Pop Warner
Glenn Scobey "Pop" Warner | ||
---|---|---|
Title | Head Coach | |
Sport | College football | |
Born | April 5, 1871 | |
Place of birth | Springville, New York | |
Died | September 7, 1954 | |
Career highlights | ||
Overall | Major NCAA: 319-106-32 (.733) Overall: 337-114-32 (.731) | |
Coaching stats | ||
College Football DataWarehouse | ||
Championships | ||
1917, 1919, 1925 | ||
Playing career | ||
1892-1894 | Cornell University | |
Position | Guard | |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | ||
1895 - 1896 1897 - 1898 1899 - 1903 1904 - 1906 1907 - 1914 1915 - 1923 1924 - 1932 1933 - 1938 1895 - 1899 |
University of Georgia Cornell University Carlisle Indian Industrial School Cornell University Carlisle Indian Industrial School University of Pittsburgh Stanford University Temple University also Iowa State University | |
College Football Hall of Fame, 1951 |
Glenn Scobey Warner (April 5, 1871–September 7, 1954) was an American football coach, also known as Pop Warner. During his illustrious forty-four year career as a head coach (1895–1938), Warner amassed 319 NCAA victories and led his teams to unheard of dominance. [1] Warner was an innovator that helped shape the game of football. More than anything else, Pop took the game of football, and developed players into better human beings. Nowadays, he is best known for the Pop Warner Youth Foundation, which has used football as a medium to develop players both athletically and academically, and prepare them mentally for what life as a whole may bring.
Early Life
Glenn Scobey Warner was born to William and Adeline Warner in Springville, New York on April 5, 1871, a mere two days after the first ever football game featuring Princeton and Rutgers.[2] This could be seen as a mark of fate from the football gods. Warner attended and played football for Cornell University. Football, which had never been a passion for him until the age of twenty-one, came to him by accident. In fact, Warner was simply invited to practice in 1892 and the rest was history. As captain of the Cornell football team, he obtained the nickname "Pop" because he was older than most of his teammates. He also participated in track and field events, and was the heavy-weight boxing champion at Cornell in 1893.[2] After graduating from Cornell, he had a brief legal career in New York. Warner was then hired by the University of Georgia as its new head football coach in 1895 at a salary of $34 per week.[3] From here, Warner dedicated his life to the development of the game of football, and invested forty-four years in the game.
Pop Warner's Coaching Career
Glen Scobey Warner’s glorious career, unlike most Hall of Fame coaches, included stints with several different teams en route to piling 319 wins—excluding 18 wins at Iowa State University. During his four decades as a coach, Warner brought many innovations to college football, including the spiral punt, the screen play, single- and double-wing formations, the naked reverse, the three-point stance, numbering players' jerseys, and the use of shoulder and thigh pads. He coached teams from two schools simultaneously on three occasions: Iowa State and Georgia during the 1895 and 1896 seasons, Iowa State and Cornell in 1897 and 1898, and Iowa State and Carlisle in 1899. [4] Warner's Iowa State record was 18-8-0, bringing Warner's total lifetime record to 337-114-32
- University of Georgia (1895-97)
During his first year there, Georgia's entire student body consisted of only 248 students, and only 13 of those were on the football team. As a result, Warner's first Georgia team had 3 wins against 4 losses. The following year, Georgia rehired Warner and the team had an undefeated season (4 wins and 0 losses). While at Georgia, Warner also coached Iowa State University.[5]
- Cornell University (1897-1898;1904-06)
After his stint in Georgia, Warner returned to Cornell to coach football for two seasons. After several seasons with Carlisle, he would later come back to Cornell in 1904 for three more seasons.
- Carlisle Indian School
Warner coached at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania for 1899-1903, returned to Cornell for three seasons, and returned again to Carlisle in 1907. During his second tenure at Carlisle, Warner coached one of the most famous American athletes, Jim Thorpe.
