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Vincent P. Batha was a college football and basketball player and coach in the United States. He also worked as a professor of math and sciences after retiring from coaching.[1]
Batha played tackle[2] for the Carroll College Pioneers (now called "Carroll University") located in Waukesha, Wisconsin. The school honored his legacy by inducting him into their "Hall of Fame" in 1973[3] as as "charter member" of the group.[4]
Batha later became the the 16th head football coach for his alma mater[5] and he held that position for the 1931 season.[6] His career coaching record at Carroll College was 1 win, 4 losses, and 1 tie. This ranks him 26th at Carroll College in total wins and 25th at Carroll College in winning percentage.[7] He would remain with the program as assistant coach[8] under Glenn Thistlethwaite beginning in 1932.[9] Coach Batha's poor performance was called the worst start in seven years for the program, which was attributed to weakness at the end positions and turnover in the bakcfield.[10]
Batha also was the head basketball coach at Carroll from 1931 until 1934, posting the 12th-most wins at the history of the school (as of 2007-2008 season) with a record of 29-13.
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C.C. Boone was the 13th head college football coach for the Carroll College Pioneers (now called Carroll University)[13] located in Waukesha, Wisconsin and he held that position for the 1921 season. His career coaching record at Carroll College was 1 wins, 6 losses, and 0 ties. This ranks him 26th at Carroll College in total wins and 27th at Carroll College in winning percentage.[14]
While Boone was the coach, college president
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Lt. L. William Caine was the first head college football coach
for the
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Chris Douglas is an American football player and coach in the United States. He presently is an assistant coach at Highland Community College[17] where he will serve as offensive coordinator.[18]
Douglass was the twenty-seventh
Douglas stepped down as head coach after the 2006 season
Douglas and his family now live in Stigler, Oklahoma. He is now coaching high school football.[23]
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Phil Hower was an American football player and coach in the United States.
Hower was the 21st football coach for the
Hower was mentor to future
Hower's love and passion to play the game of football continued after he graduated and was coaching high school football. He remained active and an avid supporter of the program, playing in an alumni game and receiving a shoulder injury.[25]
Hower continually worked in coaching, including working as the linebackers coach at Friends University in Wichita, Kansas under head coach Monty Lewis.[26]
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Wes Buller was a college football player and coach in the midwest United States.
Buller was the head coach at
Buller was the 19th football coach for the
Buller resigned as head coach after the death of his wife in 1971.[30]
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Bob Dvorak was an American football player and coach in the United States.
Dvorak played football at the college level at Southwestern College (Kansas) and in 1992 was elected to the school's "Athletic Hall of Fame".[32]
Dvorak would return to his alma mater to become the 16th football coach for the
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Robert T. "Bob" Hower was college sports coach and athletic director in the United States.
Hower was the 15th football coach
Hower also coached men's basketball at Southwestern and was the 13th person on record to hold that post.[37] He coached for thirteen seasons, from 1955 until 1967 and then again for the 1970-1971 season. His record was 32 wins and 37 losses and the team secured two Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference championships in 1961 and again in 1963.[38]
Hower served as the athletic director at Southwestern until his sudden death from complications from an automobile accident in 1972.
Dittmann served in
Collaborate on full article...Brock was also the basketball coach at Southwetsren for the 1945-1946 season,[43] producing a record of 11 wins and 9 losses.[44]
Collaborate on full article...Armin was also the basketball coach at Southwestern for the 1908-1909 season. He was the first basketball coach on record for the school, and the team produced six wins and three losses.[47]
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John Jacob "J. J." Thiel (1877? - April 15, 1946 )[48] was an American football coach, college professor, and sports figure in the United States.
Although Southwestern competed in football as far back ast 1895,
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Dan Hanson is a retired college football player and coach. He presently works as a pastor.
Hanson first served as defensive coordinator at
Hanson was promoted to become the fourth head
Hanson's inagural 2002 season started out with three consecutive wins[57] and a national ranking [58]but was answered with 3 consecutive losses. The team would win one more before finising 2002 with a 4-6 record. Despite the losing record, Malone outscored their opponents 245 to 196.[59]
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Daniel M. Frasier was the 25th head college football coach for the Geneva College Golden Tornadoes located in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania and he held that position for three seasons, from 1969 until 1971.[60] His coaching record at Geneva was 9 wins, 16 losses, and 1 ties. As of completion of the 2007 season, this ranks him 16th at Geneva in total wins and 24th at Geneva in winning percentage (0.365)..[61]
Frasier engineered a turaround of the program, when the football team went to what was considered a "laughing stock of the district" to a 8-0 start in 1971 (some records show a 7-0 start and losing the last two games[62]).[63]
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Coligny Brainerd "Dr. C. B." Metheny (December 30, 1889 - October 19, 1960[64]) was an educator, athlete, and coach in the United States.
