Word: kazmaier
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...individual playing, Dick Kazmaier of Princeton is fourth in the East in total yards gained, and A1 Pollard of Army is fourth in yards gained by rushing. Bob MacConnell of Brown is the East's fifth best punter, averaging 38.7 yards...
...right, two strong men of the Tiger backfield, Kazmaier (42) (with ball), and Davison (34) (with scowl) tramp their way toward the Crimson defense. This end run was good for eight yards...
...instilled with the rudiments of single wing shoulder blocking, Caldwell has been able to open gaping holes in every defense he has encountered. But the key to the success of the Princeton single wing has been a backfield possessing a blocking quarterback (George Chandler), a triple threat tailback (Dick Kazmaier), a shifty fullback (Jack Davison), and a pair of breakaway wingbacks in Bill Kleineasser and Bob Unger...
...Although Kazmaier is second only to Reds Bagnell in League passing Princeton has never had to rely on its passing attack to open up a ball game. In fact Caldwell usually spreads the opponent's defense with a buck-lateral series which sends fullback Davison up the middle. It was Davison who put Princeton ahead in last year's game with a 67-yard dash through the guards...
...backfield is Dick Kazmaier, the 168-pound tailback who was the Ivy League leader in total individual ground gaining last season. He is currently second to Penn's Red Bagnell in that department, which can be attributed partly to Princeton's more balanced attack. Kazmaier, shifty runner and a very good passer, is remembered locally for the part he played in Princeton's 49 to 14 victory at the Stadium last year...