- Chuck Taylor (American football)
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Chuck Taylor Sport(s) Football Biographical details Born January 24, 1920 Place of birth Portland, Oregon Died May 7, 1994 (aged 74)Place of death Stanford, California Playing career 1940–1942
1946Stanford
Miami SeahawksPosition(s) Guard Coaching career (HC unless noted) 1948
1949–1950
1951–1957Stanford (freshmen)
San Francisco 49ers (assistant)
StanfordAdministrative career (AD unless noted) 1963–1971 Stanford Head coaching record Overall 40–29–2 Bowls 0–1 Statistics College Football Data Warehouse Accomplishments and honors Championships 1 PCC (1951) Awards All-American, 1942
AFCA Coach of the Year (1951)College Football Hall of Fame
Inducted in 1984 (profile)Charles Albert "Chuck" Taylor (January 24, 1920 – May 7, 1994) was an American football player, coach, and college athletics administrator. He played college football at Stanford University from 1940 to 1942, returned as head football coach from 1951 to 1957, and served as the school's athletic director from 1963 to 1971. During his coaching tenure at Stanford, Taylor compiled a 40–29–2 record and led the Indians to the 1952 Rose Bowl his first season. That same season, at the age of 31, Taylor was named AFCA Coach of the Year, the youngest recipient of the award ever.[1]
As a sophomore, Taylor was one of the "Wow Boys" on the undefeated 1940 Stanford Indians football team and played in Stanford's 1941 Rose Bowl victory over Nebraska.[1][2] As a senior in 1942, he was an All-American guard.[1][2]
By coaching his team to the 1952 Rose Bowl, Taylor became the first person to have participated in the Rose Bowl both as a player and a head coach; only six other men have accomplished this feat since Taylor.[3]
After leaving coaching in 1957, Taylor returned to Stanford in 1963 as Director of Athletics, where he served until 1971, when Stanford again played in the 1971 Rose Bowl, giving him the distinction of being only one of two men who has participated in a Rose Bowl Game as a player, coach, and athletic director.[1][2] (The other man is Jess Hill of USC, who played in the 1930 Rose Bowl, coached in the 1953 and 1955 Rose Bowls, and was athletic director for the 1963, 1967, 1968, 1969, and 1970 Rose Bowls.)
For many years Taylor and his wife also directed a camp for young people in the coastal range of Northern California near Santa Cruz, called Mountain Camp, where hundreds of young people enjoyed two-week sessions with unlimited recreation and character-building activities.[1]
Head coaching record
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP° Stanford Indians (Pacific Coast Conference) (1951–1957) 1951 Stanford 9–2 6–1 1st L Rose 7 7 1952 Stanford 5–5 2–5 T–6th 1953 Stanford 6–3–1 5–1–1 2nd 17 19 1954 Stanford 4–6 2–4 6th 1955 Stanford 6–3–1 3–2–1 3rd 20 16 1956 Stanford 4–6 3–4 6th 1957 Stanford 6–4 4–3 5th Stanford: 40–29–2 25–20–2 Total: 40–29–2 National Championship Conference Title Conference Division Title #Rankings from final Coaches' Poll.
°Rankings from final AP Poll.References
- ^ a b c d e "Chuck Taylor". College Football Hall of Fame. http://www.collegefootball.org/famer_selected.php?id=40057.
- ^ a b c Gary Migdol (1997). Stanford: Home of Champions. Sagamore Publishing. p. 104. http://books.google.com/books?id=ntBDmB_fYo8C&pg=PA104&lpg=PA104&dq=rose+bowl+%22player+coach+and+athletic+director%22&source=bl&ots=-9MZhmmscn&sig=hwxhrzfXm7ht-k3K80Q6q8w-X_0&hl=en&ei=yGMxTb-WK466sQPJ0bDgBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CCQQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=rose%20bowl%20%22player%20coach%20and%20athletic%20director%22&f=false.
- ^ "Coaching Legends - Appeared as Both a Player and a Head Coach". Tournament of Roses. http://www.tournamentofroses.com/the-rose-bowl-game/history/coaching-legends#playercoach.
External links
- Chuck Taylor at the College Football Hall of Fame
- Chuck Taylor at the College Football Data Warehouse
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– )
Stanford Indians / Stanford Cardinal athletic directors Al Masters (1925–1963) • Chuck Taylor (1963–1971) • Joe Ruetz (1972–1978) • Andy Geiger (1979–1990) • Ted Leland (1991–2005) • Bob Bowlsby (2006– )
1942 College Football All-America Team consensus selections QB Paul Governali | HB Billy Hillenbrand | | HB Frank Sinkwich FB Mike Holovak
C Joe Domnanovich | G Julius Franks | G Harvey Hardy | G Chuck Taylor | T Dick Wildung | T Al Wistert | E Bob Dove | E Dave SchreinerAFCA Division I FBS Coach of the Year winners 1935: Waldorf | 1936: Harlow | 1937: Mylin | 1938: Kern | 1939: Anderson | 1940: Shaughnessy | 1941: Leahy | 1942: Alexander | 1943: Stagg | 1944: Widdoes | 1945: McMillin | 1946: Blaik | 1947: Crisler | 1948: Oosterbaan | 1949: Wilkinson | 1950: Caldwell | 1951: Taylor | 1952: Munn | 1953: Tatum | 1954: Sanders | 1955: Daugherty | 1956: Wyatt | 1957: Hayes | 1958: Dietzel | 1959: Schwartzwalder | 1960: Warmath | 1961: Bryant | 1962: McKay | 1963: Royal | 1964: Broyles & Parseghian | 1965: Prothro | 1966: Cahill | 1967: Pont | 1968: Paterno | 1969: Schembechler | 1970: McClendon & Royal | 1971: Bryant | 1972: McKay | 1973: Bryant | 1974: Teaff | 1975: Kush | 1976: Majors | 1977: James | 1978: Paterno | 1979: Bruce | 1980: Dooley | 1981: Ford | 1982: Paterno | 1983: Hatfield | 1984: Edwards | 1985: DeBerry | 1986: Paterno | 1987: MacPherson | 1988: Nehlen | 1989: McCartney | 1990: Ross | 1991: B. Lewis | 1992: Stallings | 1993: Alvarez | 1994: Osborne | 1995: Barnett | 1996: Br. Snyder | 1997: Carr | 1998: Fulmer | 1999: Beamer | 2000: Stoops | 2001: Coker & Friedgen | 2002: Tressel | 2003: Carroll | 2004: Tuberville | 2005: Paterno | 2006: Grobe | 2007: Mangino | 2008: Whittingham | 2009: Patterson | 2010: Kelly
Categories:- 1920 births
- 1994 deaths
- American football offensive guards
- Miami Seahawks players
- San Francisco 49ers coaches
- Stanford Cardinal athletic directors
- Stanford Cardinal football coaches
- Stanford Cardinal football players
- College Football Hall of Fame inductees
- American military personnel of World War II
- People from Portland, Oregon
- Sportspeople from San Jose, California
- Players of American football from California
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