1925 College Football All-America Team

Walter Camp died in March 1925, marking the end of his "official" All-American selections for Collier's Weekly.

The eight selectors recognized by the NCAA as "official" for the 1925 season are (1) the All-America Board (AAB), (2) the Associated Press (AP), (3) Collier's Weekly, with Grantland Rice replacing Camp as the selector, (4) Football World magazine, (5) the International News Service (INS), (6) Liberty magazine, (7) the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), and (8) the United Press (UP).

Lardner wrote: "As soon as you have Grange and a center to pass him the ball you don't need or want no more football players and can take advantage of the opportunity to fill out other positions with relatives and congenial friends.

Yost said: "As Walter Camp has stated to me more than once, during the last five years of his life, this job of selecting an All-American was growing more and more difficult because of the great number of good football men in America.

For that reason, Farrell announced that he had submitted questionnaires to 75 leading coaches and officials and picked a team based on those results.

Walter Camp died in March 1925
Bennie Oosterbaan later coached Michigan to a national championship in 1948.
Red Grange , "The Galloping Ghost", was named to seven of eight official All-America teams in 1924.
Ernie Nevers of Stanford