- Marshall Glenn
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Marshall Glenn Glenn pictured in The Monticola 1939, West Virginia yearbook Sport(s) Football, basketball Biographical details Born April 22, 1908 Place of birth Elkins, West Virginia Died October 11, 1983 (aged 75) Place of death Hagerstown, Maryland Playing career Football
1927–1929
Basketball
1927–1930
West Virginia
West VirginiaPosition(s) Quarterback (football) Coaching career (HC unless noted) Football
1937–1939
Basketball
1933–1938
West Virginia
West VirginiaHead coaching record Overall 14–12–3 (football)
61–46 (basketball)Bowls 1–0 Statistics College Football Data Warehouse Marshall "Little Sleepy" Glenn (April 22, 1908 – October 11, 1983) was a player and coach of American football and basketball and a physician. He served as the head football coach at West Virginia University from 1937 to 1939, compiling a record of 14–12–3, and the school's head basketball coach from 1933 to 1938, tallying a mark of 61–46. Glenn was born on April 22, 1908 in Elkins, West Virginia. He died on October 11, 1983 at Washington Country Hospital in Hagerstown, Maryland from injuries sustained in a car accident on U.S. Route 340.[1]
Contents
Head coaching record
Football
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs West Virginia Mountaineers (Independent) (1937–1939) 1937 West Virginia 8–1–1 W Sun 1938 West Virginia 4–5–1 1939 West Virginia 2–6–1 West Virginia: 14–12–3 Total: 14–12–3 References
- ^ "Dr. Marshall Glenn Succumbs To Injuries In Highway Wreck". Spirit of Jefferson Farmer's Advocate. October 13, 1983. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=tbRkAAAAIBAJ&sjid=PoUNAAAAIBAJ&pg=2021,283165. Retrieved November 8, 2011.
External links
- West Virginia University Athletic Hall of Fame profile
- Marshall Glenn at the College Football Data Warehouse
West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball head coaches John Purinton (1903–1904) • Anthony Chez (1904–1907) • James Jenkins (1907–1908) • No team (1908–1914) • George Pyle (1914–1917) • H. P. Mullenex (1917–1919) • Francis Stadsvold (1919–1933) • Marshall Glenn (1933–1938) • Dyke Raese (1938–1942) • Rudy Baric (1942–1943) • Harry Lothes (1943–1944) • John Brickels (1944–1945) • Lee Patton (1945–1950) • Red Brown (1950–1954) • Fred Schaus (1954–1960) • George King (1960–1965) • Bucky Waters (1965–1969) • Sonny Moran (1969–1974) • Joedy Gardner (1974–1978) • Gale Catlett (1978–2002) • John Beilein (2002–2007) • Bob Huggins (2007–)
West Virginia Mountaineers head football coaches Frederick Lincoln Emory (1891) • No team (1892) • F. William Rane (1893–1894) • Harry McCrory (1895) • Thomas Trenchard (1896) • George Krebs (1897) • Harry Anderson (1898) • Louis Yeager (1899) • John Hill (1900) • Louis Yeager (1901–1902) • Harry E. Trout (1903) • Anthony Chez (1904) • Carl Forkum (1905–1906) • Clarence W. Russell (1907) • Charles Augustus Lueder (1908–1911) • William P. Edmunds (1912) • Edwin Sweetland (1913) • Sol Metzger (1914–1915) • Mont McIntire (1916–1917) • No team (1918) • Mont McIntire (1919–1920) • Clarence Spears (1921–1924) • Ira Rodgers (1925–1930) • Greasy Neale (1931–1933) • Charles Tallman (1934–1936) • Marshall Glenn (1937–1939) • Bill Kern (1940–1942) • Ira Rodgers (1943–1945) • Bill Kern (1946–1947) • Dudley DeGroot (1948–1949) • Art Lewis (1950–1959) • Gene Corum (1960–1965) • Jim Carlen (1966–1969) • Bobby Bowden (1970–1975) • Frank Cignetti, Sr. (1976–1979) • Don Nehlen (1980–2000) • Rich Rodriguez (2001–2007) • Bill Stewart (2008–2010) • Dana Holgorsen (2011– )
Categories:- 1908 births
- 1983 deaths
- American football quarterbacks
- West Virginia Mountaineers football coaches
- West Virginia Mountaineers football players
- West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball coaches
- West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball players
- People from Charles Town, West Virginia
- People from Randolph County, West Virginia
- Players of American football from West Virginia
- Physicians from West Virginia
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