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Football Coaching Records
FOOTBALL COACHING RECORDS Overall Coaching Records 2 Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Coaching Records 5 Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) Coaching Records 15 Division II Coaching Records 26 Division III Coaching Records 37 Coaching Honors 50 OVERALL COACHING RECORDS *Active coach. ^Records adjusted by NCAA Committee on Coach (Alma Mater) Infractions. (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct. Note: Ties computed as half won and half lost. Includes bowl 25. Henry A. Kean (Fisk 1920) 23 165 33 9 .819 (Kentucky St. 1931-42, Tennessee St. and playoff games. 44-54) 26. *Joe Fincham (Ohio 1988) 21 191 43 0 .816 - (Wittenberg 1996-2016) WINNINGEST COACHES ALL TIME 27. Jock Sutherland (Pittsburgh 1918) 20 144 28 14 .812 (Lafayette 1919-23, Pittsburgh 24-38) By Percentage 28. *Mike Sirianni (Mount Union 1994) 14 128 30 0 .810 This list includes all coaches with at least 10 seasons at four- (Wash. & Jeff. 2003-16) year NCAA colleges regardless of division. 29. Ron Schipper (Hope 1952) 36 287 67 3 .808 (Central [IA] 1961-96) Coach (Alma Mater) 30. Bob Devaney (Alma 1939) 16 136 30 7 .806 (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct. (Wyoming 1957-61, Nebraska 62-72) 1. Larry Kehres (Mount Union 1971) 27 332 24 3 .929 31. Chuck Broyles (Pittsburg St. 1970) 20 198 47 2 .806 (Mount Union 1986-2012) (Pittsburg St. 1990-2009) 2. Knute Rockne (Notre Dame 1914) 13 105 12 5 .881 32. Biggie Munn (Minnesota 1932) 10 71 16 3 .806 (Notre Dame 1918-30) (Albright 1935-36, Syracuse 46, Michigan 3. -
Hinkey Haines: the Giants' First Superstar
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 4, No. 2 (1982) HINKEY HAINES: THE GIANTS' FIRST SUPERSTAR By C.C. Staph Oh Hinkey Haines, oh Hinkey Haines! The New York Giants' football brains. He never loses, always gains. Oh Hinkey Haines, oh Hinkey Haines! -- anonymous New York sportswriter, 1926 Hinkey Haines was one of those running backs who blaze across the NFL sky for only a short time, yet burn so brightly that they are honored long after their last touchdown. Gale Sayers is a recent example; George McAfee was another. Haines completed his playing career before the league began keeping statistics. As a consequence, he is remembered not for huge yardage totals but for brilliant individual performances. During his short but spectacular career, he put together enough outstanding plays to be ranked with Grange, Driscoll, and Nevers as one of the great runners of his time. He was a phenomenal breakaway runner, famous for his speed. Bob Folwell, the New York Giants' first coach, insisted that in his twenty years of coaching he had never seen a faster man on the gridiron than Haines. If he were playing today, he would almost surely be turned into a wide receiver. Even in those rather pass-sparse days, Hinkey scored several of his most spectacular touchdowns on passes. On punt and kickoff returns, he was deadly. He joined the Giants in 1925 at the comparatively ripe age of 26. For four years, he was the toast of New York. He put in one more season with the Staten Island Stapletons and then retired. He was lured back in 1931 as player-coach of the Stapes, but, at 32, he played only sparingly. -
Glenn Killinger, Service Football, and the Birth
The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School School of Humanities WAR SEASONS: GLENN KILLINGER, SERVICE FOOTBALL, AND THE BIRTH OF THE AMERICAN HERO IN POSTWAR AMERICAN CULTURE A Dissertation in American Studies by Todd M. Mealy © 2018 Todd M. Mealy Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2018 ii This dissertation of Todd M. Mealy was reviewed and approved by the following: Charles P. Kupfer Associate Professor of American Studies Dissertation Adviser Chair of Committee Simon Bronner Distinguished Professor Emeritus of American Studies and Folklore Raffy Luquis Associate Professor of Health Education, Behavioral Science and Educaiton Program Peter