Ohio State Football Coaching Staff
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
University of Oregon U of O Basic Courses
University of Oregon University of Oregon – Office of Admissions 1385 E. 13th Ave. 1217 University of Oregon Eugene, OR 97406 Eugene, OR 97304-1217 541-346-1000 800-BE-A-DUCK https://uoregon.edu [email protected] Advising and Counseling Department ADVISING & COUNSELING DEPARTMENT CHEMEKETA COMMUNITY COLLEGE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON (Eugene) BASIC COURSES REQUIRED FOR ALL BA AND BS DEGREES (See reverse side for required courses for degrees other than BA or BS.) U of O Requirements Credit Hours Chemeketa Courses Which Satisfy Requirements 6 credit Choose WR121 and 122 (with a grade of C- or better) WR121 must be Written English hours completed before transferring. Choose from the following: ART201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 289; Arts and Letters* ASL211, 212, 213; COMM100, 111, 112, 115, 218, 219; ENG100, 104, These courses must be completed in at 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 201, 202, 204, 205, 206, 216, 220, 222, 245, 250, least two subjects (prefixes), and a 15 credits. 253, 254, 256, 257, 258, 260, 261, 275; FMS201, 202, 203; FR201, 202, minimum of two courses must be 203; HUM120; JNL227; JPN201, 202, 203; LING210; MUS201, 202, 203, completed in one subject. PHL201, 203, 206; REL160, 201, 202; RUS201, 202, 203; SPN201, 202, 203, 214, 215, 216, 250, 251 Choose from the following: ATH102, 103, 180, 212, 214, 215, 231; BA101; Social Science* CLA201, 202, 203; COMM212, 237; EC200, 201, 202, 203; GEG106, 107, These courses must be completed in at 201, 202, 206, 207, 220; HST104, 105, 106, 157, 158, 201, 202, 203, 228, least two subjects (prefixes), and a 15 credits. -
Football Program
OFFICIAL PROGRAM OFFICIAL WATCH Long run for WASHINGTON-OHIO STATE FOR THIS GAME CONTENTS The University Presidents ....................................... ·· · ···· ··· · .. 2 * **** ** your money University of Washington Representatives ........................ .. 3 University of Washington ..................................................... 4 LONGINES University of Washington Campus ....................................... 5 THE WORLD'S 6 MOST HONORED \I The College of Veterinary Medicine .................................... .. WATCH ,.._ Ohio State University Football Coaching Staff ...................... 7 ===:---- ,---.,,, I Ohio State Football Player Pages ..................9, 18, 20, 32, 34, 40 •. : - Ohio Stadium Information .................................................... 11 .• • .... •• •• University of Washington Football Player Pages ...... 12, 30, 36, 46 Ohio State University Athletic Staff ....................................... 16 • ••... I University of Washington Football Coaching Staff .............. .. 19 Ohio State University Football Roster .............. ..... ..... .. .. .... .. .. 22 University of Washington Football Roster .............................. 27 Ohio State Football Team Picture ................................ ... .... 28 Half-Time Music by the Marching Band .................................. 43 - Wilbur E. Snypp, Editor and Advertising Manager John F. Hummel, Circulation Manager National Advertising Representative: Spencer Advertising Co., 271 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. lon,lnes S·Star Admiral -
OUR BRIDGE to YOU Volume 17, No
