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Modern Football
American football was made popular by teams representing colleges and
universities. These teams dominated the game for most of the first 100
years of football in the United States. Even today, despite greatly
increased interest in professional football, intercollegiate
contests—played by some 640 team—are attended by more than 35 million
spectators each year. Many college stadiums hold more than 50,000
spectators; one stadium, at the University of Michigan, holds more than
100,000. Many of the major universities are now grouped in conferences,
such as the Big Ten (northern midwest), the Big Eight (midwest), the
Pacific Ten (western states), the Southeastern Conference, and the Ivy
League (northeast).
The birth date of football in the United States is
generally regarded by football historians as November 6, 1869, when
teams from Rutgers and Princeton universities met in New Brunswick, New
Jersey, for the first intercollegiate football game. In the early games,
each team used 25 players at a time.
By 1873 the number was reduced to
20 players, in 1876 to 15 players, and in 1880 to 11 players, where it
has remained. In the 1900s, college football became one of the country's
most popular sports spectacles. Ranked among the greatest United States
sports heroes of the 20th century are such student athletes as Jim
Thorpe of Carlisle Institute; George Gipp of the University of Notre
Dame; Red Grange of the University of Illinois; Tom Harmon of the
University of Michigan; Doak Walker of Southern Methodist University;
Glenn Davis and Doc Blanchard, the “Touchdown Twins” of Army (the U.S.
Military Academy) and Joe Namath of the University of Alabama.
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