Kareithi Special Member, Associate Professor of Communications, The Pennsylvania State University John Haddad Professor of American Studies and Chair, American Studies Program *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School iii ABSTRACT This dissertation examines Glenn Killinger’s career as a three-sport star at Penn State. The thrills and fascinations of his athletic exploits were chronicled by the mass media beginning in 1917 through the 1920s in a way that addressed the central themes of the mythic Great American Novel. Killinger’s personal and public life matched the cultural medley that defined the nation in the first quarter of the twentieth-century. His life plays outs as if it were a Horatio Alger novel, as the anxieties over turn-of-the- century immigration and urbanization, the uncertainty of commercializing formerly amateur sports, social unrest that challenged the status quo, and the resiliency of the individual confronting challenges of World War I, sport, and social alienation. -
Lafayette Football 1913-1925 1913 (4-5-1) 1919 (6-2) 11/15 Alfred
tHe tRaDItIon 2011 lafayette football 99 tRaDItIon of excellence mIlestone football WIns lafayette Ranks 36tH In Since fielding its first college football team in the fall of 1882, all-tIme WIns Lafayette has had a proud, colorful gridiron tradition on the way to Lafayette College fielded its first football team in 1882 and won a total of 633 victories. Football followers on College Hill have been its first game in the fourth contest of the following season, beating able to lay claim to two outright national championships and a share Rutgers, 25-0. Since that win, the Leopards have joined the elite of still another. In 1896, Lafayette and Princeton both claimed a piece group of institutions with 600 or more football victories. Lafayette of the national championship following a scoreless tie. The Leopards played its 1,000th football game on Sept. 16, 1989, and was the first finished the season 11-0-1 while the Tigers were 10-0-1. Undefeated founding Patriot League school to eclipse the 500-victory plateau. 9-0 records in 1921 and 1926 gave Lafayette followers reason to believe they were number one in the country both seasons. Rank School NCAA Division # of Wins 1. Michigan FBS 884 Victory # Year Opponent (Score) 2. Yale FCS 864 1 1883 Rutgers (25-0) 3. Texas FBS 850 58 1896 Princeton (0-0) 4. Notre Dame FBS 844 (tied for national championship) 5. Nebraska FBS 837 100 1900 Dickinson (10-6) 6. Ohio State FBS 830 7. Alabama FBS 823 200 1915 Pennsylvania (17-0) 8. Penn State FBS 818 231 1921 Lehigh (28-6) 9. -
2017 Navy Football 2017 Navy Football
2017 NAVY FOOTBALL All-Time Scores ................................................................................152-160 All-Time Homecoming Results ...............................................................161 Series Records ........................................................................................162 All-Time Letterwinners .....................................................................163-175 THE BROTHERHOOD H 151 2017 NAVY FOOTBALL ALL-TIME SCORES 1879 (0-0-1) 1890 (5-1-1) 1900 (6-3-0) Captain: Bill Maxwell Captain: Charles Emrich 1895 (5-2-0) Coach: Garrett Cochran Coach: Matt McClung Captain: Orie Fowler D11 Baltimore Athletic Club T 0-0 St. John’s College (Md.) W 45-0 Captain: Ed Macauley Georgetown W 70-4 O6 Baltimore Med. College W 6-0 N8 Dickinson W 32-6 Elizabeth Athletic Club W 6-0 O13 Princeton L 0-5 Columbia Athletic Club T 6-6 N.J. Athletic Club W 34-0 O20 Georgetown W 6-0 1882 (1-0-0) Franklin & Marshall W 68-0 Coach: Vauix Carter Kendall W 24-0 O24 Lehigh W 15-0 Carlisle Indians W 34-0 Captain: Alex Jackson Lehigh L 4-24 N3 Washington & Jefferson W 18-0 N29 at Army *## W 24-0 Virginia (Forfeit) W 1-0 N10 Penn State W 44-0 N30 Johns Hopkins W 8-0 * First Army-Navy Game Orange Athletic Club L 6-10 N17 Columbia L 0-11 ## The Plain - West Point, N.Y. Lehigh L 4-6 N21 Pennsylvania L 6-28 D1 Army ## W 11-7 1883 (0-1-0) ## Franklin Field - Philadelphia, Pa. Captain: Frank Hill 1891 (5-2-0) 1896 (5-3-0) Coach: Johnny Poe N29 Johns Hopkins L 0-2 Captain: Charles Macklin Captain: Joe Powell St. John’s College (Md.) W 28-6 1901 (6-4-1) Coach: Doc Hillebrand Rutgers W 21-12 Pennsylvania L 0-8 Captain: Neil Nichols 1884 (1-0-0) Gallaudet (Kendall) W 6-0 Franklin & Marshall W 49-0 Captain: Jim Kittrel N11 Georgetown W 16-4 St. -
