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Wikipedia

Pop Warner

Glenn Scobey Warner (April 5, 1871 – September 7, 1954), most commonly known as Pop Warner, was an American college football coach at various institutions who is responsible for several key aspects of the modern game. Included among his innovations are the single and double wing formations (precursors of the modern spread and shotgun formations[2]), the three point stance and the body blocking technique.[2] Fellow pioneer coach Amos Alonzo Stagg called Warner "one of the excellent creators".[3][4] He was inducted as a coach into the College Football Hall of Fame as part of its inaugural class in 1951.[2] He also contributed to a junior football program which became known as Pop Warner Little Scholars, a popular youth American football organization.[5]

Pop Warner
Warner in 1921
Biographical details
Born(1871-04-05)April 5, 1871
Springville, New York, U.S.
DiedSeptember 7, 1954(1954-09-07) (aged 83)
Palo Alto, California, U.S.
Playing career
Football
1892–1894Cornell
1902Syracuse Athletic Club
Position(s)Guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1895–1896Georgia
1895–1899Iowa Agricultural/State
1897–1898Cornell
1899–1903Carlisle
1904–1906Cornell
1907–1914Carlisle
1915–1923Pittsburgh
1924–1932Stanford
1933–1938Temple
1939–1940San Jose State (associate)
Baseball
1905–1906Cornell
Head coaching record
Overall319–106–32 (football)[n 1]
36–15 (baseball)
Bowls1–1–2
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
4 national (1915, 1916, 1918, 1926)
1 SIAA (1896)
3 PCC (1924, 1926, 1927)
Awards
Amos Alonzo Stagg Award (1948)
College Football Hall of Fame
Inducted in 1951 (profile)

In the early 1900s, he created a premier football program at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School—a federally-funded, off-reservation Indian boarding school.[6] He also coached teams to four national championships: Pittsburgh in 1915, 1916, and 1918 and Stanford in 1926.[7] In all, he was head coach at the University of Georgia (1895–1896), Iowa Agricultural College and Model Farm (1895–1899), Cornell University (1897–1898 and 1904–1906), Carlisle (1899–1903 and 1907–1914), Pittsburgh (1915–1923), Stanford (1924–1932) and Temple University (1933–1938), compiling a career college football record of 319–106–32.[n 1] Predating Bear Bryant, Eddie Robinson, and Joe Paterno, he once had the most wins of any coach in college football history.[8]

Early years

Warner was born April 5, 1871, on a farm in Springville, New York. He was the son of William Warner, a cavalry officer in the American Civil War, and schoolteacher Adaline Scobey.[9][10] In 1878 a railroad came to Springville, and four years later the family moved to a house on East Main Street.[11]

Plump as a child, Warner was sometimes known as "Butter".[11] He began playing baseball at an early age, and was a skilled pitcher.[12] Nobody in town owned a football; his only exposure to the new sport at a young age was with an inflated cow's bladder, and as few knew the rules, the game more resembled soccer.[12] Warner's East Main Street house attracted a number of friends; when a neighbor told his mother that the boys' play would damage her lawn, she replied: "I'm raising boys, not grass."[12]

In 1889 at 19 years old, Warner graduated from Springville-Griffith Institute and joined his family in moving down to Wichita Falls, Texas, to work on their new purchased cattle and wheat ranch totaling over hundreds of acres.[13] Aside from ranching, Warner got a job assisting a tinsmith.[14] He was already interested in art as a childlearning how to paint watercolor landscapes, and as a tinsmith he learned how to use tools to make things like cups, teapots, baking pans, and lanterns.[n 2]

Student years at Cornell

In 1892, Warner returned to Springville and began to use his cowboy experience to gamble on horse races.[15] Although he had no interest in college, soon after coming back he attended Cornell Law School, as he had lost all of his money at the races.[16] Later Warner wrote "I dare not write to my father and tell him I was broke"[17]—he felt that the only way to get funds was to inform his father that he had decided to study law. His father, who had always wanted him to be a lawyer, sent him $100 (equivalent to about $3,000 in 2021).[17][18]

Eventually, Warner became known as "Pop" because he was one of the oldest students at Cornell.[19] Warner graduated from Cornell in 1894 and began working as an attorney in Buffalo, New York.[20] This job only lasted for a few months.[21]

Playing career

On Warner's train ride to Ithaca (the site of Cornell), he met Carl Johanson, then Cornell's football coach, who was impressed by Warner's weight (200 pounds).[22] Johanson practically ordered Warner to attend practice. This happened even though Warner admitted that he had never handled a real football.[22]

Despite his commitment to football, at the time Warner's true passion was baseball. During one of his first practices at Cornell he badly injured his shoulder and never played serious baseball again.[23] Warner also participated in track and field and was the school's heavyweight boxing champion for two years.[24]

Football
 
Warner in a Cornell uniform, c. 1894

During his three years at Cornell, Warner played as a guard on the football team. Even though he graduated in the spring of 1894, he returned as a post-graduate and was named captain of the 1894 team, which had a 6–4–1 record.[25][n 3]

Due to the then-tradition of alumni coming back to assist their undergraduate teams in rivalry games, Cornell's coach Marshall Newell left for several weeks to assist Harvard in its rivalry game with Yale.[27] As a captain, Warner was put in charge during the coach's absence.[27] It was during this time that Warner came up with his first original play: Three backs who normally protected the rusher would fake a run to one side, while the quarterback kept the ball and would hand it to the runner, who now had an open field to run through on the other side.[27] During the first in-game execution of the play, Warner carried the ball and was able to run clear for 25 yards. However, as Warner was a guard and not a runner, he was incorrectly holding the ball, and fumbled upon being tackled.[27]

Coaching career

Iowa State, Georgia and Cornell

In the spring of 1895, Warner was asked for a reference to fill the vacant head coaching position at Iowa Agricultural College, in Ames, Iowa.[n 4] Instead of giving a reference, Warner himself applied for the job and received an offer for $25 per week (equivalent to $810 in 2021).[18][28] At the same time, he decided to apply to other schools and received an offer of $34 per week (equivalent to $1,110 in 2021) from the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia.[29][n 5] Because Iowa State began its season in August—almost one and a half months prior to the beginning in Georgia—Warner was able to work out a deal. For $150 (equivalent to about $4,900 in 2021),[18] he would coach in Iowa from August until the second week of September, and then head to Georgia and begin coaching there.[28]

Iowa State

Ultimately, not only did Warner end up coaching at Iowa State before his time at Georgia; but while in Athens, he also received weekly updates from Iowa and sent back telegraphs with detailed advice for the following week.[31] One story recounts that in the middle of September (just before leaving for Georgia), Warner took his team north west for a previously agreed-upon game against the Butte Athletic Club of Butte, Montana.[32] Apparently overconfident, Warner bet the entire sum of his Iowa State wages—$150 (equivalent to about $4,900 in 2021)[18]—on his team's victory.[33] At halftime, his team trailed 10–2. Warner decided to enter the game, filling in at the guard position. Though this had a positive impact, it was not sufficient as his team still lost 12–10.[33] In a 1947 publication by Francis J. Powers, there is an alternate take on the causes of the Butte loss: "The game was played on a field as devoid of grass as a glacier and there was nothing green ... It was impossible for the center to snap the ball to the quarterback on the bounce or even roll it without chances for a fumble ... Whenever Iowa State threatened to score, the referee (a home towner) would make a decision which chilled the Cyclones' offense ... spectators, who followed up and down the sidelines, would whip out their six shooters and blaze away with enthusiasm, which also chilled the Iowa college boys."[34] In order to try and make up for losing all of his Iowa State wages, Warner worked out a deal where, for $30 (equivalent to about $1,000 in 2021),[18] he would stay in contact with Iowa State while at Georgia.[33]

Soon after Warner left for Georgia, Iowa State had its first official college game of the season. In Evanston, just north of Chicago, underdog Iowa State defeated Northwestern 36–0. A Chicago Tribune headline read, "Struck by a Cyclone".[35] Since then, Iowa State teams have been known as the Cyclones.[36] The team finished with three wins and three losses and, like Georgia, retained Warner for the following season. In 1896, Iowa State had eight wins and two losses.[37] Despite leaving Georgia for Cornell in 1897, Warner remained head coach at Iowa State for another three years, posting winning records.[37]

Georgia

 
Warner on the Georgia sidelines.

In Warner's first season at Georgia, he was hired at a salary of $34 per week.[29] The school was a charter member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA), the first athletic conference in the South.[38] The football team had three wins and four losses, including a loss to North Carolina from a not-yet-legal forward pass.[n 6] He was rehired at a salary of $40 per week,[29][n 7] and the next season Georgia had one of the school's first great teams.[37][41][42] With an undefeated record, the team won its first conference title.[43][44] It also avenged the loss to North Carolina, winning 24–16, "For the first time in Southern football history the football supremacy of Virginia and North Carolina was successfully challenged."[45]

During those two years Warner also played two games against John Heisman, another future coaching legend. Heisman was the head coach at Auburn University, and they faced each other in the 1895 and 1896 games of the "Deep South's Oldest Rivalry," an annual confrontation which has continued to the present day.[42] In 1895, the Auburn Tigers defeated the Bulldogs 12–6. The Auburn team was led by quarterback Reynolds "Tick" Tichenor, known for his punt returns.[46] Tichenor had executed the first "hidden-ball trick" in an earlier Auburn game against Vanderbilt,[n 8] and used it again against Georgia.[48] The next year, Tichenor faced Georgia's Richard Von Albade Gammon, a star quarterback in his first year under Warner.[41] Both quarterbacks played well and, unlike the previous year, Warner's team won 16–6.[46][n 9] The second touchdown came right after the first onside kick in the South.[50]

Cornell

After Georgia's outstanding 1896 performance, Warner returned to his alma mater Cornell at twice his Georgia salary.[42][51] While remaining head coach at Iowa State, he coached Cornell to records of 5–3–1 in 1897 and 10–2 in 1898;[1] in the latter season, Cornell outscored its opponents 296–29.[52] Despite its 1898 success, tension existed within the team, as its assistant coach (backed by a large proportion of the players) lobbied to replace Warner. Acknowledging an issue with his leadership, Warner resigned.[52]

Return to Cornell

In 1904, after five years at Carlisle (see below), Warner returned to Cornell but his 1904 team featuring Clemson transfer James Lynah was little improved over the previous year. The following two years were better, with the 1905 team losing to undefeated champion Penn by one point.[1] Their game next year was a scoreless tie, and Cornell lost only one game that season (to Princeton).[53]

Carlisle

After leaving Cornell the first time, Warner became head coach of the football team at Carlisle Indian Industrial School the first Native American boarding school, which stole Native children from their families in order to forcibly assimilate them into white culture. As founder Henry Pratt wrote to “kill the Indian to save the man.” [54] Its late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century football teams were nationally prominent,[55] and Warner was paid $1,200 (equivalent to about $39,000 in 2021),[18] an exceptionally high salary for a coach at the time.[56]

His previous Cornell team had once faced Carlisle, and he had been impressed by his opponent's approach to the game. Since the players were outweighed by every other team in the nation, they relied on speed and agility instead of size and physical force.[57] Despite those strengths, Cornell won the game 23 to 6. The referee was a former Cornell graduate and was accused of helping out Cornell during the game. After the match, while addressing the journalists, Warner acknowledged that there had been assistance from the referee. He stated that "We outscored 'em but we didn't defeat 'em, if you follow me."[58] It has been said that after that game he considered Carlisle to be the future of college football.[57]

The head coach dealt with young players who differed from the white, East-Coast students with whom he had previously worked. At the beginning, he used the then-customary coaching methods of rough language and a strict routine.[59] The Native American students were unaccustomed to such an approach, and several key players stopped attending practices. Warner adjusted his technique, saying that he "found I could get better results. I don't think I ever swore at a player from that time. Maybe I did a little cussing, now and then, but never at players."[60]

His coaching brought immediate improvement. In 1897 and 1898, the Carlisle teams had 6–4 records. In 1899 (Warner's first year), Carlisle won nine and lost two games—to the country's two best teams: Harvard and Princeton. That year saw Carlisle's first major victory, against one of the "Big Four" teams,[n 10] beating Penn 16–5.[60] At the end of the season, the school played Columbia at the Polo Grounds in New York City, a premier sports venue at the time, defeating them 42–0.[n 11] The Columbia game was the first time that a crouching start, a form of what is now known as a three point stance, was used by the running backs. Before Warner's innovation, the stance for a back before the ball was snapped was bent forward with his feet well apart and his hands on his knees. Warner realized that if his players took a stance similar to the one taken by sprinters, the legs would be bent, the back leaning forward, with one hand on the ground and the other arm cocked back to the thigh/hip region. Like with sprinters, this similar stance maximized the speed of his players. Shortly after, it became the standard football stance for both backs and linemen.[63]

 
1903 Carlisle Indians, with Warner at top right

At the end of 1899, Warner was appointed the school's athletic director and his salary more than doubled.[64] A track-and-field program was started that year. Warner knew little about the sport; to prepare as coach he bought every book available and consulted Jack Moakley and Mike Murphy, two of the era's leading head coaches.[65][66] The program was successful; running was a Native American tradition, and students from the Southwest were known for their stamina in long-distance races.[64][67]

Warner's next two years were less fruitful. The 1900 football team went 6–4–1, losing three games to the Big Four, and the 1901 season was a losing one, with Carlisle posting a 5–7–1 record.[1] The following year, the team posted an improved 8–3 record,[68] when Warner began implementing double (lateral) passes. Carlisle's quarterback Jimmy Johnson would make a lateral pass to the halfback running towards the sideline, bringing the defense with him as he tossed the ball back to the fast-running Johnson.[56]

In 1902, Warner played one professional football game for the Syracuse Athletic Club during the first World Series of Football at Madison Square Garden. In the first professional indoor football game, Syracuse defeated the heavily favored New York team. During the series, Warner was seriously cut on the side of his head. Although he laughed it off at first, the injury turned out to be more serious and he was replaced with Blondy Wallace for the rest of the series.[69] For the tournament, Warner and the other team members each earned $23 (equivalent to about $720 in 2021), although each player's expected share had been $300 (equivalent to about $9,000 in 2021); it was a financial failure.[70][18]

Carlisle's 1903 season was a success, with only two losses.[1] The 12–11 defeat by Harvard is known for the "hunch-back", or "hidden-ball", play which Warner learned from Heisman;[71] he had a tailor sew elastic bands into the waists of several players' jerseys before the game so the play could be executed.[56] It was used during a Harvard kickoff; when the ball was caught, Carlisle formed a circle around the returner and pushed the ball up the back of the player's (altered) jersey. Carlisle then broke the huddle and spread out in different directions. Each player except the returner (who had the hidden ball) pretended to carry the football. The ruse confused the Harvard players, who scrambled to find the ball carrier, and the returner (ignored, with both hands free) ran untouched into the end zone.[72][73] Warner's next step was a brief return to Cornell.[53]

Back to Carlisle

After three years at Cornell, Warner returned to Carlisle.[53] He considered his second stint there his best.[n 12] From 1907 to 1914, the team won ten or more games a season five times.[1]

 
A single wing formation illustrated.

