Judge, 1929-10-19 · page 13 of 36
Judge — October 19, 1929 — page 13: what you’re looking at
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bia cnc a dala sisolectacdialalsinannin Foornarien—I'll bet one of them guys was % “When the Broken Backs Come Down the Field.” Reminiscences of Ninety Years of Coaching. By Kned Knockne In all my years of cc never had a better all-arou than Mohammedan K He could run with the ball. pass, zrowl, beef and complain. alled Kleagle “Mohs dan” because whenever he in the direction of Mecea he st the ground with his for was in the old days idling when the coach was really indisp le to the team. I remember the time we lost to Bedlam, because one of the axles broke under the weight of the center. In those days the coach was the only means of transpor- tation th his was called “riding ch.” IT remember, was al ys able to make their forward passes because their line was good, and if there’s anything more forward than a pass from a Vv just write to Mr. Rip- ley and he'll send you an auto- graphed copy of his book. We played Vassar in the spring of ‘62. We played in the spring in those days because we used only the flying wedge, and prac- tice, therefore, didn’t take months as it does now, Then there was the which conference title. me in d- the Nobody knows what the conference was about, Snodgrass clin JUDGE but when the spectators arrived they saw the two teams in huddle, raphers, and a stadium said * the last minute of play the « ran onto the field and handed Snodgrass a telegram, Snod took time out, read the tel took time in “You'll have to excuse me, mmpanied by stenog m. tll time; carin’ a signet ring! My wife is expec 1 And nobody ni he'd crossed the a new hat.” iced until after nal line that he had the ball under his arm. grass was the - field - bri runner of all time greatest en - collarbone Kleagle be- reatest elevator boy of ind [am undoubtedly d the greatest coach of all time. —Nerp Hirtox came the remember Bill Higgins?”