Intercollegiate Football Researchers Association Tm
INTERCOLLEGIATE FOOTBALL RESEARCHERS ASSOCIATION ™ The College Football Historian ™ Expanding the knowledge and information on college football’s unique past—today! ISSN: 1526-233x May 8, 2010 Vol. 3 No. 4 circa: Jan. 2008 Tex Noel, Editor ([email protected]) http://www.secsportsfan.com/college-football-association.html [2009 Summer Issue of NCAA Champion, thrown into the game That rival used by permission of the author and IFRA hands may never touch; A rubber member, David Pickle] bounding, blasting soul Whose destination is the goal – Red Grange NUMBERS of Illinois!” THAT FORMED Even now, 85 years later, the LEGENDS College Football Hall of Fame biography for the Galloping Ghost By David Pickle says, “For the day, he carries the ball 21 times for 402 yards.” It was perhaps the most glorious day in college football history. On But it didn’t happen that way, at October 18, 1924, beneath a blue- least not exactly. gray sky in New York City’s Polo Grounds, Notre Dame defeated Grange did have a tremendous day, Army and propelled sportswriter and he did account for six Grantland Rice into immortality touchdowns and amass 402 yards, with his description of the Irish’s much of it in the first 12 minutes. “Four Horsemen” backfield. He did not, however, rush for 402 yards as many contemporary At the same moment, about 800 reports suggested. miles to the west, Illinois halfback Red Grange was building his own Instead, re-creations of the game legend. On that day, at the indicate that he ran for 212 yards, dedication of Memorial Stadium, he passed for 64 and added 126 more accounted for six touchdowns on kickoff returns. -
The Perfect Tackle: the Career of Hall of Famer Pete Henry
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 27, No. 5 (2005) The Perfect Tackle: The Career of Hall of Famer Pete Henry By Chris Willis “Tackles will come and tackles will go, but never will professional football enthusiasts of Canton (Ohio) ever see the peer of Wilbur Henry, 247-pounder, resident of Mansfield, graduate of Washington-Jefferson College at Washington, Pa., and a member of Canton Bulldogs teams for the last three campaigns in which he has played every game. Though he never would be able to qualify as a matinee idol, the Richland-co. individual stands out as the greatest tackle in football today- bar none, as the prohibitionists say.”-- Canton Repository, 1922. In the early years of the National Football League, most newspaper headlines- if they wrote about the NFL- were usually reserved for the exploits of fleet-footed halfbacks or bruising fullbacks scoring touchdowns. But in Canton, Ohio where the Canton Bulldogs were kings, the headlines seemed to be written about a very popular and highly gifted tackle, who was nicknamed “Fats,” who might’ve been the most talented player in the NFL. Wilbur Francis Henry was born on October 31, 1897 in the small town of Mansfield, Ohio, as the only child to Ulysses and Bertha Henry. While growing up the name Wilbur didn’t stick for very long and the Ohio kid was simply called “Pete,” the name he was called for the rest of his life. Pete gained a big appetite for food while living on the family farm and the rotund boy would use his size to become a great athlete. -
Lafayette-Lehigh Game MVP Beginning in 1960 Meeting, the Media the Lafayette-Lehigh MVP Winners : 1989 Tom Costello (Lafayette), TB, So