During this time at Carlisle, Warner made several significant contributions to football offense, including the body block technique and the single- and double-wingback formations.[75] Under Warner, Carlisle quarterback Frank Mount Pleasant and fullback Pete Hauser became two of the first regular spiral passers in football (the forward pass was legalized in 1906).[76][77][n 13] In 1908 he introduced the technique of body blocking, instead of blocking with the shoulders.[79]

Warner considered the 1907 Carlisle team "about as perfect a football machine as I ever sent on the field".[56][n 14] The team posted a 10–1 record, outscored opponents 267–62 and pioneered an elegant, high-speed passing game; it was one of the first teams to regularly throw the ball deep downfield.[56] For the first time in 11 years, Carlisle defeated Harvard on the road 23–15.[75] Carlisle also won 26–6 over Penn.[80] In the second play of the Penn game, Hauser threw a 40-yard spiral pass, hitting his receiver in stride.[56] At the time such a pass was stunning and unexpected, and is considered by one journalist to be an evolutionary step in the game.[56] The 1907 season is known for Warner's first use of the single-wing formation, characterized by laterals, trap and counter runs, and passing.[81]

According to Sally Jenkins, in her Sports Illustrated article on Carlisle:

To take advantage of the Indians' versatility Warner drew up a new offense ..."the Carlisle formation," but later it would be known as the single wing. It was predicated on one small move: Warner shifted a halfback out wide, to outflank the opposing tackle, forming something that looked like a wing. It opened up a world of possibilities. The Indians could line up as if to punt – and then throw. No one would know whether they were going to run, pass or kick. For added measure Warner taught his quarterbacks to sprint out a few yards to their left or their right, buying more time to throw. The rest of the players flooded downfield and knocked down any opponent who might be able to intercept or bat away the pass.[56]

 
The 1911 Carlisle Indians pose with a game ball from their upset of Harvard

The 1907 team included a young Jim Thorpe, considered one of the greatest athletes who ever lived.[82][83] Thorpe weighed just 155 lb (70 kg), light for a football player. Warner played him as a substitute, encouraging him to put his time into track and field.[75] By 1909, Warner had Thorpe competing in track and field and he won 14 events. In 1911, Thorpe began training for the upcoming Olympics, and won gold medals in the pentathlon and decathlon at the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm.[n 15]

 
Jim Thorpe tackling a weighted dummy on a pulley with Warner supervising, 1912.

Carlisle football had another standout year in 1911, posting an 11–1 record.[1] Thorpe had grown to 180 lb (82 kg), big enough to be a starter. The team defeated Harvard 18–15, with Thorpe scoring all of Carlisle's field goals.[85] Walter Camp selected Thorpe as a first-team All-American. According to one source, Thorpe was "recognized as the greatest player of the year and a man whose kicking is likely to revolutionize the game".[86]

Warner considered the 1912 team brilliant and adaptive, and experimented with new plays and formations. In its game against Army, Warner's team introduced a wrinkle to the wing-back system. According to Francis J. Powers, author of a book that concentrated on Warner's approach to football:

 
The double wing formation.

Warner had both halfbacks close to the line and flanking the defensive tackles. That was the start of the double wingback offense, which enjoyed tremendous popularity until the T formation was modernized with the man in motion. The double wing became the most effective of all systems for effective forward passing since it permitted the quick release of four receivers down the field.[75]

Carlisle dominated the next two years, with the 1912 and 1913 teams losing only one game each.[1] Warner's salary increased to $4,500 per season (equivalent to $126,000 in 2021).[87][18]

In January 1913 a newspaper article revealed that Thorpe had played minor league baseball in North Carolina in the summer of 1908 with the Rocky Mount Railroaders, causing the International Olympic Committee to rescind the gold medals that he had won in the decathlon and pentathlon in the 1912 Olympics. (After Thorpe's death the medals were posthumously reinstated.) Warner denied that he knew about Thorpe playing baseball professionally, and he and Moses Friedman, the Carlisle superintendent, drafted a statement for Thorpe to sign in which Thorpe took all the blame onto himself. Steve Sheinkin, the author of Undefeated – Jim Thorpe and the Carlisle Indian School Football Team, characterizes Warner's and Friedman's behavior as "scrambling to save their own hides."

"Thorpe had never tried to hide his participation in baseball. He'd told Superintendent Friedman before leaving campus in 1909, and had talked about it ever since coming back. 'I never made any secret about it.' Thorpe later said. 'I often told the boys, with the coaches listening, about things that happened while I was at Rocky Mount.' There's simply no way Pop Warner didn't know about Thorpe's summer baseball. After all they'd accomplished together, all they'd been through, this was the moment Thorpe needed Warner the most. This was Warner's chance to stand by Thorpe's side. He didn't do it. To Jim's teammates, this was nothing less than a knife to the back." Gus Welch, one of Thorpe's teammates, said, "Mr. Warner is a good football coach, but a man with no principle."

In 1914 there was an administrative change in Washington, with federal money considered better spent in the Midwest than on schools like Carlisle.[75] Many students left, and this affected the team (which had a 5–10–1 record). After that season, Warner left Carlisle to become head coach at Pittsburgh.[75]

Pittsburgh

 
Warner and Pitt captain Bob Peck during the 1916 season.

When Warner arrived at the University of Pittsburgh in 1915, the 128-year-old school was on a new campus with 3,900 students.[87] He inherited a team in good shape, full of future All-Americans,[87] and coached the Pittsburgh Panthers to their first undefeated season. Six of their eight games (all shutouts) were played at home on Forbes Field, including a 45–0 victory over Carlisle.[1] Warner coached his Pitt teams to 29 straight victories, and is credited with three national championships (1915, 1916 and 1918).[7] Coaching Pittsburgh from 1915 to 1923, he compiled a 60–12–4 record.[88]

Although the 1915 season was a success, the next year's team was one of the greatest of Warner's career.[89] The Panthers were again undefeated and, like the previous year, six of the eight games were shutouts. Thirty-two of their 35 players were from Western Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh.[90] The team scored 255 points, conceding 25. Warner considered the team an improvement because its defense was more dominant than the previous year's.[90] The Panthers were the consensus national champions, and Warner became recognized as one of football's greatest coaches.[91]

 
Warner during the 1917 season at Pittsburgh

In 1917 the United States entered World War I, and some players (including Andy Hastings and Jimmy Dehart) entered military service.[91] Pittsburgh played an undefeated full season despite the war, although it was not awarded the national championship.[n 16] Although the team lacked the previous year's punch, it dominated the opposition. A key aspect of its success was the opposing coaches' inability to address Warner's evolving strategies; according to Powers, "His reverse plays were a mystery, although Pop always was willing to explain them in detail to any other coach".[91]

Faculties had to step in to stop a decisive, postseason national championship game with John Heisman's undefeated Georgia Tech team.[93] The game was postponed until the following season, giving Tech the 1917 national championship (the first for any Southern school).[94] On November 23, 1918, the two teams played at Pittsburgh.[95] At the stadium where the game was to be played, the locker rooms were next to each other, with only a thin wall separating the two teams prior to the game. Heisman was first to begin an inspirational speech and it was said that he passionately described both heroes of Ancient Greece as well as the tragedy of a soldier found in his armor among the ruins of Pompeii. Because of Georgia Tech's players' silence the speech was crystal clear on the other side of the wall. Upon its finish Warner smiled and quietly told his players "Okay, boys. There's the speech. Now go out and knock them off." Pittsburgh defeated Georgia Tech 32–0.[95]

 
Tom Davies runs vs. Georgia Tech, 1918.

The 1918 season was cut short at the end of November due to the continuing effects of World War I and the influenza pandemic.[96] Only five games were played, and the season's final game was in Cleveland against the Naval Reserve. Warner's first loss at Pitt, it was one of the most controversial games in school history.[97] According to Warner and several reporters covering the game, Pitt was robbed by the officials.[97] The referees said that the timekeeper's watch was broken, ended the first half before Pitt was able to score and allowed the Reserves extra time in the fourth quarter to pull ahead, 10–9.[98][99] Although he refused to acknowledge the loss,[n 17] Warner's 29-game winning streak came to an end. Moon Ducote kicked the 41-yard, game-winning field goal for the Naval Reserve, and Warner called him "the greatest football player I ever saw".[100] Despite the loss, a number of selectors named the 4–1 1918 Panthers national champion.[101] The team was led by freshman running back Tom Davies, who averaged 150 yards per game over his four-year career.[102][103]

The 1919 season began with high expectations; World War I was over, and key players had returned from service.[104] However, things did not go Warner's way; at the beginning of the season, problems with the offensive line and on the flanks became apparent. Their first defeat was at Syracuse, where the Orangemen won 20–3. The 1919 Panthers had six wins, two losses and one tie.[105]

They were undefeated in 1920, with ties against Syracuse and undefeated Penn State. In 1921 the team's record dipped to 5–3–1,[1] but Pitt made college football history on October 8, 1921. Harold W. Arlin announced the first live radio broadcast of a college football game in the United States from Forbes Field on KDKA, as the Panthers defeated West Virginia 21–13 in the annual Backyard Brawl.[106]

Although Warner announced before the 1922 season that he was leaving to take the head-coaching position at Stanford, he honored his contract and remained at Pitt through 1923. The 1922 team had an 8–2 record,[1] and the season ended with the Panthers taking their first cross-country train trip to defeat Stanford 16–7 in Palo Alto (coached by two Pitt assistants, sent ahead by Warner).[107] Andrew Kerr became head coach at Stanford during Warner's last two years at Pitt.[107] Warner's final season was his worst at Pitt, as the Panthers stumbled to a 5–4 record in 1923.[1] However, the Warner era ended on a high note with a 20–3 victory over Penn State on November 29.[108]

Stanford

 
1924 Stanford team: line coach Claude E. Thornhill, Warner, assistant Andrew Kerr and team captain Jim Lawson.

Football on the Pacific Coast had been on the rise since the late 1910s.[n 18] Early in 1922, Warner signed a contract with Stanford University in which he would begin coaching in 1924 (after his contract with Pitt expired).[110] Health concerns, a significant pay raise and the rising status of Pacific Coast football made Warner make the big change. Years later, he wrote:

I felt my health would be better on the Pacific coast. Weather conditions at Pittsburgh during the football season are rather disagreeable, and much of the late season work had to be done upon a field which was ankle deep in mud. At the close of every season I would be in poor physical condition, twice being rendered incapable of coaching while I recuperated in a hospital. Doctors advised me that the climate of the Pacific coast would be much better for a man of my age and in the work in which I was engaged.[111]

In 1924, Warner began his nine-year tenure at Stanford University.[n 19] When he began coaching, Stanford was one of nine teams in the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC). Warner inherited a notable squad from the previous year, including Ernie Nevers (whom Warner considered his greatest player)[107] and All-American ends Ted Shipkey and Jim Lawson.[113]

A season highlight was the final game against Stanford's arch-rival California at California Memorial Stadium, the last game of the regular season. Before the game, both teams were undefeated and Stanford had not beaten California since 1905.[n 20][113] Nevers did not play due to a broken ankle.[114] Late in the game, California was leading 20–3; California coach Andy Smith, sure the game was over, began substituting regular players.[97] Warner seized the opportunity to combine passing with the trick plays for which he was known (a fake reverse and a full spinner), and Stanford made a comeback. The game ended in a 20–20 tie.[97]

 
Ernie Nevers, whom Warner called his greatest player.

