Tampa Spartans football


The Tampa Spartans football program was an intercollegiate American football team for the University of Tampa located in Tampa, Florida that began play in 1933. The program competed against other small college programs in the forerunner of today's NCAA Division II for almost forty years before moving to the top level of NCAA Division I as an independent in 1971. Successfully competing against top college programs as a much smaller school put an enormous strain on the university's finances, and the school decided to discontinue football after the 1974 season.

History

Beginnings of the program

Nickname and colors

When the University of Tampa was founded as Tampa Junior College in 1931, St. Petersburg Junior College was expected to be their top athletic rival. Since the neighboring sports teams were known as the Trojans, the University of Tampa's sports teams became the Spartans, a selection inspired by the Trojan War between Troy and Sparta in ancient Greece. Though the mascots were chosen to promote the rivalry, it never developed, and St. Petersburg College later changed its athletic nickname to the Titans. Meanwhile, Tampa Junior College moved to its current location in the former Tampa Bay Hotel in 1933, changed its name to the University of Tampa, and organized a football program.
Most of the University of Tampa's early students were from Tampa, and most of its early athletes were graduates of the first two public high schools in the area, Hillsborough and Plant. Hillsborough's colors are red and black and Plant's colors are gold and black, so Nash Higgins, "Tampa U"'s first football coach, decided that the Spartans would combine the colors and wear red, gold, and black.

Small college football

The University of Tampa Spartans football program kicked off on October 12, 1933 with a 28–0 win over Bowdon College in LaGrange, Georgia. They played their first home game a week later at Plant Field, which they used for their first three seasons. The Spartans shared Plant Field with many other community events, so the school built Phillips Field on nearby land donated by local businessman I. W. Phillips and moved there for the 1937 season.
During their first three and a half decades of football, the Spartans competed in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and its forerunners, mostly against other small colleges in the south. Tampa U usually fielded competitive teams and won two Cigar Bowls, a bowl game for NAIA programs played in Tampa. The Spartans scheduled eleven games against the Florida State Seminoles in the 1940s and 1950s soon after FSU founded its football program and was playing in the lower division of college football. Tampa went 2–9 against the Seminoles, which the last meeting coming in 1959.The Spartans occasionally competed against NCAA Division I programs, including the University of Florida Gators, whom they played five times in the 1930s and 1940s.

Move to Division I

In 1963, head coach Fred Pancoast encouraged the university to move its football program to the top tier of college football, NCAA Division I, but the university leadership did not feel that the school could support the move at the time, and Pancoast left to become an assistant with the Florida Gators. The Spartans moved from Phillips Field to newly-constructed Tampa Stadium in 1967 and became an independent Division I program beginning with the 1971 season. The Spartans continued to have success on the field, highlighted by wins over established programs Ole Miss and Miami and a 10–2 1972 campaign that was capped by a win in the Tangerine Bowl. The Spartans were led by star players Leon McQuay, Freddie Solomon, Noah Jackson, and John Matuszak, who was the first overall pick in the 1973 NFL Draft.

Ending the program

Although the Spartans found success on the field against Division I opponents, the University of Tampa had only about 1,300 students during the early 1970s, and the football program was putting an increasing financial strain on the small school's limited resources. In early 1975, university president B.D. Owens and the UT finance committee proposed dropping football, citing rising expenses. Owens revealed that the football program had run a deficit of almost $200,000 in 1974 and that UT had borrowed over $750,000 from its endowment to subsidize football since its move to Division I, pushing the entire university towards possible bankruptcy. He also expressed concern that Tampa's new NFL franchise would erode attendance at Spartans' games, increasing financial losses even more. To the disappointment of Spartan players and coaches and the Tampa community in general, the UT Board of Trustees voted on February 20, 1975 to immediately end the football program, cancelling the already scheduled 1975 season.
The Spartans played their last game on November 11, 1974, a 35–10 win over Florida A&M, though no one knew at the time that it would be their final contest. The football program finished with an all-time record of 201–160–12.

Stadiums

Other notable players from the University of Tampa to play professional football are quarterback Jim Del Gaizo, linebacker Ted Greene, tight end M.L. Harris, defensive back J.C. Wilson, linebacker Mike Woods.

Bowl game appearances

Tampa participated in three bowl games, garnering a 3–0 record.