Geneva has honored his memory by building the Metheney Field House in 1961.[67] He was also given a lifetime alumni award by the school in 1946.[68]
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Arthur McKean was the sixth head college football coach for the Geneva College Golden Tornadoes located in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania[69] and he held that position for five seasons, from 1907 until 1911. His coaching record at Geneva was 10 wins, 24 losses, and 7 ties. As of completion of the 2007 season, this ranks him
15th at Geneva in total wins and 25th at Geneva in winning percentage (0.329).[70]
McKean also played football at Geneva College when he was a student.[71]
Under McKean, the Geneva College team decided to join forces with five other colleges to abolish the game of football if significant rules changes were not made to make the game safer.[72]
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Dr. Archibald W. Leech was an American football player and coach in the United States. He gained prominence as an educator and businessman in the area of Cambria County, Pennsylvania where he also served as postmaster.[73]
Leech played college football, basketball, and baseball for the Geneva College Golden Tornadoes located in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. He was known for his athletic skills and was named "one of the most noted athletes ever graduated" from the school.[74]
Leech was the fifth head football coach for his alma mater, Geneva College. He held that position for the 1905 season and posted a coaching record at Geneva was 4 wins, 5 losses, and 0 ties. As of complletion of the 2007 season, this ranks him 23rd at Geneva in total wins and 18th at Geneva in winning percentage (0.444).[75]
The school suffered one of its largest defeats to Penn State[76] by a score of 73 to 0.[77] This game was also Penn State's ninth largest all-time margin of victory and total points scored.[78]
Leech only coached football for one year at Geneva, but stayed on as a full professor at the college.[79]
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Smith Alford was the fourth head college football coach for the Geneva College Golden Tornadoes located in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania and he held that position for the 1904 season. His coaching record at Geneva was 1 wins, 4 losses, and 2 ties. As of completion of the 2007 season, this ranks him 27th at Geneva in total wins and 26th at Geneva in winning percentage (0.286).
[80] During his time as coach, Geneva played (and lost) games against Penn State and Pittsburgh,[81] losing 0-30 to an undefeated Pitt team [82] and later in the season 0 -44 to Penn State.[83]
The season was considered especially disapointing by fans, considering the previous three-year coach
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Graydon Long (March 11, 1889-September 1966) was an American football coach and official in the United States.
Long played high school football at West high School in Rochester, New York as a member of the class of 1908.[85] The 1906 team concluded an undefeated season and the 1907 team produced solid results as well.[86]
Long was the seventh head college football coach for the Geneva College Golden Tornadoes[87] located in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania and he held that position for the 1912 season. His coaching record at Geneva was 3 wins, 4 losses, and 0 ties. As of completion of the 2007 season, this ranks him 25th at Geneva in total wins and 20th at Geneva in winning percentage (0.429).[88] He also coached the local high school football team that same year.[89]User:Paulmcdonald/Collaborate/22
Ward A. Wescott was an American football player and coach.
Wescott played for the Oconto, Wisconsin town team in 1895 and played a game against the team that would become the Green Bay Packers. Wescott was both a player and trainer, receiving accolades for his abilities to teach the game as well as to play.[90]
Wescott was the second head
Wescott's career coaching record at Carroll College was 5 wins, 3 losses, and 2 ties. This ranks him 17th at Carroll College in total wins and 12th at Carroll College in winning percentage.[92] Wescott's players were predicted as promising before the season began.[93]
Controversy was stirred up after a game against Milwaukee East High School on October 17, 1896. Carroll won the game 4-0, but the oppossing team disputed the result.[94] The next season's game was cancelled because Carroll was regularly using "ringers" or players that were brought in to the team from outside the school specifically to win games. [95]
Collaborate on full article...Britton was the head coach during a game witnessed by Miss Anna Sackett, who found the game to be so brutal that she revoked $5,000 from her will that had been bequested to Carroll College. She claimed that the "players were brutes" and would no longer support the school if they continued play.[97] Later that same year (October 29), she died and left none of the funds to the college.[98]
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Fans of college football sometimes use the phrase Toilet Bowl to refer to a football game that is particularly poor in play quality, generally college football. While this name is certainly not official, it does bear mentioning.
Two specific college games that are often referred to as "Toilet Bowl" games are:
- No NCAA Division I football game has ended in a scoreless tie since, and under current NCAA rules, which introduced non-sudden death overtime into NCAA football, it is unlikely to ever happen again.
