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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. -
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 7, No. 5 (1985) THE 1920s ALL-PROS IN RETROSPECT By Bob Carroll Arguments over who was the best tackle – quarterback – placekicker – water boy – will never cease. Nor should they. They're half the fun. But those that try to rank a player in the 1980s against one from the 1940s border on the absurd. Different conditions produce different results. The game is different in 1985 from that played even in 1970. Nevertheless, you'd think we could reach some kind of agreement as to the best players of a given decade. Well, you'd also think we could conquer the common cold. Conditions change quite a bit even in a ten-year span. Pro football grew up a lot in the 1920s. All things considered, it's probably safe to say the quality of play was better in 1929 than in 1920, but don't bet the mortgage. The most-widely published attempt to identify the best players of the 1920s was that chosen by the Pro Football Hall of Fame Selection Committee in celebration of the NFL's first 50 years. They selected the following 18-man roster: E: Guy Chamberlin C: George Trafton Lavie Dilweg B: Jim Conzelman George Halas Paddy Driscoll T: Ed Healey Red Grange Wilbur Henry Joe Guyon Cal Hubbard Curly Lambeau Steve Owen Ernie Nevers G: Hunk Anderson Jim Thorpe Walt Kiesling Mike Michalske Three things about this roster are striking. First, the selectors leaned heavily on men already enshrined in the Hall of Fame. There's logic to that, of course, but the scary part is that it looks like they didn't do much original research. -
Sports Coaches9 Schools Reveal a Job for Golf by SAL DI BUONO Professional, Bonnie Briar Country Club, Larchmont, N
Sports Coaches9 Schools Reveal a Job for Golf By SAL DI BUONO Professional, Bonnie Briar Country Club, Larchmont, N. Y. There is an angle to the growing associ- was a general tendency for greenkeepers ation of professional golfers with high to be reluctant about the exchange of school and college sports coaching staffs knowledge. Greenkeepers have grown out that is bound to have a beneficial effect on of that. Today they'll tell you that the old pro golf. attitude of regarding knowledge as private That is the manner in which the high property and retention of what was con- school and college coaches make a study sidered an exclusive and valuable secret re- of instruction. We in pro golf have seen in tarded greenkeepers as it did greenkeep- the greenkeeping short courses examples ing. of how methods can be improved by the We professionals have acquired the new planned and collective study of men in that attitude of being eager to exchange in- work. We have benefited by getting more formation on methods we have used with of the open-minded attitude toward our success in our instruction and our shop problems that the greenkeepers have ac- operations. Possibly there still is a rather quired as a result of their short course strong questioning attitude—almost sus- schooling. picion—among some of us when somewhat The parallel between the pros and green- revolutionary ideas are presented. But I keepers in their attitudes toward the de- have noticed that the objections haven't velopment and adoption of new methods the personal basis they often used to have. -
Mcafee Takes a Handoff from Sid Luckman (1947)
by Jim Ridgeway George McAfee takes a handoff from Sid Luckman (1947). Ironton, a small city in Southern Ohio, is known throughout the state for its high school football program. Coach Bob Lutz, head coach at Ironton High School since 1972, has won more football games than any coach in Ohio high school history. Ironton High School has been a regular in the state football playoffs since the tournament’s inception in 1972, with the school winning state titles in 1979 and 1989. Long before the hiring of Bob Lutz and the outstanding title teams of 1979 and 1989, Ironton High School fielded what might have been the greatest gridiron squad in school history. This nearly-forgotten Tiger squad was coached by a man who would become an assistant coach with the Cleveland Browns, general manager of the Buffalo Bills and the second director