Because the game was California's second tie, Stanford was chosen to play in the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day against the University of Notre Dame's Fighting Irish coached by Knute Rockne. Like Warner, Rockne is considered one of the greatest coaches in football history. According to journalist Allison Danzig, "With the exception of Knute Rockne of Notre Dame, Pop Warner was the most publicized coach in football."[115] The game was thus a test of two different and highly influential systems of football:[9] "the Warner system with the wing backs, unbalanced line and gigantic power [and the] Knute Rockne system with its rhythmic, dancing shift, lightning speed, balanced line and finely timed blocking".[116][117] Notre Dame's backfield was composed of the renowned Four Horsemen. Nevers played all 60 minutes of the game, and rushed for 114 yd (104 m) (more yardage than the Four Horsemen combined).[118] Warner's offense moved the ball but was unable to score, and Notre Dame won 27–10.[119]

During the 1925 season, Stanford lost just one PCC game (to Washington);[120] California was finally defeated, 27–7. It was the first year of a new rivalry, with coach Howard Jones and the University of Southern California (USC) team.[n 21] In their first game, at the Los Angeles Memorial Colosseum, Stanford scored twice in the first half but had to hold off the charging Trojans in a 13–9 win. Because of the loss to Washington, Warner's team was not invited to the Rose Bowl.[120]

Stanford won all its 1926 games, crushing California 41–7 and narrowly defeating USC 13–12.[123] Warner's team was invited to the Rose Bowl to play Alabama. Like the game against the Fighting Irish, Stanford dominated but the result was a 7–7 tie.[123] After the game, both teams were recognized as national champions by a number of publications.[124][n 22]

The 1927 season was one of underachievement and ultimate success. Stanford lost its third game to non-conference St. Mary's College.[126] Stanford's next loss was against non-conference Santa Clara. The game against USC was a 13-to-13 tie.[126]

However, that year, Stanford defeated California 13–6. The game included a bootleg play, the invention of which some credit to Warner. Powers stated that,

Stanford put the game on ice in the fourth period when Pop introduced the bootlegger play, which was to be widely copied and still is in use. On the original bootlegger, Warner made use of Biff Hoffman's tremendous hands. Hoffman would take the pass from center and then fake to another back. Keeping the ball, he would hide it behind him and run as though he had given it to a teammate. Sometimes defensive players would step out of Hoffman's path, thinking he was going to block. Hoffman "bootlegged" for the touchdown against California ...[127]

Despite the two losses, Stanford finished the season as PCC co-champion. They were invited to the 1928 Rose Bowl against Pitt, Warner's former team now coached by protégé Jock Sutherland. Warner broke his losing Rose Bowl streak, defeating Sutherland 7–6.[128] The win was Warner's last appearance at the Rose Bowl.[129] In recognition of his Rose Bowl accomplishments, Warner was inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame in 2018.[130]

The 1929 season is known for Warner's regular use of the hook and lateral, a play that involves a receiver who runs a curl pattern, catches a short pass and immediately laterals the ball to another receiver running a crossing route.[131] According to the October 25, 1929 Stanford Daily, "The trickiness that Pop Warner made famous in his spin plays and passing is very evident ... The frosh have been drilling all week on fast, deceptive forward and lateral pass plays, and together with the reverses will have a widely varied attack".[132] That season brought Warner his second straight loss to Jones, with Stanford defeated by the Trojans 7–0. USC won the conference, and went to the Rose Bowl.[131] Jones went on to win every year thereafter, including 1932, Warner's last season at Stanford. Because of the five consecutive defeats, Warner was severely criticized by Stanford alumni.[n 23] In all, Warner and Jones played eight games; Jones won five, Warner two and one was a tie.[134] Against Stanford's main rival, California, Warner won five games, tied three and lost one.[133]

Temple

Warner left Stanford for Temple University in Philadelphia, his final head-coaching job, after the 1932 season.[n 24] He was paid $75,000 for five years (equivalent to $1.6 million in 2021)[18], one of the largest salaries ever offered a coach at the time.[136] The 1934 team was undefeated during the regular season, losing to Tulane in the first Sugar Bowl. A star of the game was Dave Smukler, whom Warner considered one of his great fullbacks.[136]

In later years Warner said he regretted his decision to leave Stanford for Temple.[133] He left because of concern about the school's changing funding priorities. The university leadership was planning to make Stanford primarily a graduate school; because of an increase in the number of junior colleges in California, the administration saw less need for undergraduate instruction at Stanford.[133] Because fewer students were admitted, higher grade requirements for incoming students made admission more difficult and student athletes began enrolling at USC and California instead of Stanford. Warner soon realized that he had made the wrong decision; due to the economic effects of the Great Depression, the number of applicants to Stanford decreased significantly and athletes were again admitted.[133] Temple upset the Florida Gators, coached by future Temple coach Josh Cody, 20–12 in Warner's last game.[137]

San Jose State

While coaching at Temple, Warner continued living in Palo Alto (where Stanford is located). After his 1938 retirement he was immediately recruited as an advisor to Dudley DeGroot, a former center at Stanford and now the head coach at San Jose State College (near Palo Alto).[136] Officially an advisor, Warner was immediately put in charge of the offense. According to Powers, "DeGroot had been using a single back offense but Pop immediately changed to the double wing, much to the doubts of San Jose players. However, the formation began to click and San Jose not only enjoyed an undefeated season but was the highest scoring team in the nation."[138] That year the San Jose State Spartans played against College of the Pacific, coached by Amos Alonzo Stagg. It was the first time the two coaches had met since 1907, when Warner was coaching Carlisle and defeated Stagg's University of Chicago 18–4.[138] Warner and DeGroot's San Jose State defeated Stagg's Pacific Tigers, 39–0.[138]

Personal life

Warner married the former Tibb Lorraine Smith in Springville on June 1, 1899.[139] He smoked Turkish Trophy cigarettes[3] and drank alcohol; his trainers were instructed to supply him with "cough medicine".[3]

Warner always enjoyed painting in watercolors.[140][141] According to an art exhibition review in The Stanford Daily, Warner relied on painting to put him through law school at Cornell.[142] He also had a woodworking shop in his garage.[3]

Retirement and death

He retired from San Jose State (and coaching) in 1940. Warner died on September 7, 1954, at age 83 in Palo Alto from throat cancer. Tibb Warner died on November 4, 1961.[143]

Coaching legacy

For his contributions to football, the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) gave Warner its Amos Alonzo Stagg Award in 1948.[144] His name is widely known for the Pop Warner Little Scholars program, which began in 1929 as the Junior Football Conference in Philadelphia to keep children busy and out of trouble. In 1934, soon after Warner joined Temple, he agreed to the program's renaming as the Pop Warner Conference.[145] As of 2016, about 325,000 children between the ages of 5 and 16 are mentored.[5]

Innovation

Andrew Kerr, who was an assistant to Warner at Pittsburgh and Stanford, said he considered Warner "the greatest creative genius in American football."[146] Morris Bishop, a Cornell professor of history, wrote that Warner "caused more rule changes than all the other coaches combined."[147]

Warner invented the single and double wing formations,[148][149] the three-point stance,[150] and the modern body block technique.[2][151] He introduced several plays, such as the trap run,[152] the bootleg,[127] the naked reverse,[146] and the screen pass.[153] He was among the first to use the huddle,[152] to number plays,[152] and to teach the spiral pass and spiral punt.[154][155] He improved shoulder and thigh pads;[156] and was the first to utilize adjustable fiber, rather than cotton.[152] He also had his own helmet color-coding: red for backs and white for ends.[157]

Coaching tree

Warner's coaching tree includes:

  1. Charley Bowser, a Pitt end, coached at his alma mater.[158]
  2. Doc Carlson, also a star in basketball, became Pitt's basketball coach and led the team to the national championship.[159]
  3. Tom Davies, a back at Pitt, coached at Geneva and Allegheny.[102][103]
  4. James DeHart, a Pitt quarterback, became head coach at Washington and Lee and Duke Universities.[160]
  5. Dudley DeGroot, a center at Stanford, was the coach at San Jose State when Warner was an advisory coach. Later in his career, DeGroot was head coach of the NFL's Washington Redskins.[161]
  6. William Henry Dietz, a Carlisle tackle, coached at Washington State and Haskell and was the first coach of the Redskins.[162]
  7. Katy Easterday, a Pitt back, coached at Waynesburg.[163]
  8. Albert Exendine, a Carlisle end, coached at several universities (including Georgetown).[164]
  9. Skip Gougler, a Pitt back, assisted at his alma mater.[165]
  10. Andy Gustafson, a Pitt back, coached at VPI.[166]
  11. Joe Guyon, a Carlisle back, coached at Union College.[167]
  12. Harvey Harman, a Pitt tackle, coached at Penn and Rutgers.[168]
  13. Pat Herron, a Pitt end, coached at Indiana and Duke Universities.[169]
  14. Orville Hewitt, Pitt fullback who was an assistant at Alabama.[170]
  15. Jimmy Johnson, Carlisle quarterback, assisted at his alma mater.[171]
  16. Andy Kerr, Warner's assistant, coached at Colgate.[172]
  17. Herb McCracken, a Pitt back, coached at Allegheny and Lafayette.[173]
  18. George 'Tank' McLaren, a two-time All-American, was a head coach for ten years after graduation.[174]
  19. Charley Moran, a Carlisle assistant, coached at Texas A&M and Centre.[175]
  20. Frank Mount Pleasant, a Carlisle quarterback, coached at West Virginia Wesleyan and Buffalo.[176]
  21. Rufus B. Nalley, a Georgia back, coached at the Georgia Institute of Technology.[177]
  22. Ernie Nevers, a Stanford back, coached the Duluth Eskimos and Chicago Cardinals.[178]
  23. Bill Newman, center at Cornell who also assisted at Carlisle, coached at Georgetown.[179]
  24. Bob Peck, a Pitt center, was athletic director at Culver Military Academy.[180]
  25. Bemus Pierce, a Carlisle guard, coached at his alma mater and Buffalo.[181]
  26. Daniel A. Reed, a Cornell guard, coached at Cincinnati and Penn State.[182]
  27. Don Robesky, Stanford guard, was a line coach at Bakersfield College.[183]
  28. Eddie Rogers, a Carlisle end, coached at his alma mater.[184]
  29. Harry Shipkey, a Stanford player, coached freshman football at his alma mater.[185]
  30. Ted Shipkey, a Stanford end, coached for Arizona State and New Mexico.[186]
  31. Dale Sies, a Pitt guard, coached the Rock Island Independents.[187]
  32. Chuck Smalling, a Stanford fullback, assisted at Ole Miss.[188]
  33. Jake Stahl, a Pitt guard, coached at Duquesne.[189]
  34. Jock Sutherland, a Pitt end who became head coach (replacing Warner in 1924), coached Pitt for the next 14 years and later headed the Pittsburgh Steelers.[190]
  35. Fred H. Swan, a Stanford guard, coached at Temple.[191]
  36. Edwin Sweetland, a Cornell tackle, coached at several universities (including Kentucky and Syracuse).[192]
  37. Tiny Thornhill, a Pitt tackle, became a coach at Stanford.[172]
  38. Jim Thorpe, a Carlisle back, coached the Canton Bulldogs and was the first president of the National Football League.[193]
  39. Ed Walker, an end at Stanford, coached at Ole Miss.[194]
  40. Edgar Wingard, who assisted Warner at Carlisle, coached at Maine.[195]
  41. Frank Wilton, a Stanford back, coached at Miami (Ohio).[196]

