Foundation and early history The Carnegie Tech Tartan football team was founded ahead of the 1906 football season, where they competed as independents. In their first year of football, the Tartans claimed a modest record of 2-3-2. The Carnegie Tech football program continued to have an unconvincing start, as they accumulated a 4-15 record across the 1907 and 1908 seasons. This negative trend reversed, however, in 1909 as the Tartans posted their first ever winning record by finishing 5-3-1 under first year head coach
Edwin N. Snitjer. The 1910s were a decade of mediocrity, with the Tartans regularly finishing close to the .500 mark; however, by the 1920s, Carnegie Tech had become a national contender and regional powerhouse, posting a record of 34-20-4 in the decade. This includes a
1928 season, in which the Tartans finished the season ranked number 6 in nation by the AP poll. On November 28, 1926, the 6–2 Carnegie Tech football team shut out
Knute Rockne's undefeated
Notre Dame Fighting Irish 19–0 at
Forbes Field. It was the only loss for the Irish that season and only the second time they allowed a touchdown. The game was ranked the fourth-greatest upset in
college football history by
ESPN.
The 1930s: a bowl game and high AP rankings In the 1930s, Carnegie Tech (as it was known then) was among the top college football programs in the country. In
1938 and
1939, the team achieved national rankings in the
AP poll. Ranked sixth at the end of the
1938 regular season, the Tartans earned a January bowl game invitation, but lost to top-ranked
TCU in the
Sugar Bowl in
New Orleans. Carnegie Tech's AP ranking history: • No. 13 – October 17,
1938 • No. 16 – October 24, 1938 • No. 19 – October 31, 1938 • No. 6 – November 7, 1938 • No. 6 – November 14, 1938 • No. 7 – November 21, 1938 • No. 6 – November 28, 1938 • No. 6 – December 5, 1938 (final) • No. 15 – October 16,
1939 Decline and resurgence The team lost 26 straight games from 1942 through 1948 (the 1944 and 1945 seasons were cancelled due to
World War II). In the last game of the 1948 season, the team beat
Grove City, 7–0, on a 51-yard touchdown run by freshman halfback John Luchok. The team improved over the next six years, culminating in the first undefeated season in school history in 1954. That team was led by quarterback Guy Carricato, halfback Eddy Miller and end Chuck Luchok, John Luchok's younger brother.
The Joe Gasparella era In 1963, Carnegie Tech hired former
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback
Joe Gasparella as their head coach. Despite Gasparella's professional pedigree, the Tartans struggled under his leadership, only posting three winning seasons in the twelve years he was head coach. His final career record as head coach of the Tartan football team was 45-60-1 at the time of his retirement in 1975. Despite the unremarkable nature of Gasparella's record on the gridiron, his tenure as head coach was anything but. The Gasparella era was one that was marked by tremendous change and upheaval for the Tartans. Firstly, Gasparella oversaw the football team at the time of the Carnegie Tech-Mellon institute merger in 1967. This merger gave Gasparella and the Tartans a wider recruiting net, allowing Carnegie Mellon to attract athletes interested in both the sciences and the humanities. In 1968, Gasparella affirmed and supported Carnegie Mellon's first move into the Presidents' Athletic Conference. In the PAC, the Tartans performed marginally better than they had previously, regularly finishing around .500 in the middle of the conference. In
1973, when the NCAA split up sports into three divisions, Carnegie Mellon moved with the rest of the PAC into Division III of college football. Gasparella posted a 13-11 record in his three seasons in Division III. After the Carnegie Mellon's three-peat, the Klausing-lead Tartans won three more conference championships in 1981, 1983, and 1985 and made two more Division III playoff appearances. The 1983 team finished the regular season ranked #2 in the nation, the highest ranking ever awarded to a Carnegie Mellon football team. Following a loss in the first round of the 1985 playoffs, Klausing departed from the Tartans to coach for a season at the
University of Pittsburgh, before returning to his original passion of coaching high school football until his retirement in 1993. In 1998, Klausing was inducted into the
College Football Hall of Fame. in 2015 In 2015, runningback Sam Benger lead all of college football with 2,092 yards on the season. Second place was 504 yards behind him. He was just the twenty-first player in Division 3 football history to exceed 2,000 yards. In 2017, Benger was inducted into the national football foundation hall of fame. In 2019, Carnegie Mellon linebacker and long snapper Brian Khoury was signed to the
DC Defenders of the
XFL. Khoury went on to have an NFL career with the
New England Patriots and
Baltimore Ravens. In 2014, the Tartans moved back to the PAC, but failed to replicate the same successful start that they had in the UAA, not winning a conference championship until 2021. Following the 2021 PAC title win, Coach Lackner announced his retirement from football.
The Ryan Larsen era In 2022, Carnegie Mellon announced that they would be hiring
Columbia quarterbacks coach
Ryan Larsen as their next head coach. Larsen wasted no time in finding early success, shattering expectations by posting an 11-1 season in Larsen's debut year. That 2022 Tartans team boasted the longest win streak in college football with eighteen consecutive wins. Having been disqualified from the playoffs in 2021 due to a Covid-19 outbreak, Carnegie Mellon followed up their seven game win streak at the conclusion of the 2021 season with a perfect 2022 season. The Tartans win streak existed until the sweet sixteen of that year's playoffs, when they ultimately fell to the National Champion
North Central Cardinals. The 2023 team posted a similarly impressive record of 10-1. Despite a regular season record of 9-1, the Tartans were not given a bid to the division III playoff. They were, however, selected to compete in a bowl game against the
SUNY Brockport Golden Eagles in a game which was touted as being one between two of the best teams not selected for the playoffs that year. The Tartans dispelled any thoughts about their perceived parity with the Golden Eagles as they earned a commanding 37-7 win. In 2024, like in 2023, the Tartans suffered only one regular season loss, again to Grove City. However, unlike 2023, the Tartans earned an at-large bid to the Division 3 playoffs. After receiving a first-round bye, the Tartans defeated the
Centre Colonels in the second round before falling to the
Mount Union Purple Raiders in the round of sixteen. In 2025, Carnegie Mellon joined the
Centennial Conference as an associate football member. ==Playoff appearances==