(Part four of an ongoing series)
By Chris Willis, NFL Films
The National Football League didn’t recognize a Most Valuable Player Award until 1938 when Joe F. Carr, President of the league at that time, announced that the NFL would officially name
Last year,
1930-
Verne Lewellen, Green Bay Packers, End (Part 3)
1931-
Johnny “Blood” McNally, Green Bay Packers, Wing-Back (Part 3) 
1933-
Ken Strong, New York Giants, Fullback (Part 2)
1936-
Dutch Clark, Detroit Lions, Quarterback-Halfback (Part 1)
In
this installment, I ’ll look at the MVP race for the 1934 NFL season.
One
of the big off-season stories in the NFL in 1934 was the sale of the Portsmouth
Spartans to radio mogul George A. Richards, who moved the franchise north to
Detroit and renamed them the Lions 
In a
decade dominated by rushing the 1934 NFL season was no different. The ten NFL
teams (we are combing St. Louis-Cincinnati) played a variety of schedules
because of a few games being canceled. The Bears, Lions, and Giants all played
13 games; while the Redskins and Pirates played 12; and the Dodgers, Cardinals,
Eagles and Cincy-St. Louis squads played 11 each. So sifting through each
team’s games 
1934 NFL Standings
| 
Eastern Division | 
W-L | 
Pts. For | 
Pts. Against | 
| 
New York Giants | 
8-5 | 
147 | 
107 | 
| 
Boston Redskins | 
6-6 | 
107 | 
94 | 
| 
Brooklyn Dodgers | 
4-7 | 
61 | 
153 | 
| 
Philadelphia Eagles | 
4-7 | 
127 | 
85 | 
| 
Pittsburgh Pirates | 
2-10 | 
51 | 
206 | 
| 
Western Division | 
W-L | 
Pts. For | 
Pts. Against | 
| 
Chicago Bears | 
13-0 | 
286 | 
86 | 
| 
Detroit Lions | 
10-3 | 
238 | 
59 | 
| 
Green Bay Packers | 
7-6 | 
156 | 
112 | 
| 
Chicago Cardinals | 
5-6 | 
80 | 
84 | 
| 
*St. Louis Gunners | 
1-2 | 
27 | 
          61 | 
| 
*Cincinnati Reds | 
0-8 | 
10 | 
         243 | 
NFL
teams in 1934 totaled 16,967 rushing yards on 4,441 carries (a 3.8 average)
with 101 touchdowns. While the passing statistics are downright awful. NFL signal
callers threw 1,606 passes and completed just 505, a completion percentage
of 31 percent, for 7,117 yards. 
The
more glaring stat is the comparison of passing touchdowns to interceptions.
There were only 56 touchdowns compared to a whopping 206 interceptions. Despite
the new rules implemented for the 1933 season (hash marks and passing legal
anywhere behind the line of scrimmage), the passing game was still a work in
progress for most teams in 1934.
Every
team threw at least fifteen interceptions with the Brooklyn Dodgers throwing a
league-high 26 picks- which probably tells why they won only four games all
season and scored the third lowest points in the league with 61 behind the
Pirates (51) and the Cincy-St. Louis combo (37). 