of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The squad featured three brothers, two of which would become NFL players, in its starting eleven. One of the brothers would earn All-Ohio, All-American and All-Pro honors before his enshrinement in Canton, Ohio. This story is a tribute to the greatest player in Ironton High School football history, his family, his high school coach and the 1935 Ironton High School gridiron squad. This year marks the 75th anniversary of the undefeated and untied Ironton High School football team featuring three players with the last name of McAfee. It was Ironton High School’s first perfect football season, and the school would not see another such gridiron season until 1978. -
Situation Analysis Scenario
SITUATION ANALYSIS SCENARIO Sports Marketing q Pretend you work for a sports team and that you are considering acquiring a player from another team. Prepare a document that tells me: q History of the team, history of the position, current trends or issues facing team, the need for this type of player, the need for this specific player, present the stats with an argument for 3 viable players, present other issues that will effect the team’s roster, and present which player you would recommend. Team Chosen: Chicago Bears Position Being Sought: Quarterback HISTORY OF TEAM Chicago Bears q 1920s: George Halas founded a pro football league & the Decatur Staley’s in 1920 1 q Franchise was renamed the Chicago Bears in January of 1922 q Games were played at Wrigley Field in front of 36,000 people q 1930s: The Bears won the 1932 Championship before 11,198 fans at Chicago Stadium under Coach Ralph Jones 2 q The National Football League was created in 1933 q The franchise lost $18,000 that season; Halas returned to coach q 1940s: Luke Johnsos and Hunk Anderson co-coached the Bears during WWII when Halas was sent overseas; Bears won title in 1946 3 HISTORY OF TEAM q 1950s: In 1958, the Bears and Los Angeles Rams establish an NFL attendance record drawing 100,470 in the LA Coliseum 4 q 1960s: A new era was signaled in 1965 when the club drafted Dick Butkus and Gale Sayers in the 1st round of the college draft 5 q In 1968, Halas retired from coaching after 40 seasons and a 324-151-31 record q 1970s: The Bears played their final season in Wrigley Field in 1970 before moving to Soldier Field 6 q In 1975, Walter Payton was the club's first-round draft choice q After a 14-year hiatus, the Bears returned to the playoffs in 1977 and in 1979 under head coach Neill Armstrong q The organization suffered a major loss at end of the decade when team president George 'Mugs' Halas, Jr. -
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. -
The Recordings
Appendix: The Recordings These are the URLs of the original locations where I found the recordings used in this book. Those without a URL came from a cassette tape, LP or CD in my personal collection, or from now-defunct YouTube or Grooveshark web pages. I had many of the other recordings in my collection already, but searched for online sources to allow the reader to hear what I heard when writing the book. Naturally, these posted “videos” will disappear over time, although most of them then re- appear six months or a year later with a new URL. If you can’t find an alternate location, send me an e-mail and let me know. In the meantime, I have provided low-level mp3 files of the tracks that are not available or that I have modified in pitch or speed in private listening vaults where they can be heard. This way, the entire book can be verified by listening to the same re- cordings and works that I heard. For locations of these private sound vaults, please e-mail me and I will send you the links. They are not to be shared or downloaded, and the selections therein are only identified by their numbers from the complete list given below. Chapter I: 0001. Maple Leaf Rag (Joplin)/Scott Joplin, piano roll (1916) listen at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9E5iehuiYdQ 0002. Charleston Rag (a.k.a. Echoes of Africa)(Blake)/Eubie Blake, piano (1969) listen at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7oQfRGUOnU 0003. Stars and Stripes Forever (John Philip Sousa, arr. -
Harlow^ the Needle!
