- Dick Harlow
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Dick Harlow Harlow as Penn State boxing coach in 1920 Sport(s) Football, baseball, track and field, boxing Biographical details Born October 19, 1889 Place of birth Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Died February 19, 1962 (aged 72)Place of death Bethesda, Maryland Playing career Football
1910–1911
Penn StatePosition(s) Tackle Coaching career (HC unless noted) Football
1912–1914
1915–1917
1918
1919–1921
1922–1925
1926–1934
1935–1942
1945–1947
Boxing
c. 1919
Penn State (assistant)
Penn State
Virginia Tech (assistant)
Penn State (assistant)
Colgate
Western Maryland
Harvard
Harvard
Penn StateHead coaching record Overall 149–69–17 Statistics College Football Data Warehouse College Football Hall of Fame
Inducted in 1954 (profile)Richard Cresson "Dick" Harlow (October 19, 1889 – February 19, 1962) was an American football player and coach in the United States. He served as the head football coach at Pennsylvania State University (1915–1917), Colgate University (1922–1925), Western Maryland College, now McDaniel College (1926–1934), and Harvard University (1935–1942, 1945–1947), compiling a career college football record of 149–69–17. Harlow pioneered modern defensive schemes. Often fielding undersized teams, he pioneered coordinated stunts to get around or between blockers rather than trying to overpower them. His offenses were based on deception and timing rather than power, utilizing shifts, reverses, and lateral passes. Harlow was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1954.
Contents
Playing career
A native of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Harlow attended Pennsylvania State University. As a tackle at Penn State, Harlow distinguished himself during the 1910 and 1911 seasons. A two-year letterman, he also was a member of the baseball and track and field teams.
Coaching career
Penn State
Upon graduation from Penn State, Harlow remained with the Nittany Lions football team as an assistant coach for three seasons and was named head coach in 1915. After compiling a 20–8 record in three seasons, Harlow entered the military in 1918. During the fall of 1918, he was stationed at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, where he coached the football team. After an honorable discharge from the United States Army, Harlow returned to Penn State in 1919 to assistant Hugo Bezdek with the football team. Harlow also took charge of boxing at Penn State.[1]
Colgate
Harlow went on to become the 20th head coach at Colgate University from 1922 to 1925. His overall coaching record at Colgate was 24–9–3. This ranks him seventh at Colgate in terms of total wins and sixth at Colgate in terms of winning percentage.
Western Maryland
Harlow was the head football coach at Western Maryland College from 1926 to 1934.[2]
Harvard
In 1935, Harlow became the first non-alumnus ever to coach at Harvard. It was there Harlow was voted Coach-of-the-Year in 1936 and a year later was chosen as the Ivy League Coach-of-the-Year. He retired in 1947 with a lifetime record of 149–69–17, and was named to the National Football Foundation College Football Hall of Fame in 1954.
Oology
Harlow was an expert in oology, the study of birds' eggs. In 1939, he was named curator of oology at the Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology, and he remained in that position until 1954.
Head coaching record
Year Team Overall Penn State Nittany Lions (1915–1917) 1915 Penn State 7–2 1916 Penn State 8–2 1917 Penn State 5–4 Penn State: 20–8 Colgate Raiders (1922–1925) 1922 Colgate 6–3 1923 Colgate 6–2–1 1924 Colgate 5–4 1925 Colgate 7–0–2 Colgate: 24–9–3 Western Maryland Green Terror (1926–1934) 1926 Western Maryland 6–1 1927 Western Maryland 6–2 1928 Western Maryland 6–2–1 1929 Western Maryland 11–0 1930 Western Maryland 9–0–1 1931 Western Maryland 4–4–2 1932 Western Maryland 5–1–2 1933 Western Maryland 5–3 1934 Western Maryland 8–0–1 Western Maryland: 60–13–7 Harvard Crimson (1935–1942) 1935 Harvard 3–5 1936 Harvard 3–4–1 1937 Harvard 5–2–1 1938 Harvard 4–4 1939 Harvard 4–4 1940 Harvard 3–2–3 1941 Harvard 5–2–1 1942 Harvard 2–6–1 Harvard Crimson (1945–1947) 1945 Harvard 5–3 1946 Harvard 7–2 1947 Harvard 4–5 Harvard: 45–39–7 Total: 149–69–17 See also
- List of presidents of the American Football Coaches Association
- Penn State Nittany Lions football under Dick Harlow
References
- ^ "HARLOW TO COACH BOXERS.; Former Football Star Will Assist Bezdek at Penn State". The New York Times. January 9, 1919. http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F10C10F9395511738DDDA00894D9405B898DF1D3. Retrieved March 20, 2011.
- ^ "2005 McDaniel College Football Media Guide". McDaniel College Director of Sports Information. http://www.mcdaniel.edu/athletics/stats/records/foot/05mg.pdf. Retrieved March 20, 2011.
