1925 season
34th season of men's interhall football, 4th season of the Rockne Romana
Season Summary
League Director: hall managers
Duration of season: October 4 - November 22
Total teams: 10
Games scheduled: 22
Interhall champion: Badin (4-1)
Unknown games: 1C
Season schedule
Interhall championship
1925 interhall championship game
Badin Wins Inter-Hall Honors
Inter-hall football honors for 1925 were won by the Badin Hall gridiron pastimers when they defeated the Freshman Hall aggregation to the sway of 7 to 3 last Sunday morning, Badin won four out of five contests defeating the Sorin combine, a team to which they had previously bowed, 13 to 0 in the tilt that decided the winner of the western circuit. The Frosh lost but two games throughout the season.
Displaying a strong defense and an attack varied by end runs and line plunges, Badin Hall defeated the Freshman 7 to 3 in the intersectional championship tilt Sunday. There was a co-ordination of attacks between backfield and line which the Frosh couldn't stop. The winning tally for Badin, came in the first quarter. The Freshies kicked off and Badin, receiving the ball, marched straight football tactics to the Frosh one yard line. Toby Gish took the ball across the last line for the winning score. Lavelle put the oval between the uprights to total the Badin tally. The score for the newcomers came when the toe of Gebbert placed a forty yard aerial over the bar. The Badin pastimers have showed championship form throughout the entire season.
Author unknown, Notre Dame Scholastic, 27 November 1925Badin Beats Freshmen.
Yearlings are Defeated 7-3, in Interhall Game
The Big Ten of the University of Notre Dame, the 10 teams comprising the interhall league, have settled their disputes and the hatchet is buried. It was buried yesterday in the proud heads of the Freshmen eleven by a ruthlee Badin team that swept over Cartier field as the versity had swept the day before. The resistance was somewhat the same, too, and the final score, 7-3, indicates that the western campus champions were not unhampered in trampling the yearlings.
Experience tells. Among the things it told yesterday was that Badin had a heavier and much shrewder team than the Freshmen and while the score was close, the closeness was because of Freshman desperation rather than ability. The Badin team's offensive was also stopped several times when a score was in sight and, except for the one drive for a touchdown, seemed to lack the vital punch.
Author unknown, The South Bend Tribune, 23 November 1925