Colliers for October 12, 1935 21 tainly coach. In all the years at the events and sensitive of the honor of old places previously mentioned, he had John Harvard, asked in a pointed tone never had a bad team. There had been just how Mr. Harlow got the material Quicks exceptional years with undefeated teams which went into the creation of his ex and years with a few sad losses, but cellent teams. Mr. Bingham replied none in which the Harlow teams had with his oration on the birds' eggs. The been routed or disgraced. The worst de Crimson remained unconvinced. Mr. feat had been a 34-2 walloping which a Bingham then countered with the state Harlow^ ment that Mr. Harlow at his summer West Virginia team had given his Col gate outfit, but as a general thing the place in the Pocono Mountains, in Penn shellacking had been done by the Har sylvania, had a world-famous collection low boys. of Alpine plants. That completely floored the If Harvard was discarding the gradu the Crimson and the attacks ceased. ate system of coaching, it was doing only what Princeton had done with the High Time for a Change hiring of Fritz Crisler and Yale had done with the acquisition of Greasy However, by the time Harlow arrived Needle! Neale, said the football fans of Boston. for spring practice, it had been agreed And about time, too, they added. The that everybody concerned would con authorities might object when Ted Hus- centrate on the business of getting Har ing referred to the Harvard teams as vard football back on its feet. -
NCAA Division I Football Records (Coaching Records)
Coaching Records All-Divisions Coaching Records ............. 2 Football Bowl Subdivision Coaching Records .................................... 5 Football Championship Subdivision Coaching Records .......... 15 Coaching Honors ......................................... 21 2 ALL-DIVISIONS COachING RECOrds All-Divisions Coaching Records Coach (Alma Mater) Winningest Coaches All-Time (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† 35. Pete Schmidt (Alma 1970) ......................................... 14 104 27 4 .785 (Albion 1983-96) BY PERCENTAGE 36. Jim Sochor (San Fran. St. 1960)................................ 19 156 41 5 .785 This list includes all coaches with at least 10 seasons at four-year colleges (regardless (UC Davis 1970-88) of division or association). Bowl and playoff games included. 37. *Chris Creighton (Kenyon 1991) ............................. 13 109 30 0 .784 Coach (Alma Mater) (Ottawa 1997-00, Wabash 2001-07, Drake 08-09) (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† 38. *John Gagliardi (Colorado Col. 1949).................... 61 471 126 11 .784 1. *Larry Kehres (Mount Union 1971) ........................ 24 289 22 3 .925 (Carroll [MT] 1949-52, (Mount Union 1986-09) St. John’s [MN] 1953-09) 2. Knute Rockne (Notre Dame 1914) ......................... 13 105 12 5 .881 39. Bill Edwards (Wittenberg 1931) ............................... 25 176 46 8 .783 (Notre Dame 1918-30) (Case Tech 1934-40, Vanderbilt 1949-52, 3. Frank Leahy (Notre Dame 1931) ............................. 13 107 13 9 .864 Wittenberg 1955-68) (Boston College 1939-40, 40. Gil Dobie (Minnesota 1902) ...................................... 33 180 45 15 .781 Notre Dame 41-43, 46-53) (North Dakota St. 1906-07, Washington 4. Bob Reade (Cornell College 1954) ......................... 16 146 23 1 .862 1908-16, Navy 1917-19, Cornell 1920-35, (Augustana [IL] 1979-94) Boston College 1936-38) 5. -
Big Bandy 4 – Glenn Miller Vs. Count Basie 1. I Got Rhythm (George Gershwin)
MUNI 20130325 – big bandy 4 – Glenn Miller vs. Count Basie 1. I Got Rhythm (George Gershwin) 3:03 Glenn Miller and His Orchestra: Charlie Spivak, Manny Klein, Sterling Bose-tp; Glenn Miller-tb, arr; Jesse Ralph, Harry Rodgers-tb; Hal McIntyre-cl, as; George Siravo-as; Jerry Jerome, Carl Biesecker-ts; Howard Smith-p; Dick McDonough-g; Ted Kotsoftis-b; George Simon-dr. New York, June 9, 1937. Brunswick 7915/B 21234-3. [Columbia 471656] 2. Humoresque (Antonín Dvořák) 2:40 Pee Wee Erwin, Bob Price, Ardell Garrett-tp; Glenn Miller, Jesse Ralph, Bud Smith-tb; Hal McIntyre, Tony Viola-as; Irving Fazola-cl, as; Jerry Jerome, Carl Biesecker-ts; Chummy MacGregor-p; Carmen Mastren-g; Rowland Bundock-b; Doc Carney-dr; George Siravo-arr. New York, November 