![]() |
||||||||
|
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
The
Winged Helmet ![]() Michigan's football helmet is surely one of the most
instantly recognizable icons in college sports. The famous "winged"
design dates from 1938 when Coach Herbert O. "Fritz" Crisler
arrived from Princeton to begin a new era in Michigan football. Even
as the design and composition of helmets evolved from stitched cowhide
to high-tech, molded plastic, the winged design has remained the pre-eminent
symbol of Michigan football. Other Michigan athletic teams have adopted
the winged design for their own headgear as well.
After winning national titles in 1932 and 1933, Michigan had gone four years without a winning season and team morale had suffered accordingly. Coach Harry Kipke left a core of veterans and some very promising sophomores, but one of Crisler's first tasks was to instill a new attitude in the team. Known as a wily tactician and motivator, Crisler introduced the new helmet and changes in the Wolverine's uniform to mark the beginning of a new era. As 1938 captain Fred Jahnke recalled in 1987, "Just before the opener, the old black helmets were replaced with a wing type of today's style; form fitting wool pants allowed freer movement and the old "M" jersey became the tear away kind." In Crisler's recollection, "Michigan had a plain black helmet and we wanted to dress it up a bit." The distinctive helmet would also have practical advantages on the field. Crisler figured the helmet would help his quarterbacks find receivers down field."There was a tendency to use different colored helmets just for receivers in those days, but I always thought that would be as helpful for the defense as for the offense," Crisler recalled. In any event, the new helmet made a successful debut in the 1938 season opener against Michigan State. The Wolverines defeated the Spartans 14-0 behind two touchdown runs by sophomore Paul Kromer to gain their first win over Michigan State in four years. Whether the helmet helped the passing game is hard to say, Michigan completed four of eight attempts for 46 yards with no interceptions. The game certainly marked a change in Michigan's football fortunes. The Michigan Alumnus commented, "Michigan has a fighting gridiron outfit once more; a team that knows how to do things and a burning desire-and considerable ability-to do what it wants." Oddly, none of the newspaper accounts of the game make mention of the new helmet. Crisler's first team went on to compile a 6-1-1 record and tie for second in the conference. Whether attributable to the new helmet or not, the passing game improved significantly over 1937's final statistics; total yardage nearly doubled, interceptions were cut nearly in half and completion percentage was up by nine percent. Some accounts of the actual design of the new helmet have sometimes suggested Crisler came up with the idea out of whole cloth. In fact, the previous year Crisler had introduced a helmet at Princeton that should look remarkably familiar to Wolverine fans. The winged design simply took advantage of features of a helmet the Spalding sporting goods company first advertised in the 1937 edition the Official Intercollegiate Football Guide. Crisler's 1938 innovation at Michigan was to paint the helmet maize and blue. His predecessor, Harry Kipke, had also experimented with special markings on the helmets in 1937. Fortunately, though, his designs did not catch-on. Forest Evashevski, another of the sophomore stars on Crisler's 1938 squad and the only one to start the Michigan State game, models the old style helmet Michigan had worn since the 1920s. Because
so many schools wore the same black or brown helmet, a number of teams
added distinctive markings. For three games during the 1937 season Michigan's
helmet sported white stripes,
but the design was abandoned halfway through the season. Michigan
State had adopted its version of a "winged helmet" several years
earlier. The Spartans wore several models of the Spalding
winged helmet until 1948 when they joined the Big Ten and adopted
a different style helmet. While
other schools changed their look when they switched from the leather helmet,
Michigan simply painted the wings and stripes on the new material. There
have been a few minor changes to the design over the years. The shape
of the wing has been smoothed out a bit, the stripes now extend all the
way to the base of the helmet and player numbers were added to the side
of the helmet during the years 1959-1968. Info for this page was taken from here.
|
||||||||||||
| Copyright © 1995-2008 by Information Superbrand, Inc. All rights reserved. | |||||||||||||