External links
Penn State Nittany Lions head football coaches George W. Hoskins (1892–1895) • Samuel B. Newton (1896–1898) • Sam Boyle (1899) • Pop Golden (1900–1902) • Daniel A. Reed (1903) • Tom Fennell (1904–1908) • Bill Hollenback (1909) • Jack Hollenback (1910) • Bill Hollenback (1911–1914) • Dick Harlow (1915–1917) • Hugo Bezdek (1918–1929) • Bob Higgins (1930–1948) • Joe Bedenk (1949) • Rip Engle (1950–1965) • Joe Paterno (1966–2011) • Tom Bradley # (2011– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.Colgate Red Raiders / Raiders head football coaches Samuel Colgate, Jr. (1890–1891) • Preston Smith (1892) • L. Jay Caldwell (1893) • Spencer Ford (1894) • L. Jay Caldwell (1895) • Joseph Colnon (1896) • Charles B. Mason (1897–1898) • Joseph Stannard (1899) • Joseph A. Short (1900) • Jerry Delaney (1901) • Frank "Buck" O'Neill (1902) • Bob Hatch (1903) • Frank "Buck" O'Neill (1904–1905) • Bill Warner (1906–1907) • Edwin Sweetland (1908) • Gus Brown (1909) • Laurence Bankart (1910) • Jack E. Ingersoll (1911) • Frank Sommers (1912) • Laurence Bankart (1913–1916) • Harold McDevitt (1917) • No team (1918) • Ellery Huntington, Jr. (1919–1921) • Dick Harlow (1922–1925) • George Hauser (1926–1927) • Earl Abell (1928) • Andrew Kerr (1929–1946) • Paul Bixler (1947–1951) • Hal Lahar (1952–1956) • Fred Rice (1957–1958) • Alva Kelley (1959–1961) • Hal Lahar (1962–1967) • Neil Wheelwright (1968–1975) • Frederick Dunlap (1976–1987) • Michael Foley (1988–1992) • Ed Sweeney (1993–1995) • Dick Biddle (1996– )
Harvard Crimson head football coaches No coach (1873–1880) • Lucius Littauer (1881) • No coach (1882–1884) • No team (1885) • Frank A. Mason (1886) • No coach (1887–1889) • George Stewart & George Adams (1890–1892) • George Stewart & Everett J. Lake (1893) • William Brooks (1894) • Robert Emmons (1895) • Bert Waters (1896) • William Cameron Forbes (1897–1898) • Benjamin Dibblee (1899–1900) • Bill Reid (1901) • John Farley (1902) • John Cranston (1903) • Edgar Wrightington (1904) • Bill Reid (1905–1906) • Joshua Crane (1907) • Percy Haughton (1908–1916) • Wingate Rollins (1917) • William F. Donovan (1918) • Bob Fisher (1919–1925) • Arnold Horween (1926–1930) • Eddie Casey (1931–1934) • Dick Harlow (1935–1942) • Henry Lamar (1943–1944) • Dick Harlow (1945–1947) • Arthur Valpey (1948–1949) • Lloyd Jordan (1950–1956) • John Yovicsin (1957–1970) • Joe Restic (1971–1993) • Tim Murphy (1994–)
Western Maryland / McDaniel Green Terror head football coaches Unknown (1891–1894) • No team (1895) • Tom Galbreath (1896–1898) • George Burlingame (1899) • Charles Holton (1900) • Milton Whitehurst (1901–1906) • James N. Ashmore (1907–1908) • Arthur Cotrell (1909) • Earl Collister (1910) • Carl Twigg (1911) • Milton Whitehurst (1912) • Leon Richmond (1913) • John Felton (1914) • Harry Beall (1915–1916) • Sam Turner (1917–1919) • Holly Keller (1920–1921) • Ken Shroyer (1922–1925) • Dick Harlow (1926–1934) • Charlie Havens (1935–1941) • Leroy Byham (1942) • No team (1943–1945) • Charlie Havens (1946–1956) • Bob Waldorf (1957–1964) • Ron Jones (1965–1976) • Jim Hindman (1977–1980) • Jack Molesworth (1981–1985) • Dale Sprague (1986–1992) • Tim Keating (1993– )
AFCA 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
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:- 1889 births
- 1962 deaths
- Colgate Raiders football coaches
- Harvard Crimson football coaches
- McDaniel Green Terror football coaches
- Penn State Nittany Lions baseball players
- Penn State Nittany Lions football coaches
- Penn State Nittany Lions football players
- Virginia Tech Hokies football coaches
- College track and field athletes in the United States
- College Football Hall of Fame inductees
- American military personnel of World War I
- United States Army officers
- People from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Players of American football from Pennsylvania
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