Head coaching record

Football

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Georgia Bulldogs (Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association) (1895–1896)
1895 Georgia 3–4 2–2 3rd
1896 Georgia 4–0 2–0 T–1st
Georgia: 7–4 2–4
Cornell Big Red (Independent) (1897–1898)
1897 Cornell 5–3–1
1898 Cornell 10–2
Carlisle Indians (Independent) (1899–1903)
1899 Carlisle 9–2
1900 Carlisle 6–4–1
1901 Carlisle 5–7–1
1902 Carlisle 8–3
1903 Carlisle 11–2–1
Cornell Big Red (Independent) (1904–1906)
1904 Cornell 7–3
1905 Cornell 6–4
1906 Cornell 8–1–2
Cornell: 36–13–3
Carlisle Indians (Independent) (1907–1914)
1907 Carlisle 10–1
1908 Carlisle 11–2–1[n 1]
1909 Carlisle 8–3–1
1910 Carlisle 8–6
1911 Carlisle 11–1
1912 Carlisle 12–1–1
1913 Carlisle 10–1–1
1914 Carlisle 5–9–1
Carlisle: 114–42–8[n 1]
Pittsburgh Panthers (Independent) (1915–1923)
1915 Pittsburgh 8–0
1916 Pittsburgh 8–0
1917 Pittsburgh 10–0
1918 Pittsburgh 4–1
1919 Pittsburgh 6–2–1
1920 Pittsburgh 6–0–2
1921 Pittsburgh 5–3–1
1922 Pittsburgh 8–2
1923 Pittsburgh 5–4
Pittsburgh: 60–12–4
Stanford Indians (Pacific Coast Conference) (1924–1932)
1924 Stanford 7–1–1 3–0–1 1st L Rose
1925 Stanford 7–2 4–1 2nd
1926 Stanford 10–0–1 4–0 1st T Rose
1927 Stanford 8–2–1 4–0–1 T–1st W Rose
1928 Stanford 8–3–1 4–1–1 3rd
1929 Stanford 9–2 5–1 2nd
1930 Stanford 9–1–1 4–1 3rd
1931 Stanford 7–2–2 2–2–1 T–5th
1932 Stanford 6–4–1 1–3–1 7th
Stanford: 71–17–8 31–9–5
Temple Owls (Independent) (1933–1938)
1933 Temple 5–3
1934 Temple 7–1–2 L Sugar
1935 Temple 7–3
1936 Temple 6–3–2
1937 Temple 3–2–4
1938 Temple 3–6–1
Temple: 31–18–9
Total: 319–106–32[n 1]
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e The NCAA credits Warner with a career football coaching record of 319–106–32. The College Football Data Warehouse gives him one fewer win with the Carlisle Indians in 1908 for a career record of 318–106–32.[1] Neither includes the five seasons at Iowa State (1895–1899) during which time Warner co-coached the Cyclones to a record of 18–8 while he simultaneously coached at three other schools.
  2. ^ Some consider these skills and experiences those that first inspired Warner to later make improvements to shoulder and thigh pads, as well as tackling dummies.[14]
  3. ^ That year Cornell lost to Michigan, marking the first time Michigan was able to beat an Ivy League team.[26]
  4. ^ In 1895, the university was known as the Iowa Agricultural College and Model Farm.
  5. ^ For a ten-week season ($340), equivalent to $11,100 in 2021.[18] For the 1895–96 academic year, Georgia's entire student body consisted of 126 students.[30]
  6. ^ North Carolina was "in a punting situation and a Georgia rush seemed destined to block the ball. The punter (Joel Whitaker, out of desperation[39]) with an impromptu dash to his right, tossed the ball and it was caught by George Stephens, who ran 70 yards for a touchdown."[39] Warner complained to the referee that the play was illegal. However, the referee let the play stand because he did not see the pass.[39] The teams played a second time and North Carolina won 10–6.
  7. ^ "I thought more of that contract than any I have ever received for coaching a football team" said Warner.[40]
  8. ^ Auburn still lost to Vanderbilt 9–6, the first game in the south decided by a field goal.[47]
  9. ^ Richard Gammon died soon after the following season's game against the University of Virginia.[41] Tichenor and Gammon played together in 1897 as Tichenor transferred to Georgia, taking Gammon's place as the starting quarterback, who shifted to fullback.[42] In the game against Virginia, Gammon was playing defense and suffered a severe concussion after taking part in a tackle. With coaches' help Gammon was able to walk, but he lost his consciousness shortly after getting off the field. He remained unconscious and died early the next morning.[49]
  10. ^ The original term was the Big Three – the dominant programs of Harvard, Yale and Princeton. By the beginning of the century Penn also became considered one of the elite football schools.[61]
  11. ^ Columbia had also previously upset one of the Big Four – having beaten Yale 5–0.[62]
  12. ^ Warner was once asked by a reporter from the Carlisle Herald to name an all-time Carlisle football team. It included in the line: Albert Exendine, Martin Wheelock, Bemus Pierce, William Garlowe, Charles Dillon, Emil Hauser, Edward Rogers; and in the backfield: Jimmy Johnson, Jim Thorpe, Joe Guyon, and Pete Hauser.[74]
  13. ^ Warner credited Hauser with tossing the first one.[78]
  14. ^ Quarterback Mount Pleasant was also on the 1904 and 1908 U.S. Olympic track and field teams, and at end was future member of the College Football Hall of Fame and future coach Albert Exendine.
  15. ^ Lewis Tewanima, another Carlisle track and field athlete who competed in Stockholm where he won the silver medal in the 10,000 meter run, was considered a ward of the state with Thorpe. Warner was delegated to accompany them to the Olympics.[75] Warner's 1907 quarterback Frank Mount Pleasant was also an Olympic athlete who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics in London.[84]
  16. ^ The team was known as "The Fighting Dentists" because on occasion every position was filled by dental students.[92]
  17. ^ According to Warner's timekeeper, the fourth quarter ran for 49 minutes and according to official statistics, there were 52 plays in the first half and 52 plays in the fourth quarter.[97]
  18. ^ At the 1917 Rose Bowl, the University of Oregon defeated University of Pennsylvania 14 to 0. While at the 1920 Rose Bowl, Oregon lost to one of the recognized national champions, Harvard, by one point: 6 to 7. The next year, Andy Smith's University of California team beat an undefeated Ohio State 28 to 0, making California the widely agreed national champions of the 1920 season.[109]
  19. ^ Stanford was founded in 1887 and had fielded a football team every year since 1892, with the exception of 1906 to 1918, when football was dropped due concerns over the sport's increasing numbers of injuries and deaths. Along with other west coast schools the sport of rugby was played instead.[112]
  20. ^ In 1906, concerned with the growing levels of violence in football, both schools stopped playing American football and switched to rugby as their university's main sport. California switched back to football in 1915, with Stanford waiting until 1919.[112]
  21. ^ Jones won 1921 and 1922 Big Ten conference titles while heading the University of Iowa.[121][122]
  22. ^ Parke H. Davis selected the Lafayette Leopards, coached by Herb McCracken, Warner's former player at Pittsburgh, as national champion.[125]
  23. ^ During Warner's latter years at Stanford, USC became the undisputed leader of the west, winning multiple national championships.[133]
  24. ^ Stanford replaced Warner with Claude "Tiny" Thornhill, his assistant coach and also one of his star players at Pittsburgh, for the 1933 season. That season Stanford beat USC 13–7, ending the Trojans' 23-game unbeaten streak. Stanford won the PCC and played in the Rose Bowl, but lost there to Columbia 7–0.[135]

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Books

  • Anderson, Lars (2007). Carlisle versus Army: Jim Thorpe, Dwight Eisenhower, Pop Warner, and the forgotten story of football's greatest battle. Random House. ISBN 978-1-4000-6600-1.
  • Balthasar, Joel D. (2004). Pop Warner Little Scholars. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-3505-0.
  • Bishop, Morris (September 9, 2014). A History of Cornell. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-5537-7.
  • Bowling, Lewis (August 28, 2012). Alabama Football Tales. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-61423-663-4.
  • Cook, William (2011). Jim Thorpe: A Biography. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-8577-2.
  • Crawford, Bill (October 18, 2004). All American: The Rise and Fall of Jim Thorpe. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-55732-6.
  • Danzig, Allison (1956). The History of American Football: Its Great Teams, Players, and Coaches. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
  • Edwards, William Hanford (1916). Football Days: Memories of the Game and of the Men Behind the Ball. Moffat, Yard, and Company.
  • Garbin, Patrick (2008). About Them Dawgs. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6040-7.
  • Iowa State University (2006). Iowa State Cyclone Football (PDF).
  • Keck, Harry (November 30, 1918). Navy Reserves Steal Game From Pitt. Pittsburgh Sunday Post, Republished in the Greatest Moments in Pitt Football History (1994). Nashville, TN: Athlon Sports Communications. ISBN 978-1-878839-04-6.
  • King, C. Richard (2015). Native Americans In Sports. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-46403-7.
  • Kurz, Bob (1983). Miami of Ohio, the Cradle of Coaches. Troy Daily News.
  • Long, Howie (May 26, 2015). Football for Dummies. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-119-02263-3.
  • Manchester, Alan V. (2012). Springville. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-9157-5.
  • Menke, Frank G. (1950). The All-Sports Record Book. A. S. Barnes & Co.
  • Miller, Jeffrey J. (August 3, 2015). Pop Warner. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-2274-3.
  • National Collegiate Athletic Association (2007). Official 2007 NCAA Division I Records Book (PDF).
  • National Collegiate Athletic Association (August 2009). Official 2009 NCAA Division I Football Records Book (PDF). Indianapolis, Indiana.
  • National Collegiate Athletic Association (2015). National Poll Rankings (PDF). NCAA Division I Football Records. NCAA.
  • Nelson, David M. (1994). The Anatomy of a Game. University of Delaware Press. ISBN 978-0-87413-455-1.
  • Otto, J. R. (1969). Football. Taylor & Francis.
  • Pope, Edwin (1956). Football's Greatest Coaches. Tupper and Love.
  • Powers, Francis J. (1969). Life Story of Glen S. (Pop) Warner, Gridiron's Greatest Strategist. Chicago, IL: The Athletic Institute.
  • Reed, Thomas Walter (1949). History of the University of Georgia. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press.
  • Roza, Greg (September 18, 2008). Football in the SEC. Read How You Want. ISBN 978-1-4042-1919-9.
  • Sciullo, Sam Jr., ed. (1991). Pitt Football: University of Pittsburgh Football Media Guide. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Sports Information Office.
  • Sciullo, Sam Jr. (2008). University of Pittsburgh Football Vault: The History of the Panthers. Atlanta, GA: Whitman Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7948-2653-6.
  • University of Pittsburgh (2005). . Archived from the original on December 3, 2005.
  • Stanly, Gregory Kent (1996). Before Big Blue – Sports at the University of Kentucky 1880–1940. The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-1991-5.
  • Stegeman, John F. (2006). Pop Warner of Georgia. Echoes of Georgia Football: The Greatest Stories Ever Told. Triumph Books. ISBN 978-1-61749-048-4.
  • Walsh, Christopher J. (July 18, 2006). Where Football Is King. Taylor Trade Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4617-3477-2.
  • Warner, Glenn Scobey (1912). A course in football for players and coaches. Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
  • Whittingham, Richard (2001). Rites of Autumn. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-2219-8.
  • Woodruff, Fuzzy (1928a). A History of Southern Football 1890–1928. Vol. 1.
  • Woodruff, Fuzzy (1928b). A History of Southern Football 1890–1928. Vol. 2.

