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・ 1951–52 OB I bajnoksag season
・ 1951–52 Oberliga (ice hockey) season
・ 1951–52 Philadelphia Warriors season
・ 1951–52 Polska Liga Hokejowa season
・ 1951 Summer International University Sports Week
・ 1951 Sun Bowl
・ 1951 Svenska Cupen
・ 1951 Svenska Cupen Final
・ 1951 Swedish Ice Hockey Championship
・ 1951 Swiss Grand Prix
・ 1951 Swiss motorcycle Grand Prix
・ 1951 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race
・ 1951 TANFL season
・ 1951 Taça de Portugal Final
・ 1951 Team Speedway Polish Championship
1951 Tennessee Volunteers football team
・ 1951 Titleholders Championship
・ 1951 Torneo di Viareggio
・ 1951 Toronto Argonauts season
・ 1951 Tour de France
・ 1951 Triangulaire
・ 1951 U.S. National Championships (tennis)
・ 1951 U.S. National Championships – Men's Singles
・ 1951 U.S. National Championships – Women's Singles
・ 1951 U.S. Open (golf)
・ 1951 U.S. Women's Open Golf Championship
・ 1951 UCI Road World Championships
・ 1951 UCI Track Cycling World Championships
・ 1951 UCLA Bruins football team
・ 1951 UMass Redmen football team


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1951 Tennessee Volunteers football team : ウィキペディア英語版
1951 Tennessee Volunteers football team

The 1951 Tennessee Volunteers football team represented the University of Tennessee in the 1951 season. In his next to last season as head coach, Robert Neyland led the Vols to their second consecutive national title and the fourth during his tenure. The 1951 title was also the first undisputed, at the time, national title in school history. Maryland has since been retroactively credited with the 1951 national championship by several selectors, including analyst Jeff Sagarin, as they went undefeated that year and beat Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl. At the time, the AP awarded the title before the bowl games were played. 1951 was also Neyland's ninth undefeated regular season in his career. The 1950 Tennessee team had gone 11–1, winning its last nine games and capping the season off with a victory over Texas in the Cotton Bowl. In 1951, The Vols put together a 10–0 regular season and were voted national champs by the AP Poll before the bowl season began, as was the convention at the time. The game against Alabama on the Third Saturday in October that season was the first ever nationally televised game for both teams. The Vols were a dominant team in the regular season, winning their first nine games by a combined score of 338 to 61 before thwarting a spirited effort by in-state rival Vanderbilt in the last game of the regular season, 35–27.
==Prominent players==
The 1951 Tennessee Volunteers featured Hank Lauricella, that season's Heisman Trophy runner up, and Doug Atkins, a future member of both the College Football Hall of Fame and the Pro Football Hall of Fame. James Haslam Jr., a future business and civic leader in Knoxville, was a captain on the 1952 team, and a prominent member of the 1951 squad. The team featured six all-conference players: Lauricella, Atkins, Ted Daffer, John Michaels, Bill Pearman, and Bert Rechichar. Laricella, Daffer, and Pearman were also named All-Americans following the year.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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