Passing
Packers
quarterback Arnie Herber was heads and shoulders above his counterparts in
passing. He led the NFL in attempts (115), completions (42), passing yards (799)
and touchdowns (8). Herber yards but Herber 
In
the end, Herber remained the best passer in the NFL in 1934, but Newman was the
better 
In
Detroit, the great Dutch Clark put up some underrated numbers. He completed 23
of 50 passes. That doesn’t sound like much but percent and 
| 
1934 NFL Passing Stats | |||||||
| 
1) | 
Arnie Herber, Green
  Bay | 
42 of 115 passes, 799
  yards | 
8 TDs/12 INTs | ||||
| 
2) | 
Warren Heller,
  Pittsburgh | 
31 of 112 passes, 511
  yards | 
2 TDs/ 15 INTs | ||||
| 
3)  | 
Harry Newman, New York | 
35 of 93 passes, 391
  yards | 
1 TD/ 12 INTs | ||||
| 
4) | 
Dutch Clark, Detroit | 
23 of 50 passes, 383
  yards | 
0 TDs/ 3 INTs | ||||
| 
5)  | 
Ed Matesic,
  Philadelphia | 
20 of 60 passes, 278
  yards | 
2 TDs/ 5 INTs | ||||
Receiving
With
the below-average passing stats in 1934 no receiver separated himself that
season. Eagles end Joe Carter was the best of the bunch finishing second in the
NFL in receiving yards (238) and first in catches (16 tied with Red Badgro an 
| 
1934 NFL Receiving
  Stats | |||
| 
1) | 
Harry Ebding, Detroit | 
10 rec, 264 yards,
  26.4  | 
2 TDs | 
| 
2) | 
Joe Carter,
  Philadelphia | 
16 rec, 238 yards,
  14.9  | 
4 TDs | 
| 
3) | 
Red Badgro, New York | 
16 rec, 206 yards,
  12.9  | 
1 TD | 
| 
4) | 
Ben Smith, Pittsburgh | 
14 rec, 218 yards,
  15.6  | 
0 TD | 
| 
5) | 
Jack Grossman,
  Brooklyn | 
11 rec, 161 yards,
  14.6  | 
1 TD | 
Here’s where the MVP race heats up. In the end the contenders really come down to two teams (and three players) who clearly dominated the NFL’s regular season in 1934. The Chicago Bears, who finished the regular season undefeated at 13-0 and the Detroit Lions, who finished second in the Western Division behind the Bears at 10-3 (more on their
Team Rushing Stats
- Chicago Bears- 567 carries for 2,847 (5.0 average); 20 TDs
- Detroit Lions- 632 carries for 2,640 (4.3 average); 27 TDs
- New York Giants- 567 carries for 1,935 (3.4 average); 12 TDs
- Philly Eagles- 460 carries for 1,876 (4.1 average); 11 TDs
- Boston Redskins- 415 carries for 1,688 (4.0 average); 10 TD
The
Bears rushed for an impressive 2,847
yards on 567 carries, averaging an incredible 5.0 yards per rush. They
rushed for 20 touchdowns, only bested by the Lions impressive 27 TDs. The Lions
rushed for 2,640 yards for an average of 4.3-yard carry but Potsy 
Dutch
Clark was the Lions' best rusher finishing 3rd in th in 
The
13-game schedule definitely contributed to the Bears and Lions great rushing
stats, but the Bears rushing season was more than that. To put it in more
historical terms the Bears a 
|  | 
| 
Lions Halfback-Quarterback Dutch Clark carrying  
Credit: PFJ | 
In
Bears history only the 1984 Bears team rushed for more yards than the 1934
version and they did it by carrying the ball over 100 more times in three more
games. 
Bears Team History (1920-2015): Single-Season Record, Rushing Yards
- 1984 Bears: 674 carries for 2,974 rushing yards (16 games)
- 1934 Bears: 567 carries for 2,847 rushing yards (13 games)
- 1977 Bears: 599 carries for 2,811 rushing yards (14 games)
|  | 
| Newspaper Headline Nagurski- Credit: San Bernardino County Sun, Nov. 1, 1934 | 
The
Bears record-breaking 1934 season featured the one-two punch of fullback Bronco
Nagurski phenom th in 
Looking
at the numbers (as well as the undefeated regular season) you would think that
Feathers would be a run-away 
|  | 
| 
Bears Halfback Beattie Feathers (#48) ball carrier as fullback Bronco Nagurski (#3) lead blocks. 