External links

warner, glenn, warner, redirects, here, soccer, coach, naval, academy, glenn, warner, soccer, coach, other, uses, disambiguation, glenn, scobey, warner, april, 1871, september, 1954, most, commonly, known, american, college, football, coach, various, instituti. Glenn Warner redirects here For the soccer coach at the Naval Academy see Glenn Warner soccer coach For other uses see Pop Warner disambiguation Glenn Scobey Warner April 5 1871 September 7 1954 most commonly known as Pop Warner was an American college football coach at various institutions who is responsible for several key aspects of the modern game Included among his innovations are the single and double wing formations precursors of the modern spread and shotgun formations 2 the three point stance and the body blocking technique 2 Fellow pioneer coach Amos Alonzo Stagg called Warner one of the excellent creators 3 4 He was inducted as a coach into the College Football Hall of Fame as part of its inaugural class in 1951 2 He also contributed to a junior football program which became known as Pop Warner Little Scholars a popular youth American football organization 5 Pop WarnerWarner in 1921Biographical detailsBorn 1871 04 05 April 5 1871Springville New York U S DiedSeptember 7 1954 1954 09 07 aged 83 Palo Alto California U S Playing careerFootball1892 1894Cornell1902Syracuse Athletic ClubPosition s GuardCoaching career HC unless noted Football1895 1896Georgia1895 1899Iowa Agricultural State1897 1898Cornell1899 1903Carlisle1904 1906Cornell1907 1914Carlisle1915 1923Pittsburgh1924 1932Stanford1933 1938Temple1939 1940San Jose State associate Baseball1905 1906CornellHead coaching recordOverall319 106 32 football n 1 36 15 baseball Bowls1 1 2Accomplishments and honorsChampionships4 national 1915 1916 1918 1926 1 SIAA 1896 3 PCC 1924 1926 1927 AwardsAmos Alonzo Stagg Award 1948 College Football Hall of FameInducted in 1951 profile In the early 1900s he created a premier football program at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School a federally funded off reservation Indian boarding school 6 He also coached teams to four national championships Pittsburgh in 1915 1916 and 1918 and Stanford in 1926 7 In all he was head coach at the University of Georgia 1895 1896 Iowa Agricultural College and Model Farm 1895 1899 Cornell University 1897 1898 and 1904 1906 Carlisle 1899 1903 and 1907 1914 Pittsburgh 1915 1923 Stanford 1924 1932 and Temple University 1933 1938 compiling a career college football record of 319 106 32 n 1 Predating Bear Bryant Eddie Robinson and Joe Paterno he once had the most wins of any coach in college football history 8 Contents 1 Early years 1 1 Student years at Cornell 1 1 1 Playing career 1 1 1 1 Football 2 Coaching career 2 1 Iowa State Georgia and Cornell 2 1 1 Iowa State 2 1 2 Georgia 2 1 3 Cornell 2 1 3 1 Return to Cornell 2 2 Carlisle 2 2 1 Back to Carlisle 2 3 Pittsburgh 2 4 Stanford 2 5 Temple 2 6 San Jose State 3 Personal life 3 1 Retirement and death 4 Coaching legacy 4 1 Innovation 4 2 Coaching tree 5 Head coaching record 5 1 Football 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Books 10 External linksEarly years EditWarner was born April 5 1871 on a farm in Springville New York He was the son of William Warner a cavalry officer in the American Civil War and schoolteacher Adaline Scobey 9 10 In 1878 a railroad came to Springville and four years later the family moved to a house on East Main Street 11 Plump as a child Warner was sometimes known as Butter 11 He began playing baseball at an early age and was a skilled pitcher 12 Nobody in town owned a football his only exposure to the new sport at a young age was with an inflated cow s bladder and as few knew the rules the game more resembled soccer 12 Warner s East Main Street house attracted a number of friends when a neighbor told his mother that the boys play would damage her lawn she replied I m raising boys not grass 12 In 1889 at 19 years old Warner graduated from Springville Griffith Institute and joined his family in moving down to Wichita Falls Texas to work on their new purchased cattle and wheat ranch totaling over hundreds of acres 13 Aside from ranching Warner got a job assisting a tinsmith 14 He was already interested in art as a childlearning how to paint watercolor landscapes and as a tinsmith he learned how to use tools to make things like cups teapots baking pans and lanterns n 2 Student years at Cornell Edit In 1892 Warner returned to Springville and began to use his cowboy experience to gamble on horse races 15 Although he had no interest in college soon after coming back he attended Cornell Law School as he had lost all of his money at the races 16 Later Warner wrote I dare not write to my father and tell him I was broke 17 he felt that the only way to get funds was to inform his father that he had decided to study law His father who had always wanted him to be a lawyer sent him 100 equivalent to about 3 000 in 2021 17 18 Eventually Warner became known as Pop because he was one of the oldest students at Cornell 19 Warner graduated from Cornell in 1894 and began working as an attorney in Buffalo New York 20 This job only lasted for a few months 21 Playing career Edit On Warner s train ride to Ithaca the site of Cornell he met Carl Johanson then Cornell s football coach who was impressed by Warner s weight 200 pounds 22 Johanson practically ordered Warner to attend practice This happened even though Warner admitted that he had never handled a real football 22 Despite his commitment to football at the time Warner s true passion was baseball During one of his first practices at Cornell he badly injured his shoulder and never played serious baseball again 23 Warner also participated in track and field and was the school s heavyweight boxing champion for two years 24 Football Edit Warner in a Cornell uniform c 1894 During his three years at Cornell Warner played as a guard on the football team Even though he graduated in the spring of 1894 he returned as a post graduate and was named captain of the 1894 team which had a 6 4 1 record 25 n 3 Due to the then tradition of alumni coming back to assist their undergraduate teams in rivalry games Cornell s coach Marshall Newell left for several weeks to assist Harvard in its rivalry game with Yale 27 As a captain Warner was put in charge during the coach s absence 27 It was during this time that Warner came up with his first original play Three backs who normally protected the rusher would fake a run to one side while the quarterback kept the ball and would hand it to the runner who now had an open field to run through on the other side 27 During the first in game execution of the play Warner carried the ball and was able to run clear for 25 yards However as Warner was a guard and not a runner he was incorrectly holding the ball and fumbled upon being tackled 27 Coaching career EditIowa State Georgia and Cornell Edit In the spring of 1895 Warner was asked for a reference to fill the vacant head coaching position at Iowa Agricultural College in Ames Iowa n 4 Instead of giving a reference Warner himself applied for the job and received an offer for 25 per week equivalent to 810 in 2021 18 28 At the same time he decided to apply to other schools and received an offer of 34 per week equivalent to 1 110 in 2021 from the University of Georgia in Athens Georgia 29 n 5 Because Iowa State began its season in August almost one and a half months prior to the beginning in Georgia Warner was able to work out a deal For 150 equivalent to about 4 900 in 2021 18 he would coach in Iowa from August until the second week of September and then head to Georgia and begin coaching there 28 Iowa State Edit Ultimately not only did Warner end up coaching at Iowa State before his time at Georgia but while in Athens he also received weekly updates from Iowa and sent back telegraphs with detailed advice for the following week 31 One story recounts that in the middle of September just before leaving for Georgia Warner took his team north west for a previously agreed upon game against the Butte Athletic Club of Butte Montana 32 Apparently overconfident Warner bet the entire sum of his Iowa State wages 150 equivalent to about 4 900 in 2021 18 on his team s victory 33 At halftime his team trailed 10 2 Warner decided to enter the game filling in at the guard position Though this had a positive impact it was not sufficient as his team still lost 12 10 33 In a 1947 publication by Francis J Powers there is an alternate take on the causes of the Butte loss The game was played on a field as devoid of grass as a glacier and there was nothing green It was impossible for the center to snap the ball to the quarterback on the bounce or even roll it without chances for a fumble Whenever Iowa State threatened to score the referee a home towner would make a decision which chilled the Cyclones offense spectators who followed up and down the sidelines would whip out their six shooters and blaze away with enthusiasm which also chilled the Iowa college boys 34 In order to try and make up for losing all of his Iowa State wages Warner worked out a deal where for 30 equivalent to about 1 000 in 2021 18 he would stay in contact with Iowa State while at Georgia 33 Soon after Warner left for Georgia Iowa State had its first official college game of the season In Evanston just north of Chicago underdog Iowa State defeated Northwestern 36 0 A Chicago Tribune headline read Struck by a Cyclone 35 Since then Iowa State teams have been known as the Cyclones 36 The team finished with three wins and three losses and like Georgia retained Warner for the following season In 1896 Iowa State had eight wins and two losses 37 Despite leaving Georgia for Cornell in 1897 Warner remained head coach at Iowa State for another three years posting winning records 37 Georgia Edit Warner on the Georgia sidelines In Warner s first season at Georgia he was hired at a salary of 34 per week 29 The school was a charter member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association SIAA the first athletic conference in the South 38 The football team had three wins and four losses including a loss to North Carolina from a not yet legal forward pass n 6 He was rehired at a salary of 40 per week 29 n 7 and the next season Georgia had one of the school s first great teams 37 41 42 With an undefeated record the team won its first conference title 43 44 It also avenged the loss to North Carolina winning 24 16 For the first time in Southern football history the football supremacy of Virginia and North Carolina was successfully challenged 45 During those two years Warner also played two games against John Heisman another future coaching legend Heisman was the head coach at Auburn University and they faced each other in the 1895 and 1896 games of the Deep South s Oldest Rivalry an annual confrontation which has continued to the present day 42 In 1895 the Auburn Tigers defeated the Bulldogs 12 6 The Auburn team was led by quarterback Reynolds Tick Tichenor known for his punt returns 46 Tichenor had executed the first hidden ball trick in an earlier Auburn game against Vanderbilt n 8 and used it again against Georgia 48 The next year Tichenor faced Georgia s Richard Von Albade Gammon a star quarterback in his first year under Warner 41 Both quarterbacks played well and unlike the previous year Warner s team won 16 6 46 n 9 The second touchdown came right after the first onside kick in the South 50 Cornell Edit After Georgia s outstanding 1896 performance Warner returned to his alma mater Cornell at twice his Georgia salary 42 51 While remaining head coach at Iowa State he coached Cornell to records of 5 3 1 in 1897 and 10 2 in 1898 1 in the latter season Cornell outscored its opponents 296 29 52 Despite its 1898 success tension existed within the team as its assistant coach backed by a large proportion of the players lobbied to replace Warner Acknowledging an issue with his leadership Warner resigned 52 Return to Cornell Edit In 1904 after five years at Carlisle see below Warner returned to Cornell but his 1904 team featuring Clemson transfer James Lynah was little improved over the previous year The following two years were better with the 1905 team losing to undefeated champion Penn by one point 1 Their game next year was a scoreless tie and Cornell lost only one game that season to Princeton 53 Carlisle Edit After leaving Cornell the first time Warner became head coach of the football team at Carlisle Indian Industrial School the first Native American boarding school which stole Native children from their families in order to forcibly assimilate them into white culture As founder Henry Pratt wrote to kill the Indian to save the man 54 Its late nineteenth and early twentieth century football teams were nationally prominent 55 and Warner was paid 1 200 equivalent to about 39 000 in 2021 18 an exceptionally high salary for a coach at the time 56 His previous Cornell team had once faced Carlisle and he had been impressed by his opponent s approach to the game Since the players were outweighed by every other team in the nation they relied on speed and agility instead of size and physical force 57 Despite those strengths Cornell won the game 23 to 6 The referee was a former Cornell graduate and was accused of helping out Cornell during the game After the match while addressing the journalists Warner acknowledged that there had been assistance from the referee He stated that We outscored em but we didn t defeat em if you follow me 58 It has been said that after that game he considered Carlisle to be the future of college football 57 The head coach dealt with young players who differed from the white East Coast students with whom he had previously worked At the beginning he used the then customary coaching methods of rough language and a strict routine 59 The Native American students were unaccustomed to such an approach and several key players stopped attending practices Warner adjusted his technique saying that he found I could get better results I don t think I ever swore at a player from that time Maybe I did a little cussing now and then but never at players 60 His coaching brought immediate improvement In 1897 and 1898 the Carlisle teams had 6 4 records In 1899 Warner s first year Carlisle won nine and lost two games to the country s two best teams Harvard and Princeton That year saw Carlisle s first major victory against one of the Big Four teams n 10 beating Penn 16 5 60 At the end of the season the school played Columbia at the Polo Grounds in New York City a premier sports venue at the time defeating them 42 0 n 11 The Columbia game was the first time that a crouching start a form of what is now known as a three point stance was used by the running backs Before Warner s innovation the stance for a back before the ball was snapped was bent forward with his feet well apart and his hands on his knees Warner realized that if his players took a stance similar to the one taken by sprinters the legs would be bent the back leaning forward with one hand on the ground and the other arm cocked back to the thigh hip region Like with sprinters this similar stance maximized the speed of his players Shortly after it became the standard football stance for both backs and linemen 63 1903 Carlisle Indians with Warner at top right At the end of 1899 Warner was appointed the school s athletic director and his salary more than doubled 64 A track and field program was started that year Warner knew little about the sport to prepare as coach he bought every book available and consulted Jack Moakley and Mike Murphy two of the era s leading head coaches 65 66 The program was successful running was a Native American tradition and students from the Southwest were known for their stamina in long distance races 64 67 Warner s next two years were less fruitful The 1900 football team went 6 4 1 losing three games to the Big Four and the 1901 season was a losing one with Carlisle posting a 5 7 1 record 1 The following year the team posted an improved 8 3 record 68 when Warner began implementing double lateral passes Carlisle s quarterback Jimmy Johnson would make a lateral pass to the halfback running towards the sideline bringing the defense with him as he tossed the ball back to the fast running Johnson 56 In 1902 Warner played one professional football game for the Syracuse Athletic Club during the first World Series of Football at Madison Square Garden In the first professional indoor football game Syracuse defeated the heavily favored New York team During the series Warner