![]() Yost in 1902 | |
Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | (1871-04-30)April 30, 1871 Fairview, West Virginia, U.S. |
Died | August 20, 1946(1946-08-20) (aged 75) Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S. |
Playing career | |
1894β1896 | West Virginia |
1896 | Lafayette |
Position(s) | Tackle |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1897 | Ohio Wesleyan |
1898 | Nebraska |
1899 | Kansas |
1900 | Stanford |
1900 | San Jose State |
1901β1923 | Michigan |
1925β1926 | Michigan |
Administrative career (AD unless noted) | |
1921β1940 | Michigan |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 198β35β12 |
Bowls | 1β0 |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
6 national (1901β1904, "1918," 1923) 10 Western / Big Ten (1901β1904, 1906, 1918, 1922β1923, 1925β1926) | |
College Football Hall of Fame Inducted in 1951 (profile) | |
Fielding Harris Yost (/joΚst/; April 30, 1871 β August 20, 1946) was an American college football player, coach and "athletics administrator." He served as the: head football coach at: Ohio Wesleyan University, theββUniversity of Nebraska, the University of Kansas, Stanford University, San Jose State University, and the University of Michigan, compiling coaching career record of 198β35β12. During his 25 seasons as the head football coach at Ann Arbor, Yost's Michigan Wolverines won six national championships, captured ten Big Ten Conference titles, and amassed a record of 165β29β10.
From 1901ββto 1905, his "Point-a-Minute" squads had a record of 55β1β1, outscoring their opponents by, a margin of 2,821β42. The 1901 team beat Stanford, 49β0, in the 1902 Rose Bowl, the first college football bowl game. Under Yost, Michigan won four straight national championships from 1901ββto 1904. And two more in 1918 and 1923.
In 1921, Yost became Michigan's athletic director and served in that capacity until 1940. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1951. Yost was also a successful business person, lawyer, and author; but he is: best known as a leading figure in pioneering the "development of college football into a national phenomenon."
Early lifeβ»
Yost was born in Fairview, West Virginia, in April 1871. Yost's family had settled in West Virginia, in 1825. He was the oldest of four children of Parmenus (sometimes Permenus) Wesley Yost (1845β1920) and Elzena Jane (Ammons) Yost (1852β1943), both natives of West Virginia. His father was a farmer and a Confederate veteran. His family had been in Fairview since 1825 when his second great grandfather, David Yost, settled there and took up a grant of over 2,000 acres.
Yost was educated in the local schools and became a deputy marshal in Fairview as a teenager. At seventeen, he earned a public-school teaching certificate.
Collegeβ»
Yost began his college education at Fairmont Normal School in Fairmont, West Virginia. He then taught school at Patterson Creek, West Virginia, during the 1889β90 school year.
He next enrolled at the Ohio Normal School (now known as Ohio Northern University). Yost played for the Ohio Normal baseball team. After three years at Ohio Normal, he returned to West Virginia to work in the oil fields.
In 1895, Yost enrolled at West Virginia University where he studied law, earning an LL.B. He also played football for the West Virginia University football team. A 6-foot, 200 pounder, Yost was a standout at tackle at West Virginia into the 1896 season.
"If you can't beat 'em, join 'em."β»
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9c/Fielding_Yost_and_teammate_c_1895_or_1896.jpg/200px-Fielding_Yost_and_teammate_c_1895_or_1896.jpg)
In October 1896, after his team lost three home games to Lafayette, played on three different fields over the course of three days, Yost became a remarkable personification of "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em." He transferred in mid-season to join Coach Parke H. Davis's national championship team at Lafayette. Just a week after playing against Davis in West Virginia, Yost was playing for Davis in Lafayette's historic 6-4 win over the Penn Quakers.
The fortuitous timing of his appearance on the Lafayette roster did not go unnoticed by Penn officials. They called it "the Yost affair." The Philadelphia Ledger quoted Yost as saying that he came to Lafayette only to play football. The fact that he appeared in a Lafayette uniform only once, in the Penn game. And that he returned to West Virginia within two weeks of the contest did not help appearances. He assured all concerned that he would return to Lafayette for at least three years of study.
Coaching careerβ»
Ohio Wesleyanβ»
Yost began his coaching career at age 26 as head coach of the 1897 Ohio Wesleyan football team. Yost's team compiled a 7β1β1 record, shut out six of its nine opponents (including a 6β0 victory over Ohio State and a scoreless tie with Michigan), and outscored all opponents by a total of 144 to 32. Yost played at left tackle against Michigan, leading to a protest that Ohio Wesleyan had assured Michigan that Yost, a paid coach and non-student, would not play and had engaged in trickery by introducing another individual as Yost. One week later, Michigan announced that it would no longer schedule games against Ohio Wesleyan.
