- Dwight "Dike" Beede
Dwight "Dike" V. Beede (1903 – 1972) served as the first head football coach of
Youngstown State University (then Youngstown College). He served there from 1937 to 1972. In the course of his entire professional coaching career, Beede counted 175 career wins, 146 losses and 20 ties. In 1941, he invented and introduced the penalty flag, now a common fixture of American football.cite news
first = John
last = Bassetti
title = First penalty flag has its roots in YSU football
work = The Youngstown Vindicator
page = | date =August 1 1999 ]Formative years
Beede was born in
Youngstown, Ohio ,United States , a steel-manufacturing center located near thePennsylvania border. He attended the city's South High School, where he was class president and played football. In his senior year, Beede received a football scholarship toNewberry College , inSouth Carolina . He later transferred toPittsburgh 'sCarnegie Institute of Technology (nowCarnegie Mellon University ), where he studiedstructural engineering and played football.As a stand-out player with Judge Wally Steffan's Carnegie squad in the 1920s, Beede made football history when he introduced the famous "
spinner play ." He served as captain of the Carnegie Tech football team in 1925 and also played basketball.Beede and his wife Irma had two daughters, Gretchen and Susan, and a son, Ruud. Ruud drowned in 1957.
On
December 10 ,1972 , just a month after having retired fromYoungstown State University , Beede died in a drowning accident atLittle Beaver Creek near his farm inElkton, Ohio , located inColumbiana County .Coaching and professional success
Upon graduation, Beede turned down an offer to teach mathematics at
Pittsburgh 'sCarnegie Institute of Technology and, in 1926 accepted a football coaching position atWestminster College . He held this position for five years, coaching an outstanding team that tiedDuquesne University for the tri-state championship. Beede then coached atGeneva College from 1934 to 1936. The following year, he came to Youngstown College, where he enjoyed several successful decades as football coach.In 1957, Beede was honored as Coach of the Year by the Football Writers Association of American Small Colleges. In 1966, Beede was named to the Helms Football Foundation Hall of Fame. Beede was an avid tree farmer and served on
Ohio 's Forestry Advisory Council. In addition to his coaching duties, Beede was an associate professor of biology atYoungstown State University .Beede retired from Youngstown State University on
November 18 ,1972 .Father of penalty flag
Beede was an important influence on football not only regionally, but nationally. His most celebrated innovation was the penalty flag, which he created and introduced on
October 17 ,1941 . The flag was first used in a game againstOklahoma City University at Youngstown's Rayen Stadium. Prior to the introduction of the penalty flag, officials used horns and whistles to signal a penalty. This made it difficult for the players, since they would hear the whistle and sometimes stop, even though the infraction was caused by the other team. This would deprive the non-guilty team of the yardage they might rightfully have gained. Also, the fans and media sometimes could not recognize an infraction on the field because they had failed to hear the signal.At the 1941 contest at Rayen Stadium, Oklahoma City Coach Os Doenges and four game officials–Hugh McFee, Jack McFee, Bill Renner, and Carl Rebele–--agreed to use the flag as an experiment. Jack McFee later employed the penalty flag at the Ohio State-Iowa game, during which league commissioner Major John Griffith was present.
Beede's first wife, Irma, was often jokingly referred to as the "
Betsy Ross of Football," because she sewed the first penalty flag. Beede asked her to fashion a flag that was brightly colored with white stripes. Irma Beede reportedly used pieces of their daughter'sHalloween and an old bed sheet for the flag, and curtain weights to add weight and heft. The original flag was 16" square with weight all at one end. The penalty flag has been modified over the years, and today, it is a yellow cloth that is filled with sand at one end.References
Related links
* [http://www.ysu.edu/sports/traditions/penaltyflag.htm]
* [http://worlddmc.ohiolink.edu/OMP/NewSearch?searchstring=%22Coaches+(Athletics)%22&fieldname=subject&searchmark=0]
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