was seriously cut on the side of his head Although he laughed it off at first the injury turned out to be more serious and he was replaced with Blondy Wallace for the rest of the series 69 For the tournament Warner and the other team members each earned 23 equivalent to about 720 in 2021 although each player s expected share had been 300 equivalent to about 9 000 in 2021 it was a financial failure 70 18 Carlisle s 1903 season was a success with only two losses 1 The 12 11 defeat by Harvard is known for the hunch back or hidden ball play which Warner learned from Heisman 71 he had a tailor sew elastic bands into the waists of several players jerseys before the game so the play could be executed 56 It was used during a Harvard kickoff when the ball was caught Carlisle formed a circle around the returner and pushed the ball up the back of the player s altered jersey Carlisle then broke the huddle and spread out in different directions Each player except the returner who had the hidden ball pretended to carry the football The ruse confused the Harvard players who scrambled to find the ball carrier and the returner ignored with both hands free ran untouched into the end zone 72 73 Warner s next step was a brief return to Cornell 53 Back to Carlisle Edit After three years at Cornell Warner returned to Carlisle 53 He considered his second stint there his best n 12 From 1907 to 1914 the team won ten or more games a season five times 1 A single wing formation illustrated During this time at Carlisle Warner made several significant contributions to football offense including the body block technique and the single and double wingback formations 75 Under Warner Carlisle quarterback Frank Mount Pleasant and fullback Pete Hauser became two of the first regular spiral passers in football the forward pass was legalized in 1906 76 77 n 13 In 1908 he introduced the technique of body blocking instead of blocking with the shoulders 79 Warner considered the 1907 Carlisle team about as perfect a football machine as I ever sent on the field 56 n 14 The team posted a 10 1 record outscored opponents 267 62 and pioneered an elegant high speed passing game it was one of the first teams to regularly throw the ball deep downfield 56 For the first time in 11 years Carlisle defeated Harvard on the road 23 15 75 Carlisle also won 26 6 over Penn 80 In the second play of the Penn game Hauser threw a 40 yard spiral pass hitting his receiver in stride 56 At the time such a pass was stunning and unexpected and is considered by one journalist to be an evolutionary step in the game 56 The 1907 season is known for Warner s first use of the single wing formation characterized by laterals trap and counter runs and passing 81 According to Sally Jenkins in her Sports Illustrated article on Carlisle To take advantage of the Indians versatility Warner drew up a new offense the Carlisle formation but later it would be known as the single wing It was predicated on one small move Warner shifted a halfback out wide to outflank the opposing tackle forming something that looked like a wing It opened up a world of possibilities The Indians could line up as if to punt and then throw No one would know whether they were going to run pass or kick For added measure Warner taught his quarterbacks to sprint out a few yards to their left or their right buying more time to throw The rest of the players flooded downfield and knocked down any opponent who might be able to intercept or bat away the pass 56 The 1911 Carlisle Indians pose with a game ball from their upset of Harvard The 1907 team included a young Jim Thorpe considered one of the greatest athletes who ever lived 82 83 Thorpe weighed just 155 lb 70 kg light for a football player Warner played him as a substitute encouraging him to put his time into track and field 75 By 1909 Warner had Thorpe competing in track and field and he won 14 events In 1911 Thorpe began training for the upcoming Olympics and won gold medals in the pentathlon and decathlon at the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm n 15 Jim Thorpe tackling a weighted dummy on a pulley with Warner supervising 1912 Carlisle football had another standout year in 1911 posting an 11 1 record 1 Thorpe had grown to 180 lb 82 kg big enough to be a starter The team defeated Harvard 18 15 with Thorpe scoring all of Carlisle s field goals 85 Walter Camp selected Thorpe as a first team All American According to one source Thorpe was recognized as the greatest player of the year and a man whose kicking is likely to revolutionize the game 86 Warner considered the 1912 team brilliant and adaptive and experimented with new plays and formations In its game against Army Warner s team introduced a wrinkle to the wing back system According to Francis J Powers author of a book that concentrated on Warner s approach to football The double wing formation Warner had both halfbacks close to the line and flanking the defensive tackles That was the start of the double wingback offense which enjoyed tremendous popularity until the T formation was modernized with the man in motion The double wing became the most effective of all systems for effective forward passing since it permitted the quick release of four receivers down the field 75 Carlisle dominated the next two years with the 1912 and 1913 teams losing only one game each 1 Warner s salary increased to 4 500 per season equivalent to 126 000 in 2021 87 18 In January 1913 a newspaper article revealed that Thorpe had played minor league baseball in North Carolina in the summer of 1908 with the Rocky Mount Railroaders causing the International Olympic Committee to rescind the gold medals that he had won in the decathlon and pentathlon in the 1912 Olympics After Thorpe s death the medals were posthumously reinstated Warner denied that he knew about Thorpe playing baseball professionally and he and Moses Friedman the Carlisle superintendent drafted a statement for Thorpe to sign in which Thorpe took all the blame onto himself Steve Sheinkin the author of Undefeated Jim Thorpe and the Carlisle Indian School Football Team characterizes Warner s and Friedman s behavior as scrambling to save their own hides Thorpe had never tried to hide his participation in baseball He d told Superintendent Friedman before leaving campus in 1909 and had talked about it ever since coming back I never made any secret about it Thorpe later said I often told the boys with the coaches listening about things that happened while I was at Rocky Mount There s simply no way Pop Warner didn t know about Thorpe s summer baseball After all they d accomplished together all they d been through this was the moment Thorpe needed Warner the most This was Warner s chance to stand by Thorpe s side He didn t do it To Jim s teammates this was nothing less than a knife to the back Gus Welch one of Thorpe s teammates said Mr Warner is a good football coach but a man with no principle In 1914 there was an administrative change in Washington with federal money considered better spent in the Midwest than on schools like Carlisle 75 Many students left and this affected the team which had a 5 10 1 record After that season Warner left Carlisle to become head coach at Pittsburgh 75 Pittsburgh Edit Warner and Pitt captain Bob Peck during the 1916 season When Warner arrived at the University of Pittsburgh in 1915 the 128 year old school was on a new campus with 3 900 students 87 He inherited a team in good shape full of future All Americans 87 and coached the Pittsburgh Panthers to their first undefeated season Six of their eight games all shutouts were played at home on Forbes Field including a 45 0 victory over Carlisle 1 Warner coached his Pitt teams to 29 straight victories and is credited with three national championships 1915 1916 and 1918 7 Coaching Pittsburgh from 1915 to 1923 he compiled a 60 12 4 record 88 Although the 1915 season was a success the next year s team was one of the greatest of Warner s career 89 The Panthers were again undefeated and like the previous year six of the eight games were shutouts Thirty two of their 35 players were from Western Pennsylvania near Pittsburgh 90 The team scored 255 points conceding 25 Warner considered the team an improvement because its defense was more dominant than the previous year s 90 The Panthers were the consensus national champions and Warner became recognized as one of football s greatest coaches 91 Warner during the 1917 season at Pittsburgh In 1917 the United States entered World War I and some players including Andy Hastings and Jimmy Dehart entered military service 91 Pittsburgh played an undefeated full season despite the war although it was not awarded the national championship n 16 Although the team lacked the previous year s punch it dominated the opposition A key aspect of its success was the opposing coaches inability to address Warner s evolving strategies according to Powers His reverse plays were a mystery although Pop always was willing to explain them in detail to any other coach 91 Faculties had to step in to stop a decisive postseason national championship game with John Heisman s undefeated Georgia Tech team 93 The game was postponed until the following season giving Tech the 1917 national championship the first for any Southern school 94 On November 23 1918 the two teams played at Pittsburgh 95 At the stadium where the game was to be played the locker rooms were next to each other with only a thin wall separating the two teams prior to the game Heisman was first to begin an inspirational speech and it was said that he passionately described both heroes of Ancient Greece as well as the tragedy of a soldier found in his armor among the ruins of Pompeii Because of Georgia Tech s players silence the speech was crystal clear on the other side of the wall Upon its finish Warner smiled and quietly told his players Okay boys There s the speech Now go out and knock them off Pittsburgh defeated Georgia Tech 32 0 95 Tom Davies runs vs Georgia Tech 1918 The 1918 season was cut short at the end of November due to the continuing effects of World War I and the influenza pandemic 96 Only five games were played and the season s final game was in Cleveland against the Naval Reserve Warner s first loss at Pitt it was one of the most controversial games in school history 97 According to Warner and several reporters covering the game Pitt was robbed by the officials 97 The referees said that the timekeeper s watch was broken ended the first half before Pitt was able to score and allowed the Reserves extra time in the fourth quarter to pull ahead 10 9 98 99 Although he refused to acknowledge the loss n 17 Warner s 29 game winning streak came to an end Moon Ducote kicked the 41 yard game winning field goal for the Naval Reserve and Warner called him the greatest football player I ever saw 100 Despite the loss a number of selectors named the 4 1 1918 Panthers national champion 101 The team was led by freshman running back Tom Davies who averaged 150 yards per game over his four year career 102 103 The 1919 season began with high expectations World War I was over and key players had returned from service 104 However things did not go Warner s way at the beginning of the season problems with the offensive line and on the flanks became apparent Their first defeat was at Syracuse where the Orangemen won 20 3 The 1919 Panthers had six wins two losses and one tie 105 They were undefeated in 1920 with ties against Syracuse and undefeated Penn State In 1921 the team s record dipped to 5 3 1 1 but Pitt made college football history on October 8 1921 Harold W Arlin announced the first live radio broadcast of a college football game in the United States from Forbes Field on KDKA as the Panthers defeated West Virginia 21 13 in the annual Backyard Brawl 106 Although Warner announced before the 1922 season that he was leaving to take the head coaching position at Stanford he honored his contract and remained at Pitt through 1923 The 1922 team had an 8 2 record 1 and the season ended with the Panthers taking their first cross country train trip to defeat Stanford 16 7 in Palo Alto coached by two Pitt assistants sent ahead by Warner 107 Andrew Kerr became head coach at Stanford during Warner s last two years at Pitt 107 Warner s final season was his worst at Pitt as the Panthers stumbled to a 5 4 record in 1923 1 However the Warner era ended on a high note with a 20 3 victory over Penn State on November 29 108 Stanford Edit 1924 Stanford team line coach Claude E Thornhill Warner assistant Andrew Kerr and team captain Jim Lawson Football on the Pacific Coast had been on the rise since the late 1910s n 18 Early in 1922 Warner signed a contract with Stanford University in which he would begin coaching in 1924 after his contract with Pitt expired 110 Health concerns a significant pay raise and the rising status of Pacific Coast football made Warner make the big change Years later he wrote I felt my health would be better on the Pacific coast Weather conditions at Pittsburgh during the football season are rather disagreeable and much of the late season work had to be done upon a field which was ankle deep in mud At the close of every season I would be in poor physical condition twice being rendered incapable of coaching while I recuperated in a hospital Doctors advised me that the climate of the Pacific coast would be much better for a man of my age and in the work in which I was engaged 111 In 1924 Warner began his nine year tenure at Stanford University n 19 When he began coaching Stanford was one of nine teams in the Pacific Coast Conference PCC Warner inherited a notable squad from the previous year including Ernie Nevers whom Warner considered his greatest player 107 and All American ends Ted Shipkey and Jim Lawson 113 A season highlight was the final game against Stanford s arch rival California at California Memorial Stadium the last game of the regular season Before the game both teams were undefeated and Stanford had not beaten California since 1905 n 20 113 Nevers did not play due to a broken ankle 114 Late in the game California was leading 20 3 California coach Andy Smith sure the game was over began substituting regular players 97 Warner seized the opportunity to combine passing with the trick plays for which he was known a fake reverse and a full spinner and Stanford made a comeback The game ended in a 20 20 tie 97 Ernie Nevers whom Warner called his greatest player Because the game was California s second tie Stanford was chosen to play in the Rose Bowl on New Year s Day against the University of Notre Dame s Fighting Irish coached by Knute Rockne Like Warner Rockne is considered one of the greatest coaches in football history According to journalist Allison Danzig With the exception of Knute Rockne of Notre Dame Pop Warner was the most publicized coach in football 115 The game was thus a test of two different and highly influential systems of football 9 the Warner system with the wing backs unbalanced line and gigantic power and the Knute Rockne system with its rhythmic dancing shift lightning speed balanced line and finely timed blocking 116 117 Notre Dame s backfield was composed of the renowned Four Horsemen Nevers played all 60 minutes of the game and rushed for 114 yd 104 m more yardage than the Four Horsemen combined 118 Warner s offense moved the ball but was unable to score and Notre Dame won 27 10 119 During the 1925 season Stanford lost just one PCC game to Washington 120 California was finally defeated 27 7 It was the first year of a new rivalry with coach Howard Jones and the University of Southern California USC team n 21 In their first game at the Los Angeles Memorial Colosseum Stanford scored twice in the first half but had to hold off the charging Trojans in a 13 9 win Because of the loss to Washington Warner s team was not invited to the Rose Bowl 120 Stanford won all its 1926 games crushing California 41 7 and narrowly defeating USC 13 12 123 Warner s team was invited to the Rose Bowl to play Alabama Like the game against the Fighting Irish Stanford dominated but the result was a 7 7 tie 123 After the game both teams were recognized as national champions by a number of publications 124 n 22 The 1927 season was one of underachievement and ultimate success Stanford lost its third game to non conference St Mary s College 126 Stanford s next loss was against non conference Santa Clara The game against USC was a 13 to 13 tie 126 However that year Stanford defeated California 13 6 The game included a bootleg play the invention of which some credit to Warner Powers stated that