Credit: PFJ | 
The
Eagles Swede Hanson had a very productive year finishing nd in 
|  | 
| 
Eagles halfback Swede Hanson ball carrier against Lions 
Credit: PFJ | 
| 
1934 NFL Rushing Stats | |||
| 
1)  | 
Beattie Feathers,
  Chi B | 
119  | 
8 TDs | 
| 
2)  | 
Swede Hanson,
  Phil | 
146  | 
7 TDs | 
| 
3)  | 
Dutch Clark, Det | 
123  | 
8 TDs | 
| 
4) | 
Bronko Nagurski, Chi  B | 
123  | 
7 TDs | 
| 
5)  | 
Ernie Caddell, Det | 
105  | 
4 TDs | 
1934 NFL Rushing Attempts Per Game
- Harry Newman, New York 14.1 carries per game
- Swede Hanson, Philadelphia 13.3
- Clarke Hinkle, Green Bay 12.0
- Ace Gutowsky, Detroit 11.2
- Warren Heller, Pittsburgh 11.0
- Beattie Feathers, C. Bears 10.8
- Ken Strong, New York 10.6
- Dutch Clark, Detroit 10.3
- Bronko Nagurski, C. Bears 9.5
- Ed Danowski, New York 9.4
Besides
dominating the rushing categories the Bears’ Jack Manders led the league in
scoring with 76 points, mostly on field goals and extra points. No wonder the
Bears went undefeated. But the MVP race comes down to the Lions’ Dutch Clark
and the Bears’ Bronko Nagurski and Beattie Feathers. 
Scoring
| 
1934 NFL Scoring | |||
| 
1) | 
Jack Manders, C Bears | 
76 points (3 TDs, 10
  FGs, 28 XPs) | |
| 
2) | 
Dutch Clark, Detroit | 
73 points (8 TDs, 4
  FGs, 13 XPs) | |
| 
3) | 
Glenn Presnell,
  Detroit | 
63 points (7 TDs, 4
  FGs, 9 XPs) | |
| 
4) | 
Ken Strong, New York | 
56 points (6 TDs, 4
  FGs, 8 XPs) | |
| 
5) | 
Beattie Feathers, C Bears | 
55 points (9 TDs, 1
  XP) | 
Looking
at the MVP race in 1934 the Lions and Bears were clearly the two best teams in
the league. But looking closer games have 
Key Games
One
of the big was a 
The
Lions' 10-0 record on Nov. 18th did 
In
the Lions’ second game (Sept, 30th 
|  | 
| 
Lions Halfback-Quarterback Dutch Clark ball carrier against the Giants 
Credit:  PFJ | 
The
Bears defense was equally tough giving up 86 points, 2nd in was 
In
the season opener (Sept. 23rd against 
|  | 
| 
Bears Halfback Beattie Feathers ball carrier 
Credit:  PFJ | 
As
the season reached November the Bears had two games against the mighty New York
Giants within three weeks. On November 4th the nd quarter Feathers 
Two
weeks later the Bears, still undefeated at 9-0, and the Giants (6-3) battled at
the Polo Grounds in front of a massive crowd of 55,000 fans. The Big Apple saw
one of the toughest and most hard-hitting games of the year. The Giants took control
of the game early behind the play of Ken Strong. His touchdown run and a safety
gave the hometown team a 9-0 lead that held up into th quarter Then with Giants 
|  | 
| 
Bears Fullback Bronco Nagurski being gang tackled by Mel Hein and others of the  
1934 NFL Championship Game 
Credit: PFJ | 
Feathers Injury
and the Two Biggest Games of the Year
On
November 25th the th quarter 
On
the same day Feathers was injured the Lions were upset 3-0 by the Green Bay
Packers, ruining their bid for an undefeated season. 
