1933 Dixie Rebels football team
{{short description|American college football season}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{Infobox college sports team season
| year = 1933
| team = Dixie Rebels
| sport = football
| image =
| image_size =
| conference = Independent
| record = 2–4
| head_coach = Nick Dobbs (2nd season, first five games)
| head_coach2 = Jim Hamrick (1st season, final game)
| hc_year =
| captain = Jodie Whire (first three games)
| captain2 = Jake "Rabbit" Minnehan (last three games)
| stadium = Steer Stadium, Fair Park Stadium
| prev = 1932
}}
{{1933 Southern college football independents records}}
The 1933 Dixie Rebels football team was an American football team that represented Dixie University (affiliated with Somerville School of Law) during the 1933 college football season. In its first season of intercollegiate football, albeit with a mostly veteran team from the 1932 Jefferson Rangers football team, Dixie compiled a 2–4 record with victories over {{cfb link|year=1933|team=Abilene Christian Wildcats|title=Abilene Christian}} and {{cfb link|year=1933|team=Austin Kangaroos|title=Austin}}, though they scored just one touchdown in each win. In what was considered a benchmark game, Dixie traveled to Lubbock, Texas to play Texas Tech and was trounced 33–0. The head coach of Dixie was Nick Dobbs, and was assisted by Jim Hamrick, the captain of the 1932 Jefferson Rangers. The team captain was star running back Jodie Whire, formerly at the University of Georgia, but he left the team and the school at the end of September and was succeeded by Jake "Rabbit" Minnehan as the captain. On October 27, Dobbs resigned prior to the season finale and was replaced by Hamrick.{{cite news|title=Nick Dobbs Quits As Dixie U. Coach|newspaper=The Dallas Morning News|date=October 29, 1933|page=16|via=Newsbank {{Open access}} }} The Rebels finished with a close loss to North Dakota at Fair Park Stadium.
Dixie University was created by Nick Dobbs in collaboration with the Somerville Law School executives as a new college to transplant his football team-without-a-home Rangers.{{cite news|title=Strike Up Dixie! Rebels Are On Their Way; Nick Dobbs Plans Brand-New Gridiron Circus|newspaper=The Dallas Morning News|date=February 19, 1933|page=3|via=Newsbank {{Open access}} }} After Jefferson University kicked the team out of that university, Dobbs proclaimed “What is wrong with a ready-made football team getting itself a university?” {{cite web|url=http://lostcolleges.com/Dixie-University|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200919164209/https://www.lostcolleges.com/dixie-university|url-status=dead|archive-date=September 19, 2020|website=Lost Colleges|title=Dixie University|accessdate=September 21, 2020}} And with that Dixie was born to house the football team and apparently some college curricula. But the excitement that Dobbs created in 1932 had vanished almost as fast and his 1933 Rebels started to fall apart.
Schedule
{{CFB schedule
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 16
| w/l = w
| opponent = {{cfb link|year=1933|team=Abilene Christian Wildcats|title=Abilene Christian}}
| site_stadium = Steer Stadium
| site_cityst = Dallas, TX
| score = 6-0
| attend = 950
| source = {{cite news|title=Dixie Rebels Open Season With 6-to-0 Victory Overy Abilene Christians|newspaper=The Dallas Morning News|date=September 17, 1933|page=3|via=Newsbank {{Open access}} }}
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 22
| w/l = l
| opponent = Simmons (TX)
| site_stadium = Steer Stadium
| site_cityst = Dallas, TX
| score = 6–17
| attend = 1,200
| source = {{cite news|title=Simmons Cowboys Outplay Local Dixie Rebels to Hang Up 17 to 6 Victory|newspaper=The Dallas Morning News|date=September 23, 1933|page=11|via=NewsBank {{Open access}} }}
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = September 30
| w/l = w
| opponent = {{cfb link|year=1933|team=Austin Kangaroos|title=Austin}}
| site_stadium = Steer Stadium
| site_cityst = Dallas, TX
| score = 6–2
| attend = 400
| source = {{cite news|title=Dixie Rebels Eke Out Slim 6-to-2 Decision Over Austin College|newspaper=The Dallas Morning News|date=October 1, 1933|page=12|via=Newsbank {{Open access}} }}
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 6
| w/l = l
| away = y
| opponent = Texas Tech
| site_stadium = Tech Field
| site_cityst = Lubbock, TX
| score = 0–33
| attend =
| source = {{cite news|title=Rebels Handed 33-0 Drubbing by Texas Tech|newspaper=The Dallas Morning News|date=October 7, 1933|page=11|via=Newsbank {{Open access}} }}
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = October 21
| w/l = l
| away = y
| opponent = {{cfb link|year=1933|team=Sul Ross Lobos|title=Sul Ross}}
| site_stadium = Jackson Field
| site_cityst = Alpine, TX
| score = 0–5
| attend =
| source = {{cite news|title=Sul Ross Wins Over Dixie U. Rebels, 5 to 0|newspaper=The Dallas Morning News|date=October 22, 1931|page=5|via=Newsbank {{Open access}} }}
}}
|{{CFB schedule entry
| date = November 15
| w/l = l
| opponent = North Dakota
| site_stadium = Fair Park Stadium
| site_cityst = Dallas, TX
| score = 12–13
| attend = 250
| source = {{cite news|title=North Dakota Hangs Up 13-to-12 Win Over Dixie Rebels|newspaper=The Dallas Morning News|date=November 16, 1933|page=3|via=Newsbank {{Open access}} }}
}}
}}