Stanford put the game on ice in the fourth period when Pop introduced the bootlegger play which was to be widely copied and still is in use On the original bootlegger Warner made use of Biff Hoffman s tremendous hands Hoffman would take the pass from center and then fake to another back Keeping the ball he would hide it behind him and run as though he had given it to a teammate Sometimes defensive players would step out of Hoffman s path thinking he was going to block Hoffman bootlegged for the touchdown against California 127 Despite the two losses Stanford finished the season as PCC co champion They were invited to the 1928 Rose Bowl against Pitt Warner s former team now coached by protege Jock Sutherland Warner broke his losing Rose Bowl streak defeating Sutherland 7 6 128 The win was Warner s last appearance at the Rose Bowl 129 In recognition of his Rose Bowl accomplishments Warner was inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame in 2018 130 The 1929 season is known for Warner s regular use of the hook and lateral a play that involves a receiver who runs a curl pattern catches a short pass and immediately laterals the ball to another receiver running a crossing route 131 According to the October 25 1929 Stanford Daily The trickiness that Pop Warner made famous in his spin plays and passing is very evident The frosh have been drilling all week on fast deceptive forward and lateral pass plays and together with the reverses will have a widely varied attack 132 That season brought Warner his second straight loss to Jones with Stanford defeated by the Trojans 7 0 USC won the conference and went to the Rose Bowl 131 Jones went on to win every year thereafter including 1932 Warner s last season at Stanford Because of the five consecutive defeats Warner was severely criticized by Stanford alumni n 23 In all Warner and Jones played eight games Jones won five Warner two and one was a tie 134 Against Stanford s main rival California Warner won five games tied three and lost one 133 Temple Edit Warner left Stanford for Temple University in Philadelphia his final head coaching job after the 1932 season n 24 He was paid 75 000 for five years equivalent to 1 6 million in 2021 18 one of the largest salaries ever offered a coach at the time 136 The 1934 team was undefeated during the regular season losing to Tulane in the first Sugar Bowl A star of the game was Dave Smukler whom Warner considered one of his great fullbacks 136 In later years Warner said he regretted his decision to leave Stanford for Temple 133 He left because of concern about the school s changing funding priorities The university leadership was planning to make Stanford primarily a graduate school because of an increase in the number of junior colleges in California the administration saw less need for undergraduate instruction at Stanford 133 Because fewer students were admitted higher grade requirements for incoming students made admission more difficult and student athletes began enrolling at USC and California instead of Stanford Warner soon realized that he had made the wrong decision due to the economic effects of the Great Depression the number of applicants to Stanford decreased significantly and athletes were again admitted 133 Temple upset the Florida Gators coached by future Temple coach Josh Cody 20 12 in Warner s last game 137 San Jose State Edit While coaching at Temple Warner continued living in Palo Alto where Stanford is located After his 1938 retirement he was immediately recruited as an advisor to Dudley DeGroot a former center at Stanford and now the head coach at San Jose State College near Palo Alto 136 Officially an advisor Warner was immediately put in charge of the offense According to Powers DeGroot had been using a single back offense but Pop immediately changed to the double wing much to the doubts of San Jose players However the formation began to click and San Jose not only enjoyed an undefeated season but was the highest scoring team in the nation 138 That year the San Jose State Spartans played against College of the Pacific coached by Amos Alonzo Stagg It was the first time the two coaches had met since 1907 when Warner was coaching Carlisle and defeated Stagg s University of Chicago 18 4 138 Warner and DeGroot s San Jose State defeated Stagg s Pacific Tigers 39 0 138 Personal life EditWarner married the former Tibb Lorraine Smith in Springville on June 1 1899 139 He smoked Turkish Trophy cigarettes 3 and drank alcohol his trainers were instructed to supply him with cough medicine 3 Warner always enjoyed painting in watercolors 140 141 According to an art exhibition review in The Stanford Daily Warner relied on painting to put him through law school at Cornell 142 He also had a woodworking shop in his garage 3 Retirement and death Edit He retired from San Jose State and coaching in 1940 Warner died on September 7 1954 at age 83 in Palo Alto from throat cancer Tibb Warner died on November 4 1961 143 Coaching legacy EditFor his contributions to football the American Football Coaches Association AFCA gave Warner its Amos Alonzo Stagg Award in 1948 144 His name is widely known for the Pop Warner Little Scholars program which began in 1929 as the Junior Football Conference in Philadelphia to keep children busy and out of trouble In 1934 soon after Warner joined Temple he agreed to the program s renaming as the Pop Warner Conference 145 As of 2016 about 325 000 children between the ages of 5 and 16 are mentored 5 Innovation Edit Andrew Kerr who was an assistant to Warner at Pittsburgh and Stanford said he considered Warner the greatest creative genius in American football 146 Morris Bishop a Cornell professor of history wrote that Warner caused more rule changes than all the other coaches combined 147 Warner invented the single and double wing formations 148 149 the three point stance 150 and the modern body block technique 2 151 He introduced several plays such as the trap run 152 the bootleg 127 the naked reverse 146 and the screen pass 153 He was among the first to use the huddle 152 to number plays 152 and to teach the spiral pass and spiral punt 154 155 He improved shoulder and thigh pads 156 and was the first to utilize adjustable fiber rather than cotton 152 He also had his own helmet color coding red for backs and white for ends 157 Coaching tree Edit Warner s coaching tree includes Charley Bowser a Pitt end coached at his alma mater 158 Doc Carlson also a star in basketball became Pitt s basketball coach and led the team to the national championship 159 Tom Davies a back at Pitt coached at Geneva and Allegheny 102 103 James DeHart a Pitt quarterback became head coach at Washington and Lee and Duke Universities 160 Dudley DeGroot a center at Stanford was the coach at San Jose State when Warner was an advisory coach Later in his career DeGroot was head coach of the NFL s Washington Redskins 161 William Henry Dietz a Carlisle tackle coached at Washington State and Haskell and was the first coach of the Redskins 162 Katy Easterday a Pitt back coached at Waynesburg 163 Albert Exendine a Carlisle end coached at several universities including Georgetown 164 Skip Gougler a Pitt back assisted at his alma mater 165 Andy Gustafson a Pitt back coached at VPI 166 Joe Guyon a Carlisle back coached at Union College 167 Harvey Harman a Pitt tackle coached at Penn and Rutgers 168 Pat Herron a Pitt end coached at Indiana and Duke Universities 169 Orville Hewitt Pitt fullback who was an assistant at Alabama 170 Jimmy Johnson Carlisle quarterback assisted at his alma mater 171 Andy Kerr Warner s assistant coached at Colgate 172 Herb McCracken a Pitt back coached at Allegheny and Lafayette 173 George Tank McLaren a two time All American was a head coach for ten years after graduation 174 Charley Moran a Carlisle assistant coached at Texas A amp M and Centre 175 Frank Mount Pleasant a Carlisle quarterback coached at West Virginia Wesleyan and Buffalo 176 Rufus B Nalley a Georgia back coached at the Georgia Institute of Technology 177 Ernie Nevers a Stanford back coached the Duluth Eskimos and Chicago Cardinals 178 Bill Newman center at Cornell who also assisted at Carlisle coached at Georgetown 179 Bob Peck a Pitt center was athletic director at Culver Military Academy 180 Bemus Pierce a Carlisle guard coached at his alma mater and Buffalo 181 Daniel A Reed a Cornell guard coached at Cincinnati and Penn State 182 Don Robesky Stanford guard was a line coach at Bakersfield College 183 Eddie Rogers a Carlisle end coached at his alma mater 184 Harry Shipkey a Stanford player coached freshman football at his alma mater 185 Ted Shipkey a Stanford end coached for Arizona State and New Mexico 186 Dale Sies a Pitt guard coached the Rock Island Independents 187 Chuck Smalling a Stanford fullback assisted at Ole Miss 188 Jake Stahl a Pitt guard coached at Duquesne 189 Jock Sutherland a Pitt end who became head coach replacing Warner in 1924 coached Pitt for the next 14 years and later headed the Pittsburgh Steelers 190 Fred H Swan a Stanford guard coached at Temple 191 Edwin Sweetland a Cornell tackle coached at several universities including Kentucky and Syracuse 192 Tiny Thornhill a Pitt tackle became a coach at Stanford 172 Jim Thorpe a Carlisle back coached the Canton Bulldogs and was the first president of the National Football League 193 Ed Walker an end at Stanford coached at Ole Miss 194 Edgar Wingard who assisted Warner at Carlisle coached at Maine 195 Frank Wilton a Stanford back coached at Miami Ohio 196 Head coaching record EditFootball Edit Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl playoffsGeorgia Bulldogs Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1895 1896 1895 Georgia 3 4 2 2 3rd1896 Georgia 4 0 2 0 T 1stGeorgia 7 4 2 4Cornell Big Red Independent 1897 1898 1897 Cornell 5 3 11898 Cornell 10 2Carlisle Indians Independent 1899 1903 1899 Carlisle 9 21900 Carlisle 6 4 11901 Carlisle 5 7 11902 Carlisle 8 31903 Carlisle 11 2 1Cornell Big Red Independent 1904 1906 1904 Cornell 7 31905 Cornell 6 41906 Cornell 8 1 2Cornell 36 13 3Carlisle Indians Independent 1907 1914 1907 Carlisle 10 11908 Carlisle 11 2 1 n 1 1909 Carlisle 8 3 11910 Carlisle 8 61911 Carlisle 11 11912 Carlisle 12 1 11913 Carlisle 10 1 11914 Carlisle 5 9 1Carlisle 114 42 8 n 1 Pittsburgh Panthers Independent 1915 1923 1915 Pittsburgh 8 01916 Pittsburgh 8 01917 Pittsburgh 10 01918 Pittsburgh 4 11919 Pittsburgh 6 2 11920 Pittsburgh 6 0 21921 Pittsburgh 5 3 11922 Pittsburgh 8 21923 Pittsburgh 5 4Pittsburgh 60 12 4Stanford Indians Pacific Coast Conference 1924 1932 1924 Stanford 7 1 1 3 0 1 1st L Rose1925 Stanford 7 2 4 1 2nd1926 Stanford 10 0 1 4 0 1st T Rose1927 Stanford 8 2 1 4 0 1 T 1st W Rose1928 Stanford 8 3 1 4 1 1 3rd1929 Stanford 9 2 5 1 2nd1930 Stanford 9 1 1 4 1 3rd1931 Stanford 7 2 2 2 2 1 T 5th1932 Stanford 6 4 1 1 3 1 7thStanford 71 17 8 31 9 5Temple Owls Independent 1933 1938 1933 Temple 5 31934 Temple 7 1 2 L Sugar1935 Temple 7 31936 Temple 6 3 21937 Temple 3 2 41938 Temple 3 6 1Temple 31 18 9Total 319 106 32 n 1 National championship Conference title Conference division title or championship game berthSee also EditList of college football coaches with 200 wins List of college football head coaches with non consecutive tenure Pop Warner TrophyNotes Edit a b c d e The NCAA credits Warner with a career football coaching record of 319 106 32 The College Football Data Warehouse gives him one fewer win with the Carlisle Indians in 1908 for a career record of 318 106 32 1 Neither includes the five seasons at Iowa State 1895 1899 during which time Warner co coached the Cyclones to a record of 18 8 while he simultaneously coached at three other schools Some consider these skills and experiences those that first inspired Warner to later make improvements to shoulder and thigh pads as well as tackling dummies 14 That year Cornell lost to Michigan marking the first time Michigan was able to beat an Ivy League team 26 In 1895 the university was known as the Iowa Agricultural College and Model Farm For a ten week season 340 equivalent to 11 100 in 2021 18 For the 1895 96 academic year Georgia s entire student body consisted of 126 students 30 North Carolina was in a punting situation and a Georgia rush seemed destined to block the ball The punter Joel Whitaker out of desperation 39 with an impromptu dash to his right tossed the ball and it was caught by George Stephens who ran 70 yards for a touchdown 39 Warner complained to the referee that the play was illegal However the referee let the play stand because he did not see the pass 39 The teams played a second time and North Carolina won 10 6 I thought more of that contract than any I have ever received for coaching a football team said Warner 40 Auburn still lost to Vanderbilt 9 6 the first game in the south decided by a field goal 47 Richard Gammon died soon after the following season s game against the University of Virginia 41 Tichenor and Gammon played together in 1897 as Tichenor transferred to Georgia taking Gammon s place as the starting quarterback who shifted to fullback 42 In the game against Virginia Gammon was playing defense and suffered a severe concussion after taking part in a tackle With coaches help Gammon was able to walk but he lost his consciousness shortly after getting off the field He remained unconscious and died early the next morning 49 The original term was the Big Three the dominant programs of Harvard Yale and Princeton By the beginning of the century Penn also became considered one of the elite football schools 61 Columbia had also previously upset one of the Big Four having beaten Yale 5 0 62 Warner was once asked by a reporter from the Carlisle Herald to name an all time Carlisle football team It included in the line Albert Exendine Martin Wheelock Bemus Pierce William Garlowe Charles Dillon Emil Hauser Edward Rogers and in the backfield Jimmy Johnson Jim Thorpe Joe Guyon and Pete Hauser 74 Warner credited Hauser with tossing the first one 78 Quarterback Mount Pleasant was also on the 1904 and 1908 U S Olympic track and field teams and at end was future member of the College Football Hall of Fame and future coach Albert Exendine Lewis Tewanima another Carlisle track and field athlete who competed in Stockholm where he won the silver medal in the 10 000 meter run was considered a ward of the state with Thorpe Warner was delegated to accompany them to the Olympics 75 Warner s 1907 quarterback Frank Mount Pleasant was also an Olympic athlete who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics in London 84 The team was known as The Fighting Dentists because on occasion every position was filled by dental students 92 According to Warner s timekeeper the fourth quarter ran for 49 minutes and according to official statistics there were 52 plays in the first half and 52 plays in the fourth quarter 97 At the 1917 Rose Bowl the University of Oregon defeated University of Pennsylvania 14 to 0 While at the 1920 Rose Bowl Oregon lost to one of the recognized national champions Harvard by one point 6 to 7 The next year Andy Smith s University of California team beat an undefeated Ohio State 28 to 0 making California the widely agreed national champions of the 1920 season 109 Stanford was founded in 1887 and had fielded a football team every year since 1892 with the exception of 1906 to 1918 when football was dropped due concerns over the sport s increasing numbers of injuries and deaths Along with other west coast schools the sport of rugby was played instead 112 In 1906 concerned with the growing levels of violence in football both schools stopped playing American football and switched to rugby as their university s main sport California switched back to football in 1915 with Stanford waiting until 1919 112 Jones won 1921 and 1922 Big Ten conference titles while heading the University of Iowa 121 122 Parke H Davis selected the Lafayette Leopards coached by Herb McCracken Warner s former player at Pittsburgh as national champion 125 During Warner s latter years at Stanford USC became the undisputed leader of the west winning multiple national championships 133 Stanford replaced Warner with Claude Tiny Thornhill his assistant coach and also one of his star players at Pittsburgh for the 1933 season That season Stanford beat USC 13 7 ending the Trojans 23 game unbeaten streak Stanford won the PCC and played in the Rose Bowl but lost there to Columbia 7 0 135 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Glenn Scobey Pop Warner Records by Year cfbdatawarehouse com Retrieved September 29 2016 a b c d Jeremy Stoltz June 21 2007 Chalk Talk