- Claude Simons, Jr.
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Claude Simons, Jr. Simons as a football player at Tulane Sport(s) Football, basketball, and baseball Biographical details Born January 16, 1914 Place of birth New Orleans, Louisiana Died January 5, 1975 (aged 60)Place of death New Orleans, Louisiana Playing career 1932–1934 Tulane Position(s) Halfback Coaching career (HC unless noted) 1938–1941
1938–1942
1942–1945
1943–1949Tulane (baseball)
Tulane (basketball)
Tulane (football)
Tulane (baseball)Head coaching record Overall 13–17–1 Statistics College Football Data Warehouse Accomplishments and honors Championships 1948 Southeastern Conference championship (baseball) College Football Hall of Fame
Inducted in 1963 (profile)Claude M. "Little Monk" Simons, Jr. (January 16, 1914 – January 5, 1975) was an American college football, basketball, and baseball coach. He served as the head football coach at Tulane from 1942 to 1945 and amassed a 13–17–1 record.[1] Simons served as the Tulane baseball coach from 1938 to 1941 and 1943 to 1949, and as the basketball coach there from 1938 to 1942.
Contents
Early life
Simons was born on January 16, 1914 in New Orleans and later attended the Isidore Newman School.[2] Simons' father, Claude "Monk" Simons, Sr., served as the head coach for the Tulane baseball, basketball, track, and boxing teams, and as the Tulane football team trainer from 1926 until his death in 1943.[3][4]
Simons attended Tulane University, where he played football as the team's "star kicking and passing halfback,"[5] and earned varsity letters from 1932 to 1934.[6] During the 1934 season, Simons helped lead Tulane to a comeback win over Pop Warner's Temple in the inaugural Sugar Bowl, 20–14.[7] Simons scored touchdowns on 75- and 83-yard rushes.[2][8] Tulane finished with a 10–1 record, and won a share of the Southeastern Conference co-championship.[9] The Associated Press selected Simons to its All-America third team.[10] For the season, Simons led the team in rushing, passing, and scoring.[11]
Coaching career
Simons served as the head basketball coach for Tulane from 1938 to 1942, during which period his teams amassed a 19–44 record.[12]
In 1938, he was also an assistant coach on the Tulane football team.[13] Simons took over as head coach for the 1942 season, during World War II when many college age men were leaving for military service.[11] Tulane finished with a 4–5 record, which was the school's first losing season since 1927.[11] After posting a 3–3 record in 1943, Simons achieved his only winning season the following year, with a 4–3 mark.[11] In 1945, after a 2–2–1 start, Tulane suffered a four-game skid to finish 2–6–1.[11] Simons was replaced as head football coach by Henry Frnka for the 1946 season, but continued on as the university's athletic director.[14]
Simons also served as the Tulane baseball coach from 1938 to 1941 and 1943 to 1949, during which his teams amassed a 92–68 record.[15] Under Simons, the baseball team captured the 1948 Southeastern Conference championship.[15]
Administrative career
In 1956, Simons was elected to a position with the New Orleans Mid-Winter Sports Association, which sponsored the Sugar Bowl,[16] and served as the chairman of the Sugar Bowl basketball tournament committee, a position in which he continued to serve until at least 1966.[17][18] In 1958 and 1959, Simons was serving as the Association's president.[19][20] He was still working with the Sugar Bowl in 1972.[21]
Simons was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1963,[2] the Greater New Orleans Sports Hall of Fame in 1974,[6] and the Tulane Athletics Hall of Fame in 1977.[22] He died in New Orleans on January 5, 1975.[2]
References
- ^ Claude Simons, Jr., College Football Data Warehouse, retrieved June 27, 2010.
- ^ a b c d Monk Simons, College Football Hall of Fame, National Football Foundation, retrieved June 29, 2010.
- ^ Hall of Fame, Southeast Athletic Trainers' Association, retrieved June 27, 2010.
- ^ TULANE GRIDDERS, ARMED WITH TWO RED APPLES, POINT COLUMBIA WAY, Herald-Journal, November 17, 1939.
- ^ Perfects Pass Defense, The New York Times, p. 35, December 20, 1934.
- ^ a b Greater New Orleans Sports Hall of Fame, All State Sugar Bowl, retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^ Tulane Game by Game Results, College Football Data Warehouse, retrieved June 27, 2010.
- ^ Sport: At Rest, Time, January 14, 1935.
- ^ Tulane Championships, College Football Data Warehouse, retrieved June 27, 2010.
- ^ South Places Five Players On Associated Press All-America Football Team; Pug Lund Repeats '33 Performance Alabama and Minnesota Share Honor With Two Berths--'Buzz' Borries of Navy Wins Position The Associated Press All-America Selections, The Hartford Courant, p. C2, December 2, 1934.
- ^ a b c d e 2009 Football Media Guide (PDF), p. 48–50, Tulane University, 2009.
- ^ 2009–2010 Men's Basketball Media Guide (PDF), p. 30, Tulane University, 2009.