Unit 487 OUR BRIDGE TO YOU Volume 17, No. 2, April 2017 Player Profile – Ancer Haggerty I started playing a lot of bridge just a couple of years ago, after retiring from the federal bench. I could have retired much earlier, and might have started bridge much earlier, too, had I been able to pursue my original professional dream of being a linebacker in the NFL. But that didn’t work out, and probably for the better. I am a lifelong Portlander and football fan. I spent my early years in the Woodlawn neighborhood, and at one time lived just a block from Cowboys great Mel Renfro. He was a childhood pal two years my senior and future star at Jefferson High School. I joined the team as a freshman and played three seasons. I wasn’t there in time to make the 1958 squad, when Renfro was one of the 10 out of 11 starting players who went on to play college ball, but our team did win the city title. Like Renfro, I also played for the Ducks, and as a freshman I competed on the school’s wrestling team. Between football and schoolwork I was also busy with Marine Infantry Officer Training, which I joined to ensure I could finish college before serving. I did go to Vietnam, in 1968, but was there just two weeks when a major injury sent me home and ended any hope I had of playing professional football. That’s when I got to thinking seriously about a law career. At U of O, head coach Len Casanova had urged me in that direction, and during officers’ training I had become intrigued with the Military Code of Justice. -
David Cutcliffe Named Walter Camp 2013 Coach of the Year
For Immediate Release: December 5, 2013 Contact: Al Carbone (203) 671-4421 - Follow us on Twitter @WalterCampFF Duke’s David Cutcliffe Named Walter Camp 2013 Coach of the Year NEW HAVEN, CT – David Cutcliffe, head coach of the Atlantic Coast Conference Coastal Division champion Duke University Blue Devils, has been named the Walter Camp 2013 Coach of the Year. The Walter Camp Coach of the Year is selected by the nation’s 125 Football Bowl Subdivision head coaches and sports information directors. Cutcliffe is the first Duke coach to receive the award, and the first honoree from the ACC since 2001 (Ralph Friedgen, Maryland). Under Cutcliffe’s direction, the 20th-ranked Blue Devils have set a school record with 10 victories and earned their first-ever berth in the Dr. Pepper ACC Championship Game. Duke clinched the Coastal Division title and championship game berth with a 27-25 victory over in-state rival North Carolina on November 30. Duke (10-2, 6-2 in the Coastal Division) will face top-ranked Florida State (12-0) on Saturday, December 7 in Charlotte, N.C. The Blue Devils enter the game with an eight-game winning streak – the program’s longest since 1941. In addition, the Blue Devils cracked the BCS standings for the first time this season, and were a perfect 4-0 in the month of November (after going 1-19 in the month from 2008 to 2012). Cutcliffe was hired as Duke’s 21st coach on December 15, 2007. Last season, he led the high- scoring Blue Devils to a school record 410 points (31.5 points per game) and a berth in the Belk Bowl – the program’s first bowl appearance since 1994. -
The Other Bill
© Copyright 12/1/2017 Phil Sutton The Other Bill By Phil Sutton, OTC member Special to the Oregon Track Club Track and field fans know the names Bill Bowerman and Bill Dellinger. They both made their mark on the sport while coaching at the University of Oregon. Well, there was another “Bill” in sports at the University of Oregon. Bill Hayward coached at the UO for 44 years (yes, over four decades!). He was Oregon’s first full time track coach. He laid the foundation for the University Oregon’s track and field program and molded it into a national powerhouse. He is considered the grandfather of today’s Duck program. Historic Hayward Field is named in his honor. William Louis Heyward was born in 1868 in Detroit, Michigan. His last name was Heyward with an “e” but he changed the spelling to Hayward in the early 1890’s. His father was English and his mother Canadian. When Bill was ten, his parents moved to Peru to manage a rubber plantation. They left Bill, his brother and three sisters with grandparents. They raised the children for the next ten years, first in Detroit and then in Toronto, Canada. As a young man Bill lived in Vancouver, Canada. He was employed as a fireman in one of the city’s firehouse brigades. Bill and his wife also owned a fruit and cigar stand. The photo of Bill Hayward above was taken in the 1940's. All photographs and video in this article are credited to University of Oregon Libraries, Special Collections & University Archives unless otherwise indicated. -