the Single Wing scout com Retrieved September 24 2016 a b c d Pope p 293 Reet A Howell 1978 The Myth of Pop Warner Carlisle Revisited Quest 30 1 19 27 doi 10 1080 00336297 1978 10702797 a b About Us www popwarner com Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved February 23 2016 Jim Morrison December 28 2010 The Early History of Football s Forward Pass smithsonian com Retrieved October 2 2016 a b National Collegiate Athletic Association 2009 pp 76 81 Bob Hersom December 23 2000 Father Football The Bowden family is synonymous with success newsok com Retrieved September 24 2016 a b Danzig p 224 Miller p 3 a b Miller p 5 a b c Miller p 6 Anderson p 21 a b Anderson p 22 Anderson p 23 Anderson p 24 a b Miller p 9 a b c d e f g h i j 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 Pope p 291 Glenn Pop Warner 1871 1954 New Georgia Encyclopedia Retrieved December 23 2015 Powers 1969 p 11 a b Powers 1969 p 4 Powers 1969 p 5 Pope p 295 1894 Cornell Big Red Schedule and Results SR College Football Sports Reference Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved December 10 2015 The Michiganders Won A Hotly Contested Game of Football from Cornell Score 12 to 4 The Daily Republican Decatur Il November 26 1894 a b c d Powers 1969 p 10 a b Anderson p 31 a b c Reed pp 3441 3445 Reed p 1696 Anderson p 35 Anderson p 32 a b c Anderson p 34 Powers 1969 p 15 16 Struck by a Cyclone Chicago Tribune September 29 1895 Historic Athletic Team Names Cyclones definitely included Cardinal Tales The Blog of Special Collections and University Archives at Iowa State University February 7 2011 Archived from the original on September 12 2015 Retrieved November 9 2016 a b c Iowa State University p 138 Roza pp 1 3 a b c Tar Heels Credited with Throwing First Forward Pass Tar Heel Times tarheeltimes com Archived from the original on December 19 2006 Retrieved July 12 2011 Woodruff 1928a p 38 a b c Brown Calls Vanderbilt 06 Best Eleven South Ever Had Atlanta Constitution February 19 1911 p 52 Retrieved March 8 2015 via Newspapers com a b c d Garbin pp 4 8 Miller pp 24 26 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association Conference Championships cfbdatawarehouse com Retrieved April 5 2008 Woodruff 1928a p 53 a b Stegeman pp 85 91 Alan Gould January 24 1931 Sport Slants Prescott Evening Courier Cook p 27 Edwards p 244 Woodruff 1928a p 68 Miller p 27 a b Miller p 33 34 a b c Powers 1969 p 26 Carlisle Indian Industrial School History Retrieved October 29 2016 National Collegiate Athletic Association 2007 p 398 a b c d e f g h Sally Jenkins Sports Illustrated The Team that Invented Football www nativevillage org Archived from the original on May 8 2016 Retrieved March 23 2016 a b Miller p 31 Anderson p 37 Pope p 294 a b Powers 1969 p 18 Tom Benjey Carlisle vs Big Four PDF College Football Historical Society Newsletter 17 7 10 via LA84 1899 Columbia Lions Schedule and Results Sports Reference January 18 2016 Archived from the original on January 18 2016 Retrieved January 18 2016 Powers 1969 p 19 a b Powers 1969 p 21 John Jack Moakley National Track amp Field Hall of Fame Retrieved October 2 2016 Murphy Is Crowned The Wizard Trainer of the Civilized World Butte Miner August 9 1908 Lesson Plan Four Hopi Running library nau edu Archived from the original on January 30 2016 Retrieved July 1 2016 1902 Carlisle Indians Roster College Football at Sports Reference com January 19 2016 Archived from the original on January 19 2016 Retrieved January 19 2016 Carroll Bob 1980 The First Football World Series PDF Coffin Corner Vol 2 no Annual pp 1 8 Powers 1969 p 23 Woodruff 1928a p 40 Gridiron Guts The Story of Football s Carlisle Indians NPR May 19 2007 Retrieved September 24 2016 Football the Indian Way Newsweek April 27 2007 Retrieved September 24 2016 William Peet November 10 1913 G U Chances To Win Slim The Washington Herald p 8 Retrieved April 4 2015 via Chronicling America a b c d e f g Powers 1969 pp 30 34 Photos Carlisle Football radiolab Archived from the original on April 29 2016 Retrieved January 21 2016 Tom Benjey Beginnings of Modern Football PDF College Football Historical Society Newsletter 18 4 8 via LA84 King p 142 Otto p 202 Tom Benjey Carlisle vs The Big Four PDF College Football Historical Society Newsletter 17 7 Long 2015 p 104 Williams Doug June 11 2012 Jim Thorpe The Greatest Athlete A Century Later Team USA Retrieved October 28 2016 Jim Thorpe Biography life children name death history school mother young son Notable Biographies Archived from the original on February 20 2016 Retrieved January 21 2016 Frank Mount Pleasant Bio Stats and Results Olympics at Sports Reference com Archived from the original on February 5 2016 Retrieved January 21 2016 Jim Thorpe leads Carlisle to upset of Harvard in 1911 ncaa com November 11 2015 Retrieved October 3 2016 The Year In Football The Houston Post December 31 1911 p 17 Retrieved April 2 2015 via Newspapers com a b c Powers 1969 p 35 University of Pittsburgh p 150 Danzig p 219 a b Powers 1969 p 39 a b c Powers 1969 p 41 50th Anniversary Last Unbeaten Pitt Team 1917 Fighting Dentists Will Be Honored Saturday Daily Courier November 2 1967 Woodruff 1928b p 68 1917 National Championships cfbdatawarehouse com Retrieved September 24 2016 a b Powers 1969 p 42 War Conditions Coupled With Epidemic Have Big Effect On 1918 Sports February 3 2016 Archived from the original on February 3 2016 Retrieved February 3 2016 a b c d e Powers 1969 p 50 Keck p 33 Sciullo 2008 p 36 Richard Ducote Dies In Orleans State Times March 26 1937 Yearly National Championship Selections 1918 National Champions cfbdatawarehouse com Retrieved April 8 2009 a b Tom Davies National Football Foundation Retrieved October 5 2016 a b Tom Davies Takes Tough Red Cat Job Former Pitt Halfback Succeeds Edwards at Western Reserve Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 8 1941 Powers 1969 p 43 1919 Pittsburgh Panthers Stats Sports Reference Archived from the original on March 22 2016 Retrieved February 8 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Sciullo 1991 p 116 a b c Pope p 299 Pop Warner Will Winter In Florida Here in Spring The Stanford Daily Vol 64 no 48 December 10 1923 1920 National Championships cfbdatawarehouse com Archived from the original on March 31 2016 Retrieved February 9 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Powers 1969 p 48 Miller p 135 a b From Football to Rugby and Back 1906 1919 The University of California Stanford University Response to the Football Crisis of 1905 PDF Journal of Sport History 11 3 Winter 1984 23 and 28 a b Powers 1969 p 55 Powers 1969 p 57 Danzig p 221 Powers 1969 pp 58 59 cf Nelson p 156 Bowl Game Recaps PDF p 129 Archived from the original PDF on April 9 2016 Retrieved September 24 2016 Powers 1969 p 61 a b Powers 1969 p 62 Gridiron Glory 100 Years of Iowa Football 1921 www iowalum com Archived from the original on June 26 2016 Gridiron Glory 100 Years of Iowa Football 1922 www iowalum com Archived from the original on June 26 2016 a b Powers 1969 p 63 Recognized National Championships by Year www cfbdatawarehouse com Retrieved October 28 2016 National Collegiate Athletic Association 2015 p 108 a b Powers 1969 p 65 a b Powers 1969 p 66 Rose Bowl 1928 rosebowlhistory org Archived from the original on July 18 2007 Retrieved October 3 2016 Powers 1969 p 67 George Halas Randall McDaniel Pop Warner and Vince Young to be Inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame Class of 2018 Tournament of Roses Rose Bowl Game Retrieved December 14 2021 a b Powers 1969 p 68 Bruin Frosh Invade Farm Tomorrow The Stanford Daily October 25 1929 Retrieved February 11 2016 a b c d e Powers 1969 pp 70 71 Pope p 300 Stanford Game by Game Results cfbdatawarehouse com Retrieved September 24 2016 a b c Powers 1969 p 72 Worth the Wait Temple stuns Vandy first win over SEC foe since 1938 foxsports com August 29 2014 Retrieved October 7 2016 a b c Powers 1969 p 73 Miller p 47 Glenn Warner Artist Fine Art Prices Auction Records for Glenn Warner September 11 2015 Archived from the original on September 11 2015 Retrieved October 31 2016 Art Luigi Sciocchetti Gustave Wiegand Blue mountain Lake Pop Warner Lyman Byxbe Jerry Fresia Glenn S Pop Warner Lyman Byxbe Mary V Wheelhouse October 21 2016 Archived from the original on October 21 2016 Retrieved October 31 2016 Harry McMasters November 9 1931 Art Gallery Has Gridiron Coaches Painting Exhibits The Stanford Daily Vol 80 no 28 p 4 Mrs Glenn Warner Dies The New York Times Associated Press November 5 1961 Retrieved February 6 2015 Mrs Tibb Loraie Warner widow of Glenn Pop Warner died yesterday at her home Her age was 90 Menke p 129 History of Pop Warner February 5 2016 Archived from the original on February 5 2016 Retrieved February 23 2016 a b Balthasar p 36 Bishop 2014 p 345 Otto pp 139 202 203 Jim Campbell The Power and the Glory Single Wing Football The Coffin Corner Vol 14 No 4 1992 Whittingham pp 54 55 Powers 1969 p 80 a b c d Pop Warner National Football Foundation Retrieved September 24 2016 Walsh p 71 Pope p 292 Warner p 32 Manchester p 63 Crawford p 78 New Panther Coach Has Varied Career In Athletics The Pittsburgh Press March 21 1939 p 24 via Google News Archive Search Henry C Doc Carlson 1917 Historic Pittsburgh Retrieved September 24 2016 Jimmy DeHart Noted Grid Mentor Passes The Evening Independent March 5 1935 De Groot Signs With Redskins As Head Coach Chicago Tribune March 19 1944 McCartney Robert May 28 2014 1933 news article refutes cherished tale that Redskins were named to honor Indian coach The Washington Post Retrieved May 29 2014 Everhart Placed In Hall Of Fame The Morning Herald The Evening Standard Uniontown Pennsylvania October 23 1971 OSU History Lynn Pappy Waldorf STATE The official magazine of Oklahoma State University statemagazine okstate edu Archived from the original on September 19 2015 Retrieved January 13 2016 Skip Gougler New Coach Is Training Backfield Player The Lafayette Weekly October 5 1921 Andy Gustafson National Football Foundation Retrieved September 24 2016 Coach Guyon Leaves Union Cardinal and Cream April 8 1927 via Union University Archives Harvey Harman National Football Foundation Retrieved September 24 2016 Herron on Warner Pittsburgh Post Gazette February 4 1939 Retrieved September 8 2009 Bowling p 38 Jimmy Johnson National Football Foundation Retrieved September 24 2016 a b Pop Warner Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved July 20 2007 Herb McCracken National Football Foundation Retrieved September 24 2016 Pitt Crack Athletes Secure Coaching Jobs Altoona Mirror April 30 1919 Siler Tom June 22 1949 Death Ends Colorful Career of Charley Moran The Sporting News p 15 1915 Buffalo Football University at Buffalo Sports History Collection May 29 2013 Football Tenure Georgia Tech Alumni Association Spring 2000 Archived from the original on August 11 2011 Retrieved December 18 2009 Ernie Nevers Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site Retrieved September 24 2016 Newman to Coach Georgetown The Cornell Daily Sun April 11 1908 Bob Peck National Football Foundation Retrieved September 24 2016 Red Brains Matched Against White Brains Carlisle Football Team Made Up of Indians and Trained by Indians To Meet Paleface Teams of United States Atlanta Constitution October 16 1904 Daniel A Dan Reed Records by Year cfbdatawarehouse com Retrieved October 30 2016 Don Robesky KC Sports Hall of Fame Retrieved September 24 2016 Eddie Rogers National Football Foundation Retrieved September 24 2016 Harry Shipkey New Freshman Football Coach The Stanford Daily June 23 1936 Short Cuts The Spokesman Review July 20 1978 p 36 via Google News Archive Search Herb Sies Record Statistics and Category Ranks Pro Football Reference Retrieved September 24 2016 Stanford Star Signs For Job at Mississippi The Stanford Daily January 10 1930 Duquesne University Football History goduquesne com Retrieved September 24 2016 Jock Sutherland National Football Foundation Retrieved September 24 2016 Temple Signs Fred Swan To Three Year Contract The Pittsburgh Press January 31 1939 p 22 via Google News Archive Search Stanly p 48 Jim Thorpe Record Statistics and Category Ranks Pro Football Reference Retrieved September 24 2016 Ed Walker saturdaydownsouth com August 18 2014 Retrieved September 24 2016 Former University of Maine Coach Wingard Is Dead at Home in Penna The Lewiston Daily Sun November 5 1927 Retrieved October 22 2011 Kurz p 52Books EditAnderson Lars 2007 Carlisle versus Army Jim Thorpe Dwight Eisenhower Pop Warner and the forgotten story of football s greatest battle Random House ISBN 978 1 4000 6600 1 Balthasar Joel D 2004 Pop Warner Little Scholars Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 3505 0 Bishop Morris September 9 2014 A History of Cornell Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 5537 7 Bowling Lewis August 28 2012 Alabama Football Tales Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 61423 663 4 Cook William 2011 Jim Thorpe A Biography McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 8577 2 Crawford Bill October 18 2004 All American The Rise and Fall of Jim Thorpe Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 55732 6 Danzig Allison 1956 The History of American Football Its Great Teams Players and Coaches Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall Edwards William Hanford 1916 Football Days Memories of the Game and of the Men Behind the Ball Moffat Yard and Company Garbin Patrick 2008 About Them Dawgs Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6040 7 Iowa State University 2006 Iowa State Cyclone Football PDF Keck Harry November 30 1918 Navy Reserves Steal Game From Pitt Pittsburgh Sunday Post Republished in the Greatest Moments in Pitt Football History 1994 Nashville TN Athlon Sports Communications ISBN 978 1 878839 04 6 King C Richard 2015 Native Americans In Sports Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 46403 7 Kurz Bob 1983 Miami of Ohio the Cradle of Coaches Troy Daily News Long Howie May 26 2015 Football for Dummies John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 119 02263 3 Manchester Alan V 2012 Springville Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 9157 5 Menke Frank G 1950 The All Sports Record Book A S Barnes amp Co Miller Jeffrey J August 3 2015 Pop Warner McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 2274 3 National Collegiate Athletic Association 2007 Official 2007 NCAA Division I Records Book PDF National Collegiate Athletic Association August 2009 Official 2009 NCAA Division I Football Records Book PDF Indianapolis Indiana National Collegiate Athletic Association 2015 National Poll Rankings PDF NCAA Division I Football Records NCAA Nelson David M 1994 The Anatomy of a Game University of Delaware Press ISBN 978 0 87413 455 1 Otto J R 1969 Football Taylor amp Francis Pope Edwin 1956 Football s Greatest Coaches Tupper and Love Powers Francis J 1969 Life Story of Glen S Pop Warner Gridiron s Greatest Strategist Chicago IL The Athletic Institute Reed Thomas Walter 1949 History of the University of Georgia Athens GA University of Georgia Press Roza Greg September 18 2008 Football in the SEC Read How You Want ISBN 978 1 4042 1919 9 Sciullo Sam Jr ed 1991 Pitt Football University of Pittsburgh Football Media Guide Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Sports Information Office Sciullo Sam Jr 2008 University of Pittsburgh Football Vault The History of the Panthers Atlanta GA Whitman Publishing ISBN 978 0 7948 2653 6 University of Pittsburgh 2005 Record Book Archived from the original on December 3 2005 Stanly Gregory Kent 1996 Before Big Blue Sports at the University of Kentucky 1880 1940 The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 1991 5 Stegeman John F 2006 Pop Warner of Georgia Echoes of Georgia Football The Greatest Stories Ever Told Triumph Books ISBN 978 1 61749 048 4 Walsh Christopher J July 18 2006 Where Football Is King Taylor Trade Publishing ISBN 978 1 4617 3477 2 Warner Glenn Scobey 1912 A course in football for players and coaches Carlisle Pennsylvania Whittingham Richard 2001 Rites of Autumn Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 2219 8 Woodruff Fuzzy 1928a A History of Southern Football 1890 1928 Vol 1 Woodruff Fuzzy 1928b A History of Southern Football 1890 1928 Vol 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pop Warner Pop Warner at the College Football Hall of Fame Pop Warner at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pop Warner amp oldid 1148382856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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