- Biggie Munn
Clarence Lester "Biggie" Munn (
September 11 ,1908 –March 18 ,1975 ) was a college football player and coach. He is most notable for coachingMichigan State University (MSU) from 1947-1953. He retired from coaching with a 28-game winning streak in hand and a winningpercentage of .857 to assume duties as MSU'sathletic director . He held the position for eighteen years (1953-1971). Munn was born in the former Grow Township now known asAndover, Minnesota . He died inLansing, Michigan . He is widely regarded as one of the best coaches known to college football.Career before Michigan State
A 1932 graduate of the
University of Minnesota , "Biggie" Munn was a guard and sometimes fullback. He played under head coachFritz Crisler and was a two-time first-team All-Big Ten, 1931 Big TenMVP , first-team All-American and football team captain during his college career, as well as theteam captain of thetrack and field team. While in school, he was considered by many as the top collegiate punter in America. He stood just under six feet and weighed 215 pounds, but was recorded running 100 yards in 10 seconds.Munn was inducted into Minnesota's "M" Club (Hall of Fame) in 1993.
Three years after his playing career ended, Munn got his first head coaching job at
Albright College in Reading, Pa. He held the position for two seasons. Munn moved on to become an assistant at hisalma mater in 1940. From 1942-44, he was a line coach at theUniversity of Michigan . Beginning in 1944, Munn became an assistant atSyracuse University . Shortly after arriving, Munn got his big break whenOssie Solem resigned as head coach following the 1945 season. Biggie was appointed head coach for the 1946 season. One of Munn's assistants at Syracuse was former Orangeman standoutDuffy Daugherty who joined Munn's staff at Michigan State for eight seasons, beginning in 1947, before becoming Munn's Spartan coaching successor. Also while at Syracuse, Biggie coached alongside former Gopher teammateBud Wilkinson who would become one of the great college coaches at theUniversity of Oklahoma .Syracuse enshrined Munn into its Hall of Fame in 1973.
Munn left Syracuse after one season for the head coaching job at Michigan State College, which became
Michigan State University in 1955, following Munn's retirement as coach.Coaching career at Michigan State
In 1947, Biggie Munn and the Michigan State administration (primarily university president
John A. Hannah ) approached and managed to convince the highly popular Notre Dame president Father Cavanaugh to play the Spartans. Macklin Field (now Spartan Stadium) was expanded from 26,000 to 51,000 capacity in 1948, enabling MSU to play a national schedule. MSU initially offered to let Notre Dame take 80 percent of the gate, but Cavanaugh insisted they split the receipts down the middle.Once Notre Dame agreed to play, Michigan State attained almost instant national recognition and thereafter was able to get other big games across the country.
Munn was the only coach to beat Notre Dame's three-time national champion head coach
Frank Leahy three years in a row: 1950, 1951 and 1952.Munn developed the "Wingback Deep" formation of his formula "Michigan State Multiple Offense." The play featured a shifting back and forth from T-formation to Single Wing, and included a direct snap to the
tailback between a T-formation quarterback's legs. On theEast Lansing, Michigan dressing room wall, the coach hung a statement on fundamentals the team members were required to read before every home game: "Do not cheat your team or your teammates. Know your plays. Block. Protect. Add to what we are trying to do. [Signed] Biggie."During the latter part of his coaching career, Munn developed the talents of
Willie Thrower , the Big Ten's first black quarterback. Thrower subsequently became the first blackquarterback to play in theNational Football League , playing for theChicago Bears .Munn was named the NCAA college football Coach of the Year for the 1952 season after MSU went 9-0 to claim the first of his two back-to-back national championships. In 1953, the Spartans tied for the Big Ten title in their first year in the conference. The school had joined the Big Ten Conference in 1949 but wasn't allowed to contend for the championship until 1953, when Michigan State and University of Illinois tied for the title. The conference voted to send Munn's team to the Rose Bowl, where it beat
UCLA 28-20 onJanuary 1 ,1954 .Shortly after the Rose Bowl victory, MSU's athletic director Ralph Young retired and Munn took over and remained in that position until 1971. When he retired as coach he named his assistant,
Duffy Daugherty , to succeed him.Munn's coaching produced seventeen
All-America n players and he was inducted into theCollege Football Hall of Fame in 1959. Munn's teams have held on to the school's top four spots in rushing-yards-per-game in MSU's history: 1948 (304.5), 1951 (293.9), 1952 (272.4) and 1950 (269.3).Trivia
* During the time he was coach, Munn was notoriously superstitious and would carry a lucky
silver dollar with him at all times.* In 1961, Munn became MSU's first inductee into the
Michigan Sports Hall of Fame .* Munn authored the coaching
textbook "Michigan State Multiple Offense" in 1953.* MSU's
Munn Ice Arena built in 1974 is named in his honor.Quotes
* "Without some laughs, the game isn't worth playing" [http://www.any-book-in-print.com/desk_signs/coach_1_ds.htm]
* "The difference between good and great is a little extra effort." [http://www.hangnet.com/sidebar/about.html]
* "Do not cheat your team or your teammates. Know your plays. Block. Protect. Add to what we are trying to do." [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,823106,00.html]
Personal
Biggie Munn married the former Vera Jane Wattles (
January 21 ,1905 -January 4 ,2004 ) in June 1935. Biggie and Vera adopted two children: Michael and Jane Austin.Head coaching record
CFB Yearly Record Subhead
name =Syracuse Orange
startyear = 1946
conf = Independent
endyear = 1946CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1946
name = Syracuse
overall = 4-5
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confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 = CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = Syracuse
overall = 4-5
confrecord = CFB Yearly Record Subhead
name = Michigan State Spartans
startyear = 1947
conf = Independent/Big Ten Conference
endyear = 1953CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1947
name = Michigan State
overall = 7-2
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 = CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1948
name = Michigan State
overall = 6-2-2
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 = 14CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1949
name = Michigan State
overall = 6-3
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking =
ranking2 = 19CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1950
name = Michigan State
overall = 8-1
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = 9
ranking2 = 8CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1951
name = Michigan State
overall = 9-0
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = 2
ranking2 = 2CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship = national
year = 1952
name = Michigan State
overall = 9-0
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = 1
ranking2 = 1CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship = conference
year = 1953
name = Michigan State
overall = 9-1
conference = 5-1
confstanding = T-1st
bowlname =Rose Bowl
bowloutcome = W 28-20
bcsbowl =
ranking = 3
ranking2 = 3CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = Michigan State
overall = 54-9-2
confrecord = CFB Yearly Record End
overall = 58-14-2 (.797)
bcs =
poll = two
polltype =Bibliography
ee also
*
History of Michigan State University
*1931 College Football All-America Team
*College Football
*Munn Ice Arena External links
* [http://www.msu.edu/ Michigan State University homepage]
* [http://www.munnicearena.com/ Munn Ice Arena]
* [http://michiganstate.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=492009 Biggie Munn arrives in East Lansing]
* [http://www.gophermclub.org/hall/hall_spo_football.html University of Minnesota "M" Club]
* [http://www.time.com/time/archive/printout/0,23657,823106,00.html "Time magazine" article: Method and Manpower (1953)]
* [http://www.helmethut.com/College/MichState/MSU.html An illustrated history of MSU football]
* [http://www.suathletics.com/news/Football/2001/4/20/enshrined.asp Induction to the Syracuse University Hall of Fame]
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