The NCAA News
THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION VOLUME 1 . NUMBER 3 JULY-AUGUST, 1964 NCAAIS FIRMLYW ITHH IGHSCHOO LS FORFR IDAYNIGHT PRO TV PROTECT ION Minimum Academic First NCAA Indoor Joint Effort Seeks Legislative Standard in Wind Track Title Meet Aid for Game’s Best Interests Slated for Detroit For NCAA Competition The number of NCAA cham- “Facts Have Been Deliberately Distorted,” Says pionships now stands at 21 President Bob Ray in Explaining logic And Grants-in-Aid with the announcement early A national minimum academ- in July that the first annual Of Congressional Position ic admissions standard as a pre- National Collegiate Indoor “The colleges and universities of the National Collegiate Ath- Track and Field Championship requisite to NCAA competition letic Association stand firmly with the high schools and junior will be held March 12-13, 1965, is now a distinct possibility be- colleges in their determined opposition to any legislation which in Cobo Hall, Detroit. cause of a historic resolution would permit professional football to televise indiscriminately on What may very well become passed by the Conference of Friday nights to the detriment of high school and junior college the blue-ribbon event of all in- Conferences in Denver this past game attendance.” door track will be held in the month. Thus did NCAA President Robert F. Ray this week strongly Motor City for the next three reaffirm the school-college partnership in support of the proposals The resolution, which came years by an agreement reached of several members of Congress to protect high school and junior as the culmination of a joint re- between the NCAA and the De- college football from the damaging effects of professional football port of the Long Range Plan- troit NEWS following long television. -
Race and College Football in the Southwest, 1947-1976
UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA GRADUATE COLLEGE DESEGREGATING THE LINE OF SCRIMMAGE: RACE AND COLLEGE FOOTBALL IN THE SOUTHWEST, 1947-1976 A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE FACULTY in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY By CHRISTOPHER R. DAVIS Norman, Oklahoma 2014 DESEGREGATING THE LINE OF SCRIMMAGE: RACE AND COLLEGE FOOTBALL IN THE SOUTHWEST, 1947-1976 A DISSERTATION APPROVED FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY BY ____________________________ Dr. Stephen H. Norwood, Chair ____________________________ Dr. Robert L. Griswold ____________________________ Dr. Ben Keppel ____________________________ Dr. Paul A. Gilje ____________________________ Dr. Ralph R. Hamerla © Copyright by CHRISTOPHER R. DAVIS 2014 All Rights Reserved. Acknowledgements In many ways, this dissertation represents the culmination of a lifelong passion for both sports and history. One of my most vivid early childhood memories comes from the fall of 1972 when, as a five year-old, I was reading the sports section of one of the Dallas newspapers at my grandparents’ breakfast table. I am not sure how much I comprehended, but one fact leaped clearly from the page—Nebraska had defeated Army by the seemingly incredible score of 77-7. Wild thoughts raced through my young mind. How could one team score so many points? How could they so thoroughly dominate an opponent? Just how bad was this Army outfit? How many touchdowns did it take to score seventy-seven points? I did not realize it at the time, but that was the day when I first understood concretely the concepts of multiplication and division. Nebraska scored eleven touchdowns I calculated (probably with some help from my grandfather) and my love of football and the sports page only grew from there. -
The Register, 1976-09-03