29, 1937. Brunswick 8062/B 22080-1. [Columbia 471656] 3. Moonlight Serenade (Glenn Miller) 3:25 Bob Price, Legh Knowles, Dale McMickle-tp; Glenn Miller-tb, arr, Al Mastren, Paul Tanner- tb; Hal McIntyre-as; Stanley Aronson-as, bs; Wilbur Schwartz-cl, as; Tex Beneke, Al Klink-ts; Chummy MacGregor-p; Allan Reuss-g; Rowland Bundock-b; Frank Carlson-dr. New York, April 4, 1939. Bluebird 10214-B/035701-1. [CD: RCA ND90600] 4. In the Mood (Joe Garland) 3:34 Clyde Hurley, Legh Knowles, Dale McMickle-tp; Glenn Miller, Al Mastren, Paul Tanner-tb; Hal McIntyre-as; Harold Tennyson-as, bs, cl; Wilbur Schwartz-cl, as; Tex Beneke, Al Klink-ts; Chummy MacGregor-p; Richard Fisher-g; Rowland Bundock-b; Maurice Purtill-dr; Joe Garland, Glenn Miller, Eddie Durham???/arr. New York, August 1, 1939. -
Hot Charts – 1949
TOP TUNES OF THE MONTH SEPTEMBER OCTOBER 1 YOU'RE BREAKING MY HEART (3) 2 ROOM FULL OF ROSES (2) 1 YOU'RE BREAKING MY HEART (1) 3 SOMEDAY (6) 2 THAT LUCKY OLD SUN (5) 4 SOME ENCHANTED EVENING (I) 3 SOMEDAY (3) 5 THAT LUCKY OLD SUN (12) 4 JEALOUS HEART (6) 6 JEALOUS HEART (10) 5 SLIPPING AROUND (9) 7 MAYBE IT'S BECAUSE (9) 6 ROOM'FULL OF ROSES (2) JANUARY - cj 8 WHISPERING HOPE (17) 7 I CAN DREAM. CAN'T IT (17) 9 SLIPPING AROUND (—) 8 DON'T CRY JOE (16) 10 THE HUCKLE-BUCK (5) 9 WHISPERING HOPE (8) U 1 NEVER SEE MAGGIE ALONE (28) 10 MAYBE IT'S BECAUSE (7) 12 NOW THAT I HEED YOU (30) 11 HOP-SCOTCH POLKA (15) 1 A LITTLE BIRD TOLD ME (4) U FAR AHAY PLACES (96) 12 I NEVER SEE MAGGIE ALONE (11) Evelyn Knight w-std Perry Como a-hr 13 DANCE OF THE HOURS (19) (Oecca 24514) U LET'S TAKE AH OLD FASHIONED WALK (U) 13 SOME ENCHANTED EVENING (4) (RCA Victor 20-3316) 15 HOP-SCOTCH POLKA (—) 14 NOW THAT I HEED YOU (12) 16 OOH'T CRY JOE (—) 15 JOHNSON RAG (—) 2 BUTTONS AND BOWS (1) 12 SWEET GEORGIA BROWN (32) 17 I CAM DREAM. CAN'T IT (—) 16 A DREAMER'S HOLIDAY (—) Dinah Shore/Happy Valley Boys Brother Bones/Shadows 18 AGAIN (S) 17 CANADIAN CAPERS (—) (Columbia 38Z94) (Tempo 652) 19 MV BOLERO (15) 18 THE HUCKLE-BUCK (10) 20 CIRCUS (23) 19 IF I EVER LOVE AGAIN (—) 3 ON A SLOW BOAT TO CHINA (3) 13 I'VE GOT-MY LOVE TO KEEP ME (22) 20 I'VE GOT A LOVELY BUNCH OF COCONUTS (—) Kay Kyser v-glw, hb WARM - Les Brown 21 BABY IT'S COLD OUTSIDE (4) (Columbia 3B301) 22 GIVE ME YOUR HAND (—) 21 WHY WAS I BORN (—) (Columbia 38324) 23 RIDERS IN THE SKY (7) 22 DANCE OF THE HOURS (13) 23 MY BOLERO (19) 4 MY DARLING. -
Notre Dame Athletics
NOTRE DAME THE HISTORY It has been 80 years since a dramatic nickname transformed Notre Dame's 1924 backfield into the most fabled quartet in college football history - "The Four Horsemen" : Don Miller, Elmer Layden, Jim Crowley and Harry Stuhldreher. All-Time Scores 1895 Key to Abbreviations Coach: H. G. Hadden Captain: Dan Casey Record: 3-1-0 October 19 W Northwestern Law ......................................20-0 H W-L-T Game won, lost or tied November 7 W Illinois Cycling Club ..................................18-2 H H Home game November 22 L Indianapolis Artillery (S)............................0-18 H A Away game, played at opponent’s home stadium November 28 W Chicago Physicians & Surgeons ..............32-0 H N Game played at a neutral site; see footnote for city Total Points ..................................70-20 Nt Night game HC Homecoming game 1896 TH Game played on Thanksgiving Day Coach: Frank E. Hering Captain: Frank E. Hering Record: 4-3-0 R Game played in rain October 8 L Chicago Physicians & Surgeons ................0-4 H S Game played in snow October 14 L Chicago ........................................................0-18 H 0:00 Time remaining in games decided in the final minutes; in case of ties, October 27 W South Bend Commercial Athletic Club ..46-0 H time followed by team scoring last October 31 W Albion ..........................................................24-0 H C Capacity crowd November 14 L Purdue........................................................22-28 H AP Beginning with the 1936 season, the number in front of the opponent November 20 W Highland Views............................................82-0 H name indicates Notre Dame’s ranking in the Associated Press poll com- November 26 W Beloit (R)........................................................8-0 H ing into the game.