TABLE OF CONTENTS 2019 SCHEDULE MEDIA INFORMATION OPPONENTS Lafayette Quick Facts .................... 2 Opponent Capsules ................. 32-33 AUGUST 31 The Rivalry — Lafayette vs. Lehigh ....34-35 31 at William & Mary ...........................6 p.m. 2019 LEOPARDS Overall Series Records . .36-42 For complete player and coach bios, SEPTEMBER please see GoLeopards.com 2018 SEASON REVIEW 7 at Monmouth ..................................1 p.m. Career Statistics and Single-Game Highs ... 5-21 Game-by-Game Recaps ..............44-49 14 SACRED HEART .................... 12:30 p.m. Alphabetical Roster .................. 22-23 Overall Statistics .................... 50-51 21 at Albany ................................... 3:30 p.m. Numerical Roster.................... 24-25 Patriot League Standings/Awards.........52 28 PENN (Homecoming) ....................3:30 p.m. Short Roster/Pronunciation Guide ........26 THE TRADITION OCTOBER COACHING STAFF Fisher Stadium ........................54 5 OPEN Fred M. Kirby II ’42 Head Coach Tradition of Excellence ..................55 11 at Princeton ....................................7 p.m. John Garrett..........................28 Lafayette All-Americans . .56 19 at Georgetown*............................12 p.m. Assistant Coaches . .29-30 Team Most Valuable Players .......... 57-58 26 BUCKNELL* .............................. 3:30 p.m. Team Records .........................58 Individual Records................... 59-68 NOVEMBER All-Patriot League Players............. 69-71 2 FORDHAM* ......................... -
The Shield Phi Kappa
Volume 36 OCTOBER 1915 Number 1 THE SHIELD OF PHI KAPPA PSI The official magazine of the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. Published under the authority and direction of the Executive Council ESTABLISHED 1879 Entered as second-class matter October 15,1912, at the post office at Albany, New York, under the act of March 3,1879 LLOYD L. CHENEY, EDITOR Ai^BANY, NEW YORK THE SHIELD CONTENTS FOR OCTOBER 1915 THE FRATERNITY AND THE FRESHMAN William I. Woodcock, Jr. 1 EARLY DAYS OF OHIO ALPHA AND NEW YORK ALPHA John A. Rea 5 PITTSBURG PREPARING FOR NO. 4 7 OFF FOR THE GEE-A-SEE 9 THE PRESIDENT'S CORNER Sion B. Smith 10 CHAPTER BUSINESS EFFICIENCY Kenneth Barnard 12 LETTERS FROM DAD 14 PROFESSOR TAFT DEFENDS FRATERNITIES 15 CALIFORNIA GAMMA'S NEW HOUSE Harold B. Reed 16 LITTLE SKETCHES OF BIG PHI PSIS 18 DEMOCRACY AT MICHIGAN 22 NEW DIRECTORY PROVES VALUABLE 23 RILEY DAY IN INDIANA 23 NOTABLE MEN AT PENNSYLVANIA BETA'S CELEBRATION B. F. Miller, Jr. 24 EDITORIAL 26 PHI KAPPA PSI NOTES 29 ALUMNI ASSOCIATION CORRESPONDENCE 35 CHAPTER CORRESPONDENCE 39 OBITUARY 56 Illustrations: THIRD DISTRICT COUNCIL, frontispiece; JOHN L. PORTER; N. R. DAUGHERTY; B. M. JOHNSON; F. D. GLOVER; CALIFORNIA GAMMA'S NEW CHAPTER HOUSE; THE NEW WILLIAM PENN HOTEL; NEW HOME OF MICHIGAN UNION; HON. JAMES E. WATSON; DR. EDMUND J. JAMES. HON. JAY H. NEFF. THE SHIELD is the official organ of the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity, and is published under the authority and direction of the Executive Council as follows : October, December, February, April, June and August. -
Washington & Jefferson: Team of the 90'S (1890'S
Who is College Football's place. Michigan? The Wolverines were among the leaders, with a 70- "King of the Nineties"? 20-3 record (77.8), good for 8th... By E. Lee North But guess who comes in at No. 5? In the 1890s decade W & J posted [Warning to viewers: if you do not 65 wins against ten losses and eight like statistics, skip the first few ties, or 86.7 pct. No. 6 is also a paragraphs!] surprise, University of Buffalo -- 17 By "king of the Nineties," we are wins, four losses, and five ties referring to the 1890s and 1990s... (81.0). Next is Stanford at 30-9-7 so let's consult the record books, (77.9), then the aforementioned noting that some of the schools with Michigan at 8, Texas 20-6-0 (76.9) top records in the 1990s either did at No. 9, and (wow!) Oberlin 44-14-4 not play in the 1890s (e.g., Florida (75.9) to finish our top 10. did not start football til 1906; Rounding out our 1890s top 20 are Miami, 1926; Florida State, 1947; VMI, Kansas, Bates, Navy, St. Johns--MN, 1910) or did not Wisconsin, Notre Dame, Oregon, play over half of the ten years of the Grove City, North Dakota, and 1890s decade (e.g., Marshall Vanderbilt. University and Mount Union). W & J a Deserving No. 5 in 1890s As longtime students of football may know, the Ivy League was the So little Washington and Jefferson gridiron leader for most of the College, averaging less than five sport's early years, so it is no hundred students a year, was FIFTH surprise to find that Yale was No. -
