Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/383968
uarterback Christian
Hackenberg won't be
the last Penn State
player to wear jersey
No. 14, but it's a number
with a legacy that
stretches back to 1908
and a game against one-
time bitter rival Pitt.
Over the decades, dozens of Nittany
Lions have worn jersey No. 14 and two of
them were quarterbacks who led the
team to national championships. A third
quarterback was the runner-up for the
Heisman Trophy. One No. 14 went on to
become a Hall of Fame coach, and an-
other was a star running back on the
great unbeaten Cotton Bowl team in
1947.
Some of the players who have donned
the No. 14 jersey were starters, and oth-
ers were little-used reserves. No one is
more obscure than William Mordecai
Riddle, the ;rst player to have worn the
number.
Riddle is not listed among the dozens
of Nittany Lion lettermen whose names
are preserved on a wall in the Lasch
football building and printed every fall
in the Penn State Football Yearbook.
Yet, based on information in the stu-
dent newspaper and school yearbook,
LaVie, he played four years from 1907-
10 as a guard and tackle, usually as the
prime backup and an occasional
starter.
Unfortunately for Riddle, the policies
for earning a varsity letter in his era
were strict, based on an inordinate
amount of playing time that Riddle ap-
parently never accrued.
What we do know is that Riddle was
from the Pittsburgh suburb of Coraopo-
lis and attended Slippery Rock Normal
before enrolling at Penn State to study
electrical engineering. Perhaps Riddle
can best be summed up by this com-
ment in the LaVie biographical sketches
of his 1911 senior class: "An unassuming
modest man."
It was on Thanksgiving Day of 1908
before 9,000 fans at Pittsburgh's Expo-
sition Park when W. Mordecai Riddle
began the generational link to Christian
Hackenberg. That was the ;rst time
Penn State players wore jerseys with
numbers. Washington & Je