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University Aggie Digital Collections and Scholarship NCAT Student Newspapers Digital Collections 9-3-1976 The Register, 1976-09-03 North Carolina Agricutural and Technical State University Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.library.ncat.edu/atregister Recommended Citation North Carolina Agricutural and Technical State University, "The Register, 1976-09-03" (1976). NCAT Student Newspapers. 641. https://digital.library.ncat.edu/atregister/641 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Digital Collections at Aggie Digital Collections and Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in NCAT Student Newspapers by an authorized administrator of Aggie Digital Collections and Scholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. That IT'S ROUGH BUT IT'S FAIR Leon Rucker •••••••A************************* *•*•*•*••••*••••••••••*••••*••*•• Once in an athletic lifetime, a few young men gather to form what we often times refer to as a mere team. They are immersed in the idea of performing up to standards that will not allow room for failure. They will be dedicated, responsHe, intelligent and, above all, filled with the faith that they will conquer their adversary no matter how tough. We are indeed fortunate to be a part of and to witness the 1976 A&T football team. -Onig R. Turner Sports Editor Page S2 the A&T Register September 3, 1976 Hornsby North Carolina Howell y4&T Slate HEAD COACH Since taking over as the North Carolina A&T State University head football coach, Hornsby Howell has guided the Unikersiiy Aggies to an impressive 49-30-3 record. -
Sportsnews1961january Dece
" UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND ATHLETICS MINNEAPOLIS 14 i-~'HHHHHHHHHHHHH'~-lHHHHHHHHHHl* 1961 GOIF BROCHURE "The Gophers" The Schedule March 2(}.21 Rice at Houston, Texas April 26 Carleton Here May 6 Iowa, Wisconsin at Iowa City May 19-20 Conference Meet at Bloomington, Ind. June 19-24 NCAA Meet at Lafayette, Ind. 1960 Minnesota Golf Results Minn. Opp. 23t St. Thomas 3} 16~ Maca1ester l~ 17 Hamline 1 29 Iowa 25 15 Wisconsin 21 27 Wisconsin 201. 22 Northwestern 13 181 Iowa 171 20 Alumni 10 21 Minneapolis Golf Club 15 Placed Fourth in Conference Meet *****i'MHHHh\~<iHHHH.YHHP,******",HHHHHHHfo This brochure was prepared by the Sports Information Office, University of Minnesota. For further information contact Otis'J. Dypwick, Sports Information Director, Room 208 Cooke Hall, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 14, Minnesota. - 2·- 1961 MINNESOTA GOLF PROSPECTS "Minnesota's golf outlook is the brightest in years.IV That optimistic statement is how veteran Gopher coach Les Bolstad views his team's prospects for the 1961 season. riAnything can happen in the Big 10, but we're aiming for as high as we can go,a Bolstad declares. Biggest factors in the rosy outlook, according to Bolstad, are experience and balance. The Gophers top four men, Gene Hansen, Capt. Carson Herron, Rolf Deming, and Jim Pfleider are extremely well matched, and Bolstad says he can't chose between them as to excellence. The other members of the squad's top six are Harry Newby and Les Peterson. Bolstad hopes his squad will continue the great improvement demonstrated last year when the Gophers catapulted from ninth to fourth place and almost finished second. -
Parking / Shuttle Information Shuttle Departure Times
OSAA / U.S. Bank / Les Schwab Tires 2018 TRACK & FIELD STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS 3A, 2A, 1A – May 17‐18, 2018 6A, 5A, 4A – May 18‐19, 2018 Hayward Field, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403 Parking / Shuttle Information All teams and spectators are advised that parking availability surrounding the University of Oregon is restrictive. Street parking is limited to 2‐hour parking zones and meters. Unauthorized vehicles in University parking lots will be issued citations and towed. Both the City of Eugene and the University of Oregon will be strictly enforcing