- Glenn Scobey Warner
-
Glenn Scobey "Pop" Warner Warner during the 1917 season at Pittsburgh Sport(s) Football, baseball Biographical details Born April 5, 1871 Place of birth Springville, New York Died September 7, 1954 (aged 83)Place of death Palo Alto, California Playing career 1892–1894
1902Cornell
Syracuse Athletic ClubPosition(s) Guard Coaching career (HC unless noted) Football
1895–1896
1895–1899
1897–1898
1899–1903
1904–1906
1907–1914
1915–1923
1924–1932
1933–1938
1939
Baseball
1905–1906
Georgia
Iowa State
Cornell
Carlisle Indian
Cornell
Carlisle Indian
Pittsburgh
Stanford
Temple
San Jose State (associate)
CornellHead coaching record Overall 319–106–32 (football)[n 1]
36–15 (baseball)Bowls 1–1–2 Statistics College Football Data Warehouse 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)Glenn Scobey Warner (April 5, 1871 – September 7, 1954), most commonly known as Pop Warner, was an American football player and coach. He served as the head coach at the University of Georgia (1895–1896), Cornell University (1897–1898, 1904–1906), the Carlisle Indian Industrial School (1899–1903, 1907–1914), the University of Pittsburgh (1915–1923), Stanford University (1924–1932), and Temple University (1933–1938), compiling a career college football record of 319–106–32.[n 1] Warner coached four teams to national championships: in 1915, 1916, and 1918 with Pittsburgh and in 1926 with Stanford. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1951. Warner also helped start the popular youth American football organization, Pop Warner Little Scholars.
Contents
Early life and playing career
Warner was born in Springville, New York. He attended and played football for Cornell University. As captain of the Cornell football team, Warner obtained the nickname "Pop" because he was older than most of his teammates. After graduating from Cornell, he had a brief legal career in New York. In 1902, Warner played pro football for the Syracuse Athletic Club during the first World Series of Football, held at Madison Square Garden. It was during this event, that Warner played in the very first professional indoor football game as his Syracuse squad upset the heavily favored "New York" team. During the Series, Warner was cut badly on the side of his head. While he laughed it off at the time, he was replaced for the rest of the Series, by Blondy Wallace.[1]
Coaching career
Warner was hired by the University of Georgia as its new head football coach in 1895 at a salary of $34 per week.[2] For the 1895-1896 academic year, Georgia's entire student body consisted of 126 students.[3] This was Georgia's first year in the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association, a conference that it founded along with Alabama, Auburn, Georgia Tech, North Carolina and Vanderbilt. Warner's first Georgia team had three wins against four losses.
The following year, Georgia rehired Warner and the team had an undefeated season. While at Georgia, Warner also served as a co-coach at Iowa State.[4] He coached teams from two schools simultaneously on three occasions: Iowa State and Georgia during the 1895 and 1896 seasons, Iowa State and Cornell in 1897 and 1898, and Iowa State and Carlisle in 1899.[5] Warner's Iowa State record was 18–8, bringing Warner's total lifetime record to 337–114–32.[n 1]
After his stint in Georgia, Warner returned to Cornell to coach football for two seasons. He then coached at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania from 1899–1903, returned to Cornell for three seasons, and returned again to Carlisle in 1907. During his second tenure at Carlisle, Warner coached one of the most famous American athletes, Jim Thorpe.
In 1914, Warner was hired by the University of Pittsburgh, where he coached his teams to 33 straight major wins and has been credited with three national championships, in 1915, 1916 and 1918.[6] He coached Pittsburgh from 1915 to 1923, compiling a record of 60–12–4.[7] One of Warner's players, Jock Sutherland, would succeed him as the head coach at Pitt.
The next team Warner coached was at Stanford University from 1924 to 1932, where his teams played in three Rose Bowl games, including the classic 1925 Rose Bowl game against Knute Rockne and the Four Horsemen of Notre Dame. Warner added a fourth national championship in 1926.[6]
Warner's final head coaching job was at Temple University where he coached for five years until retiring in 1938. Following his retirement, he served as advisory football coach for the Spartans of San Jose State College.
Warner brought many innovative playing mechanics to college football:
- the screen pass
- spiral punt
- single- and double-wing formations
- the use of shoulder and thigh pads.
- designed helmets red for backs and white for ends
Warner died of throat cancer in Palo Alto, California at the age of 83.