- 1987 Kansas vs. Kansas State: On November 7, 1987 the Kansas Jayhawks traveled to Manhattan, Kansas to play the Kansas State Wildcats. The game was termed "The Toilet Bowl" by national commentators during the week leading up to it because it featured a KU team with a 1-7 record and 0-8 K-State. The contest lived down to expectations and resulted in a 17-17 tie, which was secured when KU blocked a K-State field goal attempt at the end of the game. ESPN College Football broadcaster Lee Corso said this about the game: "A tie is like kissing your sister, but a loss is like kissing your brother." This gave KU the all-time NCAA Division I-A record for number of tie games with 57.[106]
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Earl Craven was a college football player, coach, and administrator in the United States. He was president of the NAIA Coaches Association from 1957 through 1959.[107]
Craven entered Pacific College (now called George Fox University) in Newberg, Oregon during the fall of 1941. His time in college was interrupted by military service in World War II from 1943-1946, but he returned to Pacific and was awarded letteres in basketball, baseball and football. Craven earned a degree in psychology and education in 1949.
Craven coached at
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Help update the Wikipedia:WikiProject College football/Master team table with NAIA football schools!
This is a giant table (actually part of a much larger table) that is used by the
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Jock Sanders (born Jockée Kevin Sanders; 1988 in St. Petersburg, Florida) is an American football receiver and running back for the West Virginia Mountaineers.
Sanders was given three and two stars by different recruiting sites while being recruited by
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Holly Neher is an American athlete who is credited as the first female in the state of Florida to throw a touchdown in a high school game, a feat she accomplished on her first pass attempt and third play in 2017.[110] As a junior for Hollywood Hills High School, she threw a 42-yard touchdown pass to teammate Alexander Shelton late in the fourth quarter of a 21–7 loss to Hallandale High School.[111]
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- ^ The passenger pigeon Eugene M. Roark, 1961
- ^ Carroll College Yearbook "Football - Season 1919" page 135
- ^ Carroll University Alumni Hall of Fame
- ^ Milwaukee Journal "Carroll Honors 12 Alumni" Oct 4, 1973
- ^ Chicago Tribune "HANLEY ORDERS 2 DRILLS DAILY DESPITE THE HEAT" September 15, 1931
- ^ Stevens Point Daily Journal "Sports--Nineteen Candidates Report for Workouts" September 15, 1931
- ^ Carroll College/University Football coaching records
- ^ Chicago Daily Tribune "Thistlethwaite Takes Carroll Coaching Job" May 14, 1932
- ^ New York Times "Thistlethwaite Gets Post" May 14, 1932
- ^ The Milwaukee Sentinel "Pioneers Play Viking Eleven" November 6, 1931
- ^ Carroll University Basketball results
- ^ Carroll University Yearbook 1930
- ^ Waukesha Daily Freeman "Carroll College Opens Football Season" August 29, 1921
- ^ Carroll College/University football records
- ^ Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune "Carroll's New President Talks of Centre's Teams" September 28, 1921
- ^ The University of Texas at Arlington - Official Athletic Site
- ^ NewsOK
- ^ Highland Community College Football Hires Offensive & Defensive Coordinators
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS
- ^ CJOnline.com | Handheld Version | Briefly in sports 05/29/02
- ^ Arkansas City Taveler "Monty Lewis named football coach at Friends" By Rama Peroo, January 17, 2003
- ^ Football coach resigns after five years - Collegian Front Page
- ^ NewsOK.com Article
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS
- ^ Kiowa News "Injured in Alumni Game" September 19, 1968
- ^ Crimson Chronicle Meet the coaches
- ^ Bethel College Football records
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse Wes Buller records by year
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS
- ^ Lawrence Journal-World "Buller Resigns Post as Southwestern Head Coach" December 3, 1971
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS
- ^ Southwestern College Athletic hall of fame
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS
- ^ Kiowa News "Father-Son Banquet" April 12, 1961
- ^ WINFIELD AND THE WALNUT VALLEY "THE ATHLETIC PICTURE" A HISTORY COMMISSIONED BY THE WINFIELD ARTS COUNCIL AND THE BICENTENNIAL COMMISSION, Gilliland's Publishing Arkansas City, Kansas 1975
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS
- ^ Hovpen Sports Southwestern College Basketball
- ^ "Men's Basketball Coaches Records". Southwestern College. Retrieved 2008-02-28.