parking. Columbia Garage – the University of Oregon strongly urges all spectators to park in located adjacent the Matt Knight Arena on East 13th Avenue. Hourly rates vary see http://parking.uoregon.edu for more info. Metered Parking – University meters: $1.25/hour City of Eugene meters: $1.70/hour In an effort to alleviate parking frustrations the OSAA will be providing a shuttle between Autzen Stadium and Hayward Field for the Track and Field State Championships. The shuttle is available to participating teams and spectators at no cost. To access parking closest to the South Gate of Autzen Stadium those choosing the shuttle option should use Entry 5 off of Leo Harris Parkway and proceed to the south end of the Autzen Stadium Lot. Shuttle Departure Times Please note: Shuttle departure times are tentative. Thursday, May 17 – 8am‐7:30pm Friday, May 18 – 8am‐10:30pm Saturday, May 19 – 8am‐6:30pm 8:00 AM Autzen Stadium ‐ South Gate 8:00 AM Autzen Stadium ‐ South Gate 8:00 AM Autzen Stadium -
All-Time All-America Teams
1944 2020 Special thanks to the nation’s Sports Information Directors and the College Football Hall of Fame The All-Time Team • Compiled by Ted Gangi and Josh Yonis FIRST TEAM (11) E 55 Jack Dugger Ohio State 6-3 210 Sr. Canton, Ohio 1944 E 86 Paul Walker Yale 6-3 208 Jr. Oak Park, Ill. T 71 John Ferraro USC 6-4 240 So. Maywood, Calif. HOF T 75 Don Whitmire Navy 5-11 215 Jr. Decatur, Ala. HOF G 96 Bill Hackett Ohio State 5-10 191 Jr. London, Ohio G 63 Joe Stanowicz Army 6-1 215 Sr. Hackettstown, N.J. C 54 Jack Tavener Indiana 6-0 200 Sr. Granville, Ohio HOF B 35 Doc Blanchard Army 6-0 205 So. Bishopville, S.C. HOF B 41 Glenn Davis Army 5-9 170 So. Claremont, Calif. HOF B 55 Bob Fenimore Oklahoma A&M 6-2 188 So. Woodward, Okla. HOF B 22 Les Horvath Ohio State 5-10 167 Sr. Parma, Ohio HOF SECOND TEAM (11) E 74 Frank Bauman Purdue 6-3 209 Sr. Harvey, Ill. E 27 Phil Tinsley Georgia Tech 6-1 198 Sr. Bessemer, Ala. T 77 Milan Lazetich Michigan 6-1 200 So. Anaconda, Mont. T 99 Bill Willis Ohio State 6-2 199 Sr. Columbus, Ohio HOF G 75 Ben Chase Navy 6-1 195 Jr. San Diego, Calif. G 56 Ralph Serpico Illinois 5-7 215 So. Melrose Park, Ill. C 12 Tex Warrington Auburn 6-2 210 Jr. Dover, Del. B 23 Frank Broyles Georgia Tech 6-1 185 Jr. -
History and Results
H DENVER BRONCOS ISTORY Miscellaneous & R ESULTS Year-by-Year Stats Postseason Records Honors History/Results 252 Staff/Coaches Players Roster Breakdown 2019 Season Staff/Coaches Players Roster Breakdown 2019 Season DENVER BRONCOS BRONCOS ALL-TIME DRAFT CHOICES NUMBER OF DRAFT CHOICES PER SCHOOL 20 — Florida 15 — Colorado, Georgia 14 — Miami (Fla.), Nebraska 13 — Louisiana State, Houston, Southern California 12 — Michigan State, Washington 11 — Arkansas, Arizona State, Michigan 10 — Iowa, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oregon 9 — Maryland, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Purdue, Virginia Tech 8 — Arizona, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Minnesota, Syracuse, Texas, Utah State, Washington State 7 — Baylor, Boise State, Boston College, Kansas, North Carolina, Penn State. 6 — Alabama, Auburn, Brigham Young, California, Florida A&M, Northwestern, Oklahoma State, San Diego, Tennessee, Texas A&M, UCLA, Utah, Virginia 5 — Alcorn State, Colorado State, Florida State, Grambling, Illinois, Mississippi State, Pittsburgh, San Jose State, Texas Christian, Tulane, Wisconsin 4 — Arkansas State, Bowling Green/Bowling Green State, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa State, Jackson State, Kansas State, Kentucky, Louisville, Maryland-Eastern Shore, Miami (Ohio), Missouri, Northern Arizona, Oregon State, Pacific, South Carolina, Southern, Stanford, Texas A&I/Texas A&M Kingsville, Texas Tech, Tulsa, Wyoming 3 — Detroit, Duke, Fresno State, Montana State, North Carolina State, North Texas State, Rice, Richmond, Tennessee State, Texas-El Paso, Toledo, Wake Forest, Weber State 2 — Alabama A&M, Bakersfield