- University of Pittsburgh
In 1914, Warner was hired by the University of Pittsburgh, where he coached his teams to 33 straight major wins and three national championships (1915, 1916 and 1918).[6] He coached Pittsburgh from 1915 to 1923 to a 60-12-4 record.[7]
- Stanford University
The next team Warner coached was at Stanford University from 1924 to 1932, where his teams played in three Rose Bowl games, including the classic 1925 game against Knute Rockne and the Four Horsemen of Notre Dame. He coached one of college football's greatest talents, Ernie Neverse en route to adding a fourth national championship to his Hall of Fame career in 1926.[6]
- Temple University
Warner's final head coaching job was at Temple University where he coached for 5 years until retiring in 1938. He served as advisory football coach for several years at San Jose State College after his retirement from Temple.
Pop Warner Little Scholars
A youth program that began as the Pop Warner Conference evolved into a national non-profit organization in 1959. In honor of Pop Warner, this youth program aspired to keep younger kids active and as a result, keep them from getting into trouble. The name, Pop Warner Little Scholars "was selected to underscore the basic concept of Pop Warner- that the classroom is as important as the playing field." [8] The program now consists of "over 300,000 boys and girls, ages 5-16, participating in PW programs in the United States. Teams in Mexico and Japan have also joined the PW "family." There are now over 5000 football teams, playing in eight different age/weight classifications."[8] For boys, there is the Pop Warner Superbowl held annually, and for girls, there is the National Cheerleading competition. The Pop Warner Little Scholars culminates with one of the most prestigious award for a player or cheerleader in the organization: the All-American Scholar award.
Death and Legacy
Warner died of throat cancer in Palo Alto, California at the age of 83. On July 25, 1997, the U.S. Postal Service honored four legendary football coaches—Pop Warner, Bear Bryant, Vince Lombardi, and George Halas—with a 32-cent commemorative stamp for each. First day of issue ceremonies were held at the Professional Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. Each stamp was subsequently issued with a red bar above the coach's name in the state most associated with that stamp. On August 8, 1997, the second version of the Pop Warner stamp (with the red bar) was issued in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania—the state where he spent most of his years coaching. Still, some sports enthusiasts felt that Georgia—which gave Warner his first coaching job—would have been a worthy site for the stamp. In terms of football innovations, Warner was the first coach to actually "invent" his own system of offense. He was instrumental in introducing the idea of numbered jerseys, the huddle, headgear for protection, the spiral punt, and the infamous dummy blocking. Finally, his lasting legacy is the Pop Warner Little Scholars organization that he helped found with Joe Tomlin. This program is recognized all over the United States, and has ties to Japan and Mexico as well.
Related Page
- Georgia Bulldogs football under Pop Warner
Notes and References
- ↑ Official 2006 NCAA Divisions I-A and II-A Football Records Book, at page 374 reflects 319 wins, however College Football DataWharehouse lists 318 wins.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 http://www.cornellbigred.com/Pdfs/football/2007/8/23/CornellFootballLegends.pdf
- ↑ Reed, Thomas Walter (1949). Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. History of the University of Georgia; Chapter XVII: Athletics at the University from the Beginning Through 1947 imprint pages 3441
- ↑ Cornell Chronicle 9-18-97
- ↑ 2006 Iowas State Cyclone Football, page 126
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Past Division I-A Football National Champions
- ↑ Pittsburgh Coaching Records
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 http://www.popwarner.com/history/pop.asp?lable=history
External links
- Pop Warner biography. University of Georgia's GeorgiaInfo. Retrieved June 27, 2005.
- CU football halftime ceremony honors legendary 'Pop' Warner. Cornell Chronicle. Retrieved June 26, 2005.
- Reed, Thomas Walter (1949). Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. History of the University of Georgia; Chapter XVII: Athletics at the University from the Beginning Through 1947 imprint pages 3441-3445
- Circa 1895 photograph of Georgia coach Pop Warner. Digital Library of Georgia. Retrieved December 18, 2006.
- college hall of fame bio
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