Head coaching record
Football
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Georgia Bulldogs (Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association) (1895–1896) 1895 Georgia 3–4 2–4 1896 Georgia 4–0 3–0 T–1st Georgia: 7–4 5–4 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 (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 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 See also
- Georgia Bulldogs football under Pop Warner
- Pittsburgh Panthers football under Pop Warner
- List of college football coaches with 200 wins
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f 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. 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.
References
- ^ Carroll, Bob (1980). "The First Football World Series". Coffin Corner (Professional Football Researchers Association) 2 (Annual): 1–8. http://www.profootballresearchers.org/Coffin_Corner/02-An-054.pdf.
- ^ Reed, Thomas Walter (1949). Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. History of the University of Georgia; Chapter XVII: Athletics at the University from the Beginning Through 1947 imprint pages 3441
- ^ Reed, Thomas Walter (circa 1949). "Chapter XI: The Administration of Chancellor William E. Boggs Through the Session of 1898". History of the University of Georgia. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia. p. 1696. http://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/cgi-bin/ebind2html.pl/reed_c11?seq=27.
- ^ 2006 Iowas State Cyclone Football, page 126
- ^ Cornell Chronicle 9-18-97
- ^ a b Official 2009 NCAA Division I Football Records Book. Indianapolis, Indiana: The National Collegiate Athletic Association. August 2009. pp. 76–81. http://web1.ncaa.org/web_files/stats/football_records/DI/2009/2009FBS.pdf. Retrieved October 16, 2009.
- ^ Pittsburgh Coaching Records
Further reading
- Danzig, Allison (1956). The History of American Football: Its Great Teams, Players, and Coaches. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc.
External links
- Glenn Scobey Warner at the College Football Hall of Fame
- Glenn Scobey Warner at the College Football Data Warehouse
- Glenn Scobey "Pop" Warner at Find a Grave
- Reed, Thomas Walter (1949). Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. History of the University of Georgia; Chapter XVII: Athletics at the University from the Beginning Through 1947 imprint pages 3441-3445
Georgia Bulldogs head football coaches Charles Herty (1891) • No team (1892) • Ernest Brown (1893) • Robert Winston (1894) • Pop Warner (1895–1896) • Charles McCarthy (1897–1898) • Gordon Saussy (1899) • E. E. Jones (1900) • William A. Reynolds (1901–1902) • Marvin D. Dickinson (1903) • Charles A. Barnard (1904) • Marvin D. Dickinson (1905) • W. S. Whitney (1906–1907) • Branch Bocock (1908) • James Coulter & Frank Dobson (1909) • W. A. Cunningham (1910–1916) • No team (1917–1918) • W. A. Cunningham (1919) • Herman Stegeman (1920–1922) • George Cecil Woodruff (1923–1927) • Harry Mehre (1928–1937) • Joel Hunt (1938) • Wally Butts (1939–1960) • Johnny Griffith (1961–1963) • Vince Dooley (1964–1988) • Ray Goff (1989–1995) • Jim Donnan (1996–2000) • Mark Richt (2001– )
