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Uniform Numbers

The Jersey Numbers that make up the Hisory of Each Day of the Year

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About the Daily Sports History Through Jersey Numbers

We have said it before and will probably overstate it again, but one of the deepest connections that an athlete in a team sport has to spectators is the number they wear on their person. These iconic digits generally worn on the shirts of the participants become a synonomous with their names to the average fan. Officials use the number to identify fouls, scoring and who is the captain on the field. We aim as always here on the Sports Jersey Dispatch to preserve history through these numbers of our past heroes, and in this section we do it one day at a time!  Enjoy!


Podcast of Sports Number History

The history of the big bold numbers on sports uniforms themselves is our topic dujour. Join me in learning more about when and why numbers were placed on the shirts of the athletes we watch. As an added bonus Joe Ziemba joins us in the Pigpen to talk about White Sox legend, Minnie Minoso!


General History Of Jersey Numbers

The first recorded use of numbers on jerseys belongs to our friends from New Zealand and Australia. The first formal use was during the late 1890s during rugby matches in those two countries on the other side of the world.
Author Timothy P. Brown on his Fields of Friendly Strife website claims that American Football may have performed the numeral adornment as first in North America. Brown’s September 2021 article claims that Amos Alonzo Stagg thought about putting numbers on his University of Chicago players around 1900 but rescinded the idea when he worried that it would make the scouting of his players by opponents much easier. A Thanksgiving Day collegiate game in 1905 though between Iowa State and Drake did have unique numbers on the participants. The article says that the numbers were painted on pieces of canvas that had been sewn on the jersey back of each player in the game. 50 numbered shirts were provided with Drake using the first 25 and then Iowa State using the remaining number of 26 through 50.
The digits were displayed prominently on player jerseys to identify them from other players, spectators, game scorers and officials. In the early days of its use, there was order in its implementation. In soccer or Association Football, the players were made to wear the numbers 1 to 11, with the goalie wearing number 1 and so on. In baseball, the number corresponded to the order of the batting position. In American football it was often the case of the best player having the lowest number, so wearing jersey number one on the gridiron was a prestigious honor indeed in that era.
Today, however, the players are oftentimes are allowed to choose their own number, as long as the number has not been retired and no one else in the team uses that particular number. Most levels of American football range numbers based on the player’s position, so the digits they select are a bit more limited than other sports.
Here is a basic list of when each major sport first used numbers on the shirts/sweaters of the players:

  • The 1890s- Australian and New Zealand rugby teams
  • 1905 - American college football teams of Iowa State and Drake.
  • 1911 - Australian Rules Football 
  • 1911-12 - Hockey played in the National Hockey Association required its players to wear numbers on their sweaters for identification purposes. Right around that same time the Pacific Hockey League required numbers on the players so that they could generate added revenue by selling programs to spectators.
  • 1916 - Cleveland Indians baseball team. 
  • 1920 - APFA/NFL used them right from the start.
     

Photo Credits

The photo above in the banner is of the 1925 Courtesy of 1925 American football game of Michigan versus Minnesota by an unknown photographer. Courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Also thanks to authors Timothy Brown and Joe Ziemba for helping us preserve the history of uniforms.


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Orville Mulligan: Sports Writer
We invite you to take a ride through 1920's sports history in the audio drama that takes the listener through the sounds and legendary events of the era through the eyes of a young newspaper journalist. You will feel like you were there! Brought to you by Number 80 Productions and Pigskin Dispatch
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Hut! Hut! Hike! Book
Historian Timothy P. Brown has released another excellent book to help fill our football minds with knowledge. His latest is called Hut! Hut! Hike!: A History of Football Terminology.

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