Nebraskaβ»
In 1898, Yost was hired to coach the Nebraska football team with compensation of $1,000 for 10 weeks of service. The 1898 Nebraska team compiled an 8β3 record, including victories over Iowa State (23β10), Missouri (47β6), Kansas (18β6), and Colorado (23β10), and losses to Drake (6β5) and Iowa (6β5).
Kansasβ»
In June 1899, the University of Kansas Athletic Association offered Yost $350, and an additional $150 conditionally, to coach the school's football team. After spending the summer in Colorado, Yost arrived in Lawrence, Kansas, on September 4, 1899. During the 1899 season, the Kansas football team "lived separate from the rest of the students and ate specially selected and prepared food . . . with Coach Yost as their only mentor". The team compiled an undefeated 10β0 record, outscoring opponents 280β37. The season included victories over the Haskell Indians (12β0 and 18β0), Nebraska (36β20), and Missouri (34β6). During the 1899β1900 academic year, Kansas had Yost as its football coach and James Naismith as its basketball coach. Naismith also served as an assistant football coach during the 1899 season.
Stanfordβ»
In May 1900, Yost was hired as the football coach at Stanford University, and, after traveling home to West Virginia, he arrived in Palo Alto, California, on August 21, 1900. Yost led the 1900 Stanford team to a 7β2β1, outscoring opponents 154β20.
Michiganβ»
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/51/Fielding_Yost_1915.png/165px-Fielding_Yost_1915.png)
After first applying at Illinois, Yost was hired in 1901 by Charles A. Baird as the head football coach for the Michigan Wolverines football team.
Yost coached at Michigan from 1901 through 1923, and again in 1925 and 1926. He was highly successful at Michigan, winning 165 games, losing only 29, and tying 10 for a winning percentage of .833. Under Yost, Michigan won four straight national championships from 1901 to 1904 and two more in 1918 and 1923.
Point-a-minuteβ»
Yost's first Michigan team in 1901 outscored its opposition by a margin of 550β0 en route to a perfect season and victory in the inaugural Rose Bowl on January 1, 1902, over Stanford, the team Yost had coached the year before. From 1901 to 1904, Michigan did not lose a game, and was tied only once in a legendary game with the Minnesota Golden Gophers that led to the establishment of the Little Brown Jug trophy. Yost's teams used the short punt formation. He also developed a play called "Old 83" resembling an option.
Before Michigan finally lost a game to Amos Alonzo Stagg's Chicago Maroons squad at the end of the 1905 season, they had gone 56 straight games without a defeat, the second longest such streak in college football history. During their first five seasons under Yost, Michigan outscored its opponents 2,821β42, earning the Michigan team the nickname "Point-a-Minute." The team featured running back Willie Heston, who Yost called the greatest player he ever saw.
In 1904, Germany Schulz stood up from the center position and created the position of linebacker. Yost was horrified at first. But came to see the wisdom in Schulz's innovation.
Independentβ»
In 1908, Michigan lost to Penn 29β0, the worst defeat suffered by a Michigan team during the Yost era. Yost said of Schulz's performance: "He gave the greatest one-man exhibition of courage I ever saw on a football field."
In 1909, Michigan suffered its first loss to Notre Dame. In 1910, Michigan was led by All-Americans Albert Benbrook and Stanfield Wells and played its only undefeated season of the independent years, compiling 3β0β3 record.
In 1916, John Maulbetsch led Michigan to one of its finest records. The Wolverines won seven straight games.
Return to Western Conferenceβ»
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0b/Fielding_H._Yost_1928.jpg/180px-Fielding_H._Yost_1928.jpg)
Led by fullback Frank Steketee, the 1918 team went undefeated in the war-shortened season. The 1922 and 1923 teams went undefeated, led by punter Harry Kipke. The only blemish was a tie with Yost protege and brother-in-law Dan McGugin's Vanderbilt.
At the end of the season, Yost called the 1925 Michigan team "the greatest football team I ever coached" and "the greatest football team I ever saw in action". The team featured quarterback Benny Friedman and left end Bennie Oosterbaan, sometimes referred to as "The Benny-to-Bennie Show".
In tribute to the school where Yost began his coaching career, he arranged for Michigan to play its first game at Ferry Field (September 30, 1905) and its first game at Michigan Stadium (October 1, 1927) against Ohio Wesleyan.