Iowa State Cyclones head football coaches Ira C. Brownlie (1892) • W. F. Finney (1893) • Bert German & Pop Warner (1894–1898) • Joe Meyers & Pop Warner (1899) • C. E. Woodruff (1900) • Edgar N. Clinton (1901) • A. W. Ristine (1902–1906) • Clyde Williams (1907–1912) • Homer C. Hubbard (1913–1914) • Charles Mayser (1915–1919) • Norman C. Paine (1920) • Maury Kent (1921) • Sam Willaman (1922–1925) • C. Noel Workman (1926–1930) • George F. Veenker (1931–1936) • James J. Yeager (1937–1940) • Ray Donels (1941–1942) • Mike Michalske (1942–1946) • Emmett Stuber (1947–1953) • Vince DiFrancesca (1954–1956) • Jim Myers (1957) • Clay Stapleton (1958–1967) • Johnny Majors (1968–1972) • Earle Bruce (1973–1978) • Donnie Duncan (1979–1982) • Jim Criner (1983–1986) • Jim Walden (1987–1994) • Dan McCarney (1995–2006) • Gene Chizik (2007–2008) • Paul Rhoads (2009– )
Carlisle Indians head football coaches W. G. Thompson (1893) • Vance C. McCormick (1894–1895) • William O. Hickok (1896) • William T. Bull (1897) • John A. Hall (1898) • Pop Warner (1899–1903) • Edward Rogers (1904) • George W. Woodruff (1905) • Ralph Kinney (1905) • Bemus Pierce (1906) • Pop Warner (1907–1914) • Victor M. Kelly (1915) • M. L. Clevett (1916) • Leo F. Harris (1917)
Cornell Big Red head football coaches No coach (1887–1893) • Marshall Newell (1894–1895) • Joseph Beacham (1896) • Pop Warner (1897–1898) • Percy Haughton (1899–1900) • Raymond Starbuck (1901–1902) • Bill Warner (1903) • Pop Warner (1904–1906) • Henry Schoellkopf (1907–1908) • George Walder (1909) • Daniel A. Reed (1910–1911) • Albert Sharpe (1912–1917) • No team (1918) • John Rush (1919) • Gil Dobie (1920–1935) • Carl Snavely (1936–1944) • Edward McKeever (1945–1946) • George K. James (1947–1960) • Tom Harp (1961–1965) • Jack Musick (1966–1974) • George Seifert (1975–1976) • Bob Blackman (1977–1982) • Maxie Baughan (1983–1988) • Jack Fouts (1989) • Jim Hofher (1990–1997) • Pete Mangurian (1998–2000) • Tim Pendergast (2001–2003) • Jim Knowles (2004–2009) • Kent Austin (2010–)
Hughie Jennings (1900–1904) • Glenn Scobey Warner (1905–1906) • Dan Coogan (1907–1912) • Albert Sharpe (1913–1916) • No team (1917) • Albert Sharpe (1918–1919) • John Henry (1920) • John Carney (1921–1924) • Paul Eckley (1925–1936) • Jim Tatum (1937–1939) • Mose Quinn (1940–1942) • George K. James (1943–1945) • Mose Quinn (1946–1949) • Royner Greene (1949–1956) • George Patte (1957–1961) • Ted Thoren (1962–1990) • Tom Ford (1991–2008) • Bill Walkenbach (1990– ) Pittsburgh Panthers head football coaches No coach (1890–1892) • Anson Harrold (1893) • No coach (1894) • J. P. Linn (1895) • George W. Hoskins (1896) • Thomas Trenchard (1897) • Frederick A. Robinson (1898–1899) • Roy Jackson (1900) • Wilbur Hockensmith (1901) • Fred Crolius (1902) • Arthur Mosse (1903–1905) • Edgar Wingard (1906) • John A. Moorehead (1907–1908) • Joseph H. Thompson (1909–1912) • Joseph Duff (1913–1914) • Pop Warner (1915–1923) • Jock Sutherland (1924–1938) • Charley Bowser (1939–1942) • Clark Shaughnessy (1943–1945) • Wes Fesler (1946) • Mike Milligan (1947–1949) • Len Casanova (1950) • Tom Hamilton (1951) • Red Dawson (1952–1954) • Tom Hamilton (1954) • John Michelosen (1955–1965) • David Hart (1966–1968) • Carl DePasqua (1969–1972) • Johnny Majors (1973–1976) • Jackie Sherrill (1977–1981) • Foge Fazio (1982–1985) • Mike Gottfried (1986–1989) • Paul Hackett (1989–1992) • Sal Sunseri # (1992) • Johnny Majors (1993–1996) • Walt Harris (1997–2004) • Dave Wannstedt (2005–2010) • Phil Bennett # (2010) • Todd Graham (2011– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.Stanford Indians / Cardinals / Cardinal head football coaches No coach (1891) • Walter Camp (1892) • C. D. Bliss (1893) • Walter Camp (1894–1895) • Harry P. Cross (1896) • George H. Brooke (1897) • Harry P. Cross (1898) • Burr Chamberlain (1899) • Fielding H. Yost (1900) • Charles Fickert (1901) • Carl L. Clemans (1902) • James F. Lanagan (1903–1905) • No team (1906–1918) • Bob Evans (1919) • Walter D. Powell (1920) • Eugene Van Gent (1921) • Andrew Kerr (1922–1923) • Pop Warner (1924–1932) • Claude E. Thornhill (1933–1939) • Clark Shaughnessy (1940–1941) • Marchmont Schwartz (1942) • No team (1943–1945) • Marchmont Schwartz (1946–1950) • Chuck Taylor (1951–1957) • Jack Curtice (1958–1962) • John Ralston (1963–1971) • Jack Christiansen (1972–1976) • Bill Walsh (1977–1978) • Rod Dowhower (1979) • Paul Wiggin (1980–1983) • Jack Elway (1984–1988) • Dennis Green (1989–1991) • Bill Walsh (1992–1994) • Tyrone Willingham (1995–2001) • Buddy Teevens (2002–2004) • Walt Harris (2005–2006) • Jim Harbaugh (2007–2010) • David Shaw (2011– )
Temple Owls head football coaches Charles M. Williams (1894–1989) • John Rogers (1899–1900) • H. Shindle Wingert (1901–1905) • Horace Butterworth (1907) • Frank W. White (1908) • William J. Schatz (1909–1913) • William Nicholai (1914–1916) • Elwood Geiges (1917) • Francois M. D'Eliscu (1922–1923) • Albert Barron (1924) • Heinie Miller (1925–1932) • Pop Warner (1933–1938) • Fred H. Swan (1939) • Ray Morrison (1940–1948) • Albert Kawal (1949–1954) • Josh Cody (1955) • Peter P. Stevens (1956–1959) • George Makris (1960–1969) • Wayne Hardin (1970–1982) • Bruce Arians (1983–1988) • Jerry Berndt (1989–1992) • Ron Dickerson (1993–1997) • Bobby Wallace (1998–2005) • Al Golden (2006–2010) • Steve Addazio (2011– )
Amos Alonzo Stagg Award winners 1940: Donald Herring, Jr. | 1941: Butch Cowell† | 1942–1945 No award given | 1946: Grantland Rice | 1947: William Alexander | 1948: Gil Dobie, Glenn Scobey Warner & Robert Zuppke | 1949: Dick Harlow | 1950 No award given | 1951: Tuss McLaughry | 1952: Bo McMillin | 1953: Lou Little | 1954: Dana X. Bible | 1955: Joseph J. Tomlin | 1956 No award given | 1957: Robert Neyland | 1958: Bernie Bierman | 1959: John Wilce | 1960: Harvey Harman | 1961: Ray Eliot | 1962: Elton Wieman | 1963: Andrew Kerr | 1964: Don Faurot | 1965: Harry Stuhldreher | 1966: Bernie Moore | 1967: Jess Neely | 1968: Abe Martin | 1969: Rip Engle | 1970: Pappy Waldorf | 1971: William D. Murray | 1972: Jack Curtice | 1973: Lloyd Jordan | 1974: Jake Gaither | 1975: Gerald B. Zornow | 1976 No award given | 1977: Ben Schwartzwalder | 1978: Tom Hamilton | 1979: Fritz Crisler | 1980 No award given | 1981: Fred Russell | 1982: Eddie Robinson | 1983: Bear Bryant | 1984: Bud Wilkinson | 1985: Duffy Daugherty | 1986: Woody Hayes | 1987: Field Scovell | 1988: Herb McCracken | 1989: David M. Nelson | 1990: Len Casanova | 1991: Bob Blackman | 1992: Charles McClendon | 1993: Keith Jackson | 1994: Bob Devaney | 1995: John Merritt† | 1996: Chuck Neinas | 1997: Ara Parseghian | 1998: Bob Reade | 1999: Bo Schembechler | 2000: Tom Osborne | 2001: Vince Dooley | 2002: Joe Paterno | 2003: LaVell Edwards | 2004: Ron Schipper | 2005: Hayden Fry | 2006: Grant Teaff | 2007: Bill Curry | 2008: Bill Walsh† | 2009: John Gagliardi | 2010: Darrell Royal| 2011: Bobby Bowden
† Denotes posthumous selectionCategories:- 1871 births
- 1954 deaths
- 19th-century players of American football
- American football offensive linemen
- Cancer deaths in California
- Carlisle Indians football coaches
- College Football Hall of Fame inductees
- Cornell Big Red baseball coaches
- Cornell Big Red football players
- Cornell Law School alumni
- Deaths from esophageal cancer
- Georgia Bulldogs football coaches
- Iowa State Cyclones football coaches
- People from Springville, New York
- Pittsburgh Panthers football coaches
- San Jose State Spartans football coaches
- Stanford Cardinal football coaches
- Syracuse Athletic Association players
- Temple Owls football coaches
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.