- ^ Calling 'Em Right With BERT KEANE, Sports Editor, The Hartford Courant, p. 11, November 5, 1938.
- ^ 4 SCHOOLS ENTER SEC TENNIS MEET, The Miami News, May 2, 1946.
- ^ a b 2010 Tulane Record Book (PDF), Tulane University, 2010.
- ^ Sugar Bowl Sponsors Elect Paul De Blanc, Chicago Daily Tribune, February 17, 1956.
- ^ Sugar Bowl Hopes For Cage Tourney, The Pittsburgh Press, August 21, 1956.
- ^ Utah, Boston College In Sugar Cage Meet, Daytona Beach Morning Journal, November 1, 1966.
- ^ Sugar Bowl Tilt Is Sold Out, Daytona Beach Morning Journal, November 6, 1958.
- ^ OLE MISS WINS, 42-0; GOES TO SUGAR BOWL, Chicago Daily Tribune, November 29, 1959.
- ^ It's That Time, Chicago Tribune, October 15, 1972.
- ^ Tulane Athletic Hall of Fame, Tulane University, retrieved June 28, 2010.
Tulane Green Wave head baseball coaches J. P. Clinton (1892–1893) • Jack Dowling & T. L. Bayne (1894–1895) • F. B. Manis (1897–1898) • H. T. Summersgill (1902) • Thomas Willis (1903–1905) • J. Richard (1906–1907) • Bruce Hays (1911–1915) • John Gondolfi • Bruce Hays (1923) • Claude Simons, Sr. (1924–1927) • Peggy Flournoy (1928) • Ted Bank (1930) • Bill Vegan (1937) • Claude Simons, Jr. (1938–1941) • Robert Kellog (1942) • Claude Simons, Jr. (1943–1949) • John Reed (1950–1951) • Dennis Vinzant (1952–1954) • Ben Abadie (1955–1957) • Mel Parnell (1958) • Bob Whitman (1959) • Jack Orsley (1960–1961) • Doug Hafner (1962–1963) • Ben Abadie (1964–1966) • Milt Retif (1967–1974) • Joe Brockhoff (1975–1993) • Rick Jones (1994– )
Tulane Green Wave head football coaches T. L. Bayne (1893) • Fred Sweet (1894) • T. L. Bayne (1895) • Harry Baum (1896) • John Lombard (1898) • H. T. Collier (1899) • H. T. Summersgill (1900–1901) • Virginius Dabney (1902) • Charles Eshleman (1903) • Thomas A. Barry (1904) • John F. Tobin (1905) • John Russ (1906) • Joe Curtis (1907–1908) • R. M. Brown (1909) • Appleton A. Mason (1910–1912) • A. C. Hoffman (1913) • Edwin Sweetland (1914) • Clark Shaughnessy (1915–1920) • Myron Fuller (1921) • Clark Shaughnessy (1922–1926) • Bernie Bierman (1927–1931) • Ted Cox (1932–1935) • Red Dawson (1936–1941) • Claude Simons (1942–1945) • Henry Frnka (1946–1951) • Raymond Wolf (1952–1953) • Andy Pilney (1954–1961) • Tommy O'Boyle (1962–1965) • Jim Pittman (1966–1970) • Bennie Ellender (1971–1975) • Larry Smith (1976–1979) • Vince Gibson (1980–1982) • Wally English (1983–1984) • Mack Brown (1985–1987) • Greg Davis (1988–1991) • Buddy Teevens (1992–1996) • Tommy Bowden (1997–1998) • Chris Scelfo (1999–2006) • Bob Toledo (2007–2011) • Mark Hutson # (2011– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.Tulane Green Wave men's basketball head coaches Silas Hickey (1905–1906) • Coach unknown (1906–1911) • No team (1911–1912) • Appleton A. Mason (1912–1913) • Carl Hanson (1913–1914) • Edwin Sweetland (1914–1915) • Clark Shaughnessy (1915–1918) • M. A. Moenck (1918–1920) • Claude Simons, Sr. (1920–1928) • Bernie Bierman (1928–1930) • Claude Simons, Sr. (1930–1931) • George E. Rody (1931–1933) • Ray G. Dauber (1933–1938) • Claude Simons, Jr. (1938–1942) • Vernon Haynes (1942–1945) • Clifford Wells (1945–1963) • Ted Lenhardt (1963–1964) • Ralph Pedersen (1964–1971) • Dick Longo (1971–1973) • Charles Moir (1973–1976) • Roy Danforth (1976–1981) • Ned Fowler (1981–1985) • No team (1985–1989) • Perry Clark (1989–2000) • Shawn Finney (2000–2005) • Dave Dickerson (2005–2010) • Ed Conroy (2010– )
Categories:- 1914 births
- 1975 deaths
- Tulane Green Wave football coaches
- Tulane Green Wave men's basketball coaches
- Tulane Green Wave athletic directors
- Tulane Green Wave baseball coaches
- American football halfbacks
- College Football Hall of Fame inductees
- Isidore Newman alumni
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