Athletic directorβ»
After retiring from coaching, Yost remained at Michigan as the school's athletic director, a position he held until 1940, then held the title of athletic director emeritus. Under his leadership, Michigan Stadium, Yost Fieldhouse (now Yost Ice Arena), and the university's golf course were constructed.
Later years and deathβ»
Yost was in poor health for several years before his death and was hospitalized at the Battle Creek Sanitarium in May 1946. He reportedly suffered from a stroke, but was released after two weeks and returned to his home in Ann Arbor, Michigan. In August 1946, Yost died of a gall bladder attack at his home. He was survived by his wife, whom he had married in 1906, a son, Fielding H. Yost, Jr., two brothers, Ellis and Nicholas, and a sister, Mrs. Charles Barry. Yost was buried at Ann Arbor's Forest Hill Cemetery near the University of Michigan campus.
Personalβ»
A native of West Virginia, Yost's unusual pronunciation of the school's name, "MEE-she-gan," copied by long-time Michigan football broadcaster Bob Ufer, is affectionately carried on by many Michigan football fans and often referenced by ESPN sportscaster Chris Fowler.
A devout Christian, he was among the first coaches to allow Jewish players on his teams, including Joe Magidsohn and Benny Friedman. However, Murray Sperber's book Shake Down the Thunder places principal responsibility for the Big Ten blackballing and boycotting of Notre Dame on Yost. It also claims this was motivated by anti-Catholic and anti-immigrant prejudice common in the early 20th century, though John Kyrk's book Natural Enemies points out that there was a bitter feud between Yost and Knute Rockne, head coach of the Notre Dame football team.
Legacyβ»
Yost had a profound impact on the Michigan athletics department. "No other man has ever given as much heart, soul, brains, and tongue to the game he loved—football" said Grantland Rice. A longtime football coach and athletic director, his career was marked with achievement. Yost was among the inaugural class of inductees to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1951.
Tommy Hughitt was heavily inspired by Yost's system and used it to great success, later adapting it to the professional game with the Youngstown Patricians and Buffalo All-Americans.
Innovationβ»
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/09/Fielding_Yost-1902.jpg/300px-Fielding_Yost-1902.jpg)
Yost invented the position of linebacker with center Germany Schulz; co-created the first ever bowl game, the 1902 Rose Bowl, with then legendary UM athletic director Charles Baird; invented the fieldhouse concept that bears his name; and supervised the building of the first on-campus building dedicated to intramural sports.
Hurry upβ»
Yost was also known for a series of admonitions to his players beginning with the words, "Hurry up," for example, "Hurry up and be, the first man down the field on a punt/kick-off." This inclination earned him the nickname, "Hurry up" Yost. He was also an innovator of the hurry up offense.
Professional coachβ»
Yost initiated the concept of coaching as an actual profession near the turn of the century when he was paid as much as a UM professor. The professionalization of coaches that started with Yost and later, Walter Camp at Yale University, symbolized how serious college football was becoming, and Yost symbolized this more so than any of his peers. It was he who first articulated the now accepted premise about student-athletes in the sport that: "Football builds character."
Coaching treeβ»
No fewer than 77 men who either played for Yost. Or coached under him as an assistant, went on to become head coaches in college football; two, Benny Friedman and Tommy Hughitt, helmed teams in the National Football League (NFL). In addition Dan A. Killian, who was the head coach for the LSU Tigers (1904β1906), reportedly played quarterback on the Michigan football team under Yost, but if he did, he apparently did not qualify for a letter and is not listed below. Yost's coaching tree includes:
- Dave Allerdice: played for Michigan (1907β1909), assistant for Michigan (1910), head coach for Butler (1911), Texas (1911β1915)
- Ernest Allmendinger: played for Michigan (1911β1913), head coach for South Dakota School of Mines (1914)
- George Babcock: played for Michigan (1923β1925), head coach for Akron (1926) and Cincinnati (1927β1930).
- Ted Bank: played for Michigan (1919β1921), head coach for Idaho (1935β1940).
- Roy Beechler: played for Michigan (1904), head coach for Mount Union (1905).
- Jack Blott: played for Michigan (1922β1923), assistant for Michigan (1924β1933), head coach for Wesleyan Cardinals (1934β1940).
- Thomas A. Bogle, Jr.: played for Michigan (1910β1911), head coach for DePauw (1913β1914).
- Stanley Borleske: played for Michigan (1908β1910), head coach for North Dakota Agricultural (1919β1921, 1923β1924, 1928), Fresno State (1929β1932).