|  | 
| Headlines Beattie Feathers 1934 Shoulder Injury Credit: Lincoln Evening-Journal, Nov. 27, 1934 | 
The
first quarter saw the two teams exchange touchdowns but nd quarter booted 
The
Bears came out in the second half a different team. The defense played
fantastically and held the Lions scoreless. As for the offense, the Bears adjusted
without Feathers’ sweeps by running Nagurski up the middle. Yards front but Gutowsky Zeller who 
The
Bears tried Nagurski twice up the middle, but got nowhere. But the MVP candidate
on rd down 
Three
days later at Wrigley Field (crowd of 34,412) Nagurski led the Bears to an
undefeated season. Playing again without Feathers, the bruising fullback scored
a short touchdown run in the first quarter to set the tone. The defense did the
rest as the Bears earned a hard-fought 10-7 win to complete a 13-0 regular
season.
|  | 
| 
Bears Fullback Bronco Nagurski ball carrier against the Detroit Lions 
Credit:  PFJ | 
Key
Stat: In the 11 games before the Lions played the Bears they gave up just 30
points- only 2.7 points per game- including seven straight shutouts to start
the season. In the two games against the Bears they surrender 29 points, nearly
15 points a game. Although the Bears averaged 23.3 points per game with
Feathers in the lineup Nagurski helped lead the Bears’ offense to over two
touchdowns a game against the league’s best defense. 
A
week after beating the Lions twice in four days the Bears were stunned in the
1934 NFL Championship Game by the Giants at the Polo Grounds in the famous
“Sneakers Game”- failing to finish the season undefeated. 
1934 NFL MVP 
As
for the 1934 MVP race it comes down to a close vote. 
The
Eagles Swede Hanson had a career year leading the NFL in carries (146) 2nd in nd in Plus he Herber th in 
The
Giants duo of Harry Newman and Ken Strong played hard each week giving th in th in 
|  | 
| Arnie Herber. Credit: PFJ | 
|  | 
| Newman. Credit: PFJ | 
|  | 
| Ken Strong. NY Giants. Credit: PFJ | 
Now, down to the final three.
Lions
super-star Dutch Clark continued his great play on the field since joining the
NFL in 1931. Playing in 12 games in 1934 Dutch led his team to 10 wins;
finished 3rd in th in nd in defensive th in nd in rd in 
Nobody
had a better year statistically than Beattie Feathers. He finished 1st in 
The
definition of MVP is pretty self-explanatory. So if missing the two most
important games of the year, and your team still wins, you might not get the
vote. 
Bronco
Nagurski played in all 13 Bears games and was the heart and soul of an
undefeated team. Every game the Bears played he was a marked man. He finished 4th in rd in th in a 
Nagurski
helped guide his team to back-to-back wins against the tough Lions in the
season’s final two games- just three days apart too- while having no Feathers
in the backfield. In the end his production on the field, as well as his defensive
play and blocking prowess gives him the edge over Feathers in a close, close
vote. 
After finishing 3rd in the voting the previous year in PFJ's retroactive MVPs, Bronco
Nagurski is your 1934 NFL MVP.
1934 NFL MVP
|  | 
| Nagurski. Credit: PFJ | 
Top Five
- Bronco Nagurski, Chicago Bears, Fullback
- Beattie Feathers, Chicago Bears, Halfback
- Dutch Clark, Detroit Lions, Tailback-Quarterback
- Harry Newman, New York Giants, Quarterback; Ken Strong, New York Giants, Fullback
- Arnie Herber, Green Bay Packers, Quarterback
 

 
Great article, I agree with your choices, But, the poor linemen, they get no respect. After the championship game, Lou Little said (Bill) "Morgan's was the greatest exhibition of line play I've ever seen. It's a perfect example of what a one-man rampage can do to a great running attack."
ReplyDeleteWith Clark and the Gruen Award in 1937 that means 1935 and 1932 are the only two left to do in the 30's.
ReplyDeleteAre the 1920's going to be done also?
Yes, Chris will be doing the 1920s as well
ReplyDeleteGreat. That's of more interest to me. Perhaps can fill in some of the blanks for me (McBride '27 & ... )
DeleteDo you think the carry total for Feathers is "settled"? I know there has/had been some controversy.
ReplyDeleteI love reading that
ReplyDelete