 150 L3
Milwaukee Badgers 2 7 0 .222 41 66 L5
Dayton Triangles 1 4 1 .200 15 82 L2
Akron Indians 1 4 3 .200 23 89 T1
Racine Tornadoes 1 4 0 .200 8 92 L4
Columbus Tigers 1 6 0 .143 26 93 L5
Canton Bulldogs 1 9 3 .100 46 161 L1
Hammond Pros 0 4 0 .000 3 56 L4
Louisville Colonels 0 4 0 .000 0 108 L4
Note: Tie games were not officially counted in the standings until 1972.

Roster

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Future Hall of Fame players

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Other leading players

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Players departed from 1925

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References

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  1. ^ "Milwaukee Badgers Drop 10–7 Contest to Chicago Bears," Green Bay Press-Gazette, Sept. 20, 1926, pp. 14-15.
  2. ^ "Bears Win from Milwaukee, 10–7: Paddy Driscoll Stars as Chicago Eleven Sweeps to Victory in Opener," Wisconsin State Journal [Madison], Sept. 20, 1926, p. 14.