- ^ El Dorado Times, "Obituaries" April 22, 1972
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS
- ^ Southwestern College in Winfield, KS
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS Football coaching records
- ^ Hovpen Sports Southwestern College Basketball
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS Baskeball coaching records
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS
- ^ Southwestern College - Winfield, KS
- ^ Hovpen Sports Southwestern College Basketball
- ^ Eastern Washington Genealogical Society Blog "EWGS Presidents: Leora Cookingham Thiel" November 4, 2009
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse Southwestern College Records
- ^ Southwestern College Football Records
- ^ Canton First Church of the Nazarene Staff directory
- ^ Akron Beacon Journal "MALONE AT GENEVA" October 11, 2003
- ^ Football Scoop Daily Football Scoop December 30, 2005
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse Dan Hanson records by year
- ^ Malone Coaching Records
- ^ Mid-States Football Association 2007 Media Guide
- ^ Northern Kentucky News "Dirty work pays off for Thomas More" John Lachmann October 23, 2002
- ^ Akron Beacon Journal "BIG GAME IS EVEN BIGGER THIS TIME FOR PIONEERS, CAVALIERS, EACH IS UNBEATEN HEADING INTO SATURDAY'S SHOWDOWN BETWEEN TWO NATIONALLY RANKED STARK COUNTY TEAMS" October 3, 2002
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse Malone College 2002 Football Results
- ^ Beaver Country Times "Big Switch for Max Holm" by Ed Rose, Jr. Sep 2, 1972
- ^ Geneva College coaching records
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse Geneva College Football 1971
- ^ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "The Geneva Story: A Winning Fairy Tale" by MARINO PARASCENZO November 3, 1971
- ^ Nye Family History Coligny Brainerd Metheny
- ^ Intercollegiate Athletic Calendar L. L. Logdon, 1917
- ^ Geneva College coaching records
- ^ Geneva College Metheny Field house
- ^ Geneva College Alumni Awards
- ^ The Daily Times July 11, 1907
- ^ Geneva College coaching records
- ^ The Daily Times "Football to be Revived" September 6, 1907
- ^ New York Times "SIX COLLEGES STRIKE BLOW AT FOOTBALL; Rules Must Be Changed So as to Remove Unnecessary Danger to Life and Limb. THREAT TO ABOLISH SAME Action by Intercollegiate Athletic Association of Western Pennsylvania and West Virginia." December 15, 1909
- ^ Cambria County, PA Geneology "History of Cambria County, V2
- ^ Cambria County, PA Geneology "History of Cambria County, V2
- ^ Geneva College coaching records
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse Penn State 1905 Season Results
- ^ State Collegian "State 73-Geneva 0" November 19, 1905
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse Penn State: 50+ Points Scored In A Game
- ^ New Castle News May 31, 1905
- ^ Geneva College coaching records
- ^ College Football Reference Geneva College 1904
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse Pittsburgh Yearly Results (1904)
- ^ College Football Data Warehouse Penn State Yearly Results (1904)
- ^ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "The Geneva Story: A Winning Fairy Tale" by MARINO PARASCENZO November 3, 1971
- ^ West High School Football Team 1906 Football Program
- ^ West High School Football Team 1907 Football Program
- ^ University of West Virginia Games Against Graydon Long
- ^ Geneva College coaching records
- ^ The Daily Times August 27, 1912
- ^ Before They Were the Packers By Denis J. Gullickson, Carl Hanson
- ^ The Milwaukee Journal September 3, 1896
- ^ Carroll College/University All-time football results
- ^ Chicago Tribune "PREPARING FOR GREAT GAMES AT THE MADISON UNIVERSITY" March 26, 1896
- ^ Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel "The Duffel Bag-This Week 100 years ago" October 17, 1996
- ^ The Milwaukee Journal "Events on the Gridiron" October 9, 1896
- ^ Carroll College/University All-time football results
- ^ Chicago Daily Tribune "Costly Ball Game", November 6, 1898
- ^ Waukesha Freeman "Football cost $5000-One Game Expensive for Carroll College" November 3, 1898
- ^ Carroll College/University football records
- ^ Hinakaga Yearbook Collection "Carroll Digital Collections"
- ^ The Anatomy of a Game: Football, the Rules, and the Men Who Made the Game by David M. Nelson 1994
- ^ Capital Times "State Title Wort By Olson's Football Eleven" November 10, 1919
- ^ Stevens Point Daily Journal "Sports" November 10, 1919
- ^ Carroll College/University football records
- ^ Austin Murphy, Washington-Washington State playing for pride in Apple Cup, SI.com, November 20, 2008, Accessed January 9, 2009.
- ^ Division I-A All-Time Wins
- ^ George Fox University "FORMER FOOTBALL COACH AND A.D. EARL CRAVEN PASSES AWAY" July 31, 2000
- ^ a b 1973 Football Team Watertown High Hall of Fame.
- ^ Papas: Watertown must leave the Middlesex League immediately, Watertown Wicked Local, 11 Feb 2009.
- ^ Codd, Carey (September 1, 2017). "Hollywood Hills QB Scores TD On Her First Pass". CBS Miami. Retrieved September 2, 2017.
- ^ "Hollywood Hills quarterback tosses TD on first pass of her career". Miami Herald. August 31, 2017. Retrieved September 2, 2017.