1923 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team

1923 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football
ConferenceIndependent
Record3–5
Head coach
CaptainMaurice Taylor
Home stadiumAggie Stadium
1923 Midwestern college football independents records
Conf.Overall
TeamW L TW L T
Marquette    8 0 0
Michigan Mines    2 0 0
Notre Dame    9 1 0
Western State Normal    6 1 1
Haskell    11 2 1
Butler    7 2 0
Central Michigan    5 1 2
Baldwin–Wallace    5 2 1
Cincinnati    6 3 0
Loyola (IL)    6 3 0
Saint Louis    5 3 1
Detroit    4 3 2
Wabash    4 3 2
John Carroll    4 4 1
Valparaiso    2 2 1
Dayton    4 5 0
Michigan Agricultural    3 5 0
Fairmount    2 4 2
Kent State    0 5 0

The 1923 Michigan Agricultural Aggies football team was an American football team that represented Michigan Agricultural College (MAC), now known as Michigan State University, as an independent during the 1923 college football season. In their first year under head coach Ralph H. Young, the Aggies compiled a 3–5 record and were outscored by a total of 144 to 56. It was the Aggies' 28th season of intercollegiate football.

MAC opened its season with a 34–0 loss to Amos Alonzo Stagg's Chicago Maroons. The Aggies also suffered one-sided losses to Wisconsin (21–0), rival Michigan (37–0), and Creighton (27–7). The team's only victories were in games with Lake Forest (21–6), Albion (13–0), and Detroit (2–0). After the victory over Detroit in the final game of the season, MAC's students were criticized for their "deplorable" actions as "an ordinary mob" resulting in the destruction of private property and a "battle with the police." The Lansing State Journal wrote that the students needed "a good spanking."

Key players included end Ray "Stub" Kipke, the younger brother of Michigan's All-American halfback Harry Kipke, and quarterback Roland Richards.

MAC played its games in a new, but not fully completed, concrete Aggie Stadium with a seating capacity of 16,000 for the 1923 season. The stadium was officially dedicated in 1924.