2017 Navy Football 2017 Navy Football
2017 NAVY FOOTBALL Individual Records ...........................................................................126-133 Rushing ........................................................................................126-127 Passing .........................................................................................127-128 Receiving ......................................................................................128-129 Total Offense .......................................................................................129 Scoring .........................................................................................129-130 Kicking / Punting .........................................................................130-131 Interceptions .......................................................................................131 Punt Returns .......................................................................................131 Kickoff Returns ...................................................................................132 All-Purpose ..................................................................................132-133 Defense ................................................................................................133 Team Records ...................................................................................133-135 Single-Game Offense ..................................................................133-134 Season Offense ..................................................................................134 -
191-193N196 Nygiants.Qxd:New York Giants 04R.Qxd
NEW YORK GIANTS CLUB OFFICIALS COACHING HISTORY President/CEO: John K. Mara (669-555-33) Chairman/EVP: Steve Tisch Records include postseason games Treasurer: Jonathan Tisch Senior Vice President-General Manager: 1925 Bob Folwell ......................8-4-0 Jerry Reese 1926 Joe Alexander ..................8-4-1 Senior Vice President and Chief 1927-28 Earl Potteiger..................15-8-3 Marketing Officer: Michael Stevens 1929-1930 LeRoy Andrews*............24-5-1 Senior Vice President and General 1930 Benny Friedman- Counsel: William J. Heller, Esq. Steve Owen......................2-0-0 Senior Vice President, Player Personnel: Chris Mara 1931-1953 Steve Owen............153-108-17 Senior Vice President, Medical Services: 1954-1960 Jim Lee Howell ............55-29-4 Ronnie Barnes 1961-68 Allie Sherman...............57-54-4 Senior Vice President and Chief Financial 1969-1973 Alex Webster................29-40-1 Officer: Christine Procops 1974-76 Bill Arnsparger** ...........7-28-0 Senior Vice President, Corporate 1976-78 John McVay.................14-23-0 Partnerships: John Maguire National Football Conference 1979-1982 Ray Perkins..................24-35-0 East Division Senior Vice President, Communications: Pat Hanlon 1983-1990 Bill Parcells ..................85-52-1 Team Colors: Blue, Red, and White Vice President, Communications: 1991-92 Ray Handley.................14-18-0 Timex Performance Center Peter John-Baptiste 1993-96 Dan Reeves..................32-34-0 1925 Giants Drive Vice President of Community Relations: 1997-2003 Jim Fassel....................60-56-1 East Rutherford, New Jersey 07073 Frank Mara 2004-2011 Tom Coughlin...............82-57-0 Telephone: (201) 935-8111 Vice President of Marketing: *Released after 15 games in 1930 Rusty Hawley **Released after seven games in 1976 Vice President of Media and 2012 SCHEDULE Partnerships: Dan Lynch PRESEASON Vice President, Giants Entertainment: PAID ATTENDANCE Aug.