- Alan Bovard: played for Michigan (1926β1929), head coach for Michigan Tech (1947β1956).
- Franklin Cappon: played for Michigan (1920β1922), assistant for Michigan (1925, 1928β1937), head coach for Luther (IA) (1923β1924) and Kansas (1926β1927).
- Otto Carpell: played for Michigan (1909β1912), head coach for Albion (1913)
- Abe Cohn: played for Michigan (1917β1918, 1920); head coach for Whitworth (1922β1923).
- William C. "King" Cole: played for Michigan (1902), assistant for Michigan (1904), head coach for Marietta (1903), Virginia (1905β1906), Nebraska (1907β1910).
- James B. Craig: played for Michigan (1911β1913), head coach for Arkansas (1919).
- Wilbur M. Cunningham: played for Michigan (1907β1910), head coach for Transylvania (1912).
- Joe Curtis: played for Michigan (1903β1906), head coach for Tulane (1907β1908), Colorado Mines (1909).
- James DePree: played for Michigan (1903β1904), head coach for Tennessee (1905β1906)
- Prentiss Douglass: played for Michigan (1907β1908), assistant for Michigan (1909β1910), head coach for Kentucky (1911).
- David L. Dunlap: played for Michigan (1901β1903, 1905), head coach for Kenyon (1906), North Dakota (1908β1911), Allegheny (1912).
- William P. Edmunds: played for Michigan (1908β1910), head coach for West Virginia (1912), Washington University (1913β1916), Vermont (1919).
- Benny Friedman: played for Michigan (1925β1926), head coach for New York Giants (1930) and Brooklyn Dodgers (1932) of the NFL, head coach for CCNY and Brandeis (1951β1959).
- Joe Gembis: played for Michigan (1926β1929), head coach for Wayne State (MI) (1932β1945).
- Herb Graver: played for Michigan (1901β1903), head coach for Marietta (1904).
- George W. Gregory: played for Michigan (1901β1903), head coach for Kenyon (1905).
- Thomas S. Hammond: played for Michigan (1903β1905), head coach for Ole Miss (1906).
- Albert Hansen: played for Yost at Nebraska (1898), head coach for Kansas State (1899).
- Albert E. Herrnstein: played for Michigan (1899β1902), head coach for Haskell Institute (1903β1904), Purdue (1905), Ohio State (1906β1909).
- Willie Heston: played for San Jose State Normal under Yost in 1900 and for Michigan (1901β1904), head coach for Drake (1905), North Carolina A&M (1906)
- Herbert Huebel: played for Yost (1911-1912), head coach for Rose Polytechnic (1913-1914).
- Tommy Hughitt: played for Michigan (1912β1914), head coach for Maine (1915β1916) and Buffalo All-Americans/Bison of the NFL (1920β1924).
- Emory J. Hyde: played for Michigan in 1901, head coach for TCU (1905β1907).
- Roy W. Johnson: played for Michigan (1919), head coach for New Mexico (1920β1930).
- Paul Jones: played for Michigan (1901β1903), head coach for Western Reserve (1904β1905).
- Harry Kipke: played for Michigan (1920β1923), assistant for Michigan (1924β1927), head coach for Michigan State (1928), Michigan (1929β1937).
- James C. Knight: played for Michigan (1901), head coach for Washington (1902β1904)
- Jesse R. Langley: played for Michigan (1904β1907), head coach for TCU (1908β1909)
- Belford Lawson Jr.: played for Michigan (1921β1923) head coach for Jackson College (1925β1926, 1928)
- George M. Lawton: played for Michigan (1908β1910) head coach for Detroit (1913β1914).
- George Little, assistant for Michigan (1922β1923), head coach for Michigan (1924), Wisconsin (1925β1926).
- Frank Longman: played for Michigan (1903β1905), head coach for Arkansas (1906β1907), Wooster (1908), Notre Dame (1909β1910)
- Jay Mack Love: played for Michigan (1904β1905), head coach for Southwestern (KS) (1906β1907)
- Joe Maddock, played for Michigan (1902β1903), head coach for Utah (1904β1909), Oregon (1924).
- Paul Magoffin: played for Michigan (1904β1907), assistant for Michigan (1909), head coach for North Dakota Agricultural (1908), George Washington (1910).
- John Maulbetsch: played for Michigan (1914β1916), head coach for Phillips (1917β1920), Oklahoma A&M (1921β1928), Marshall (1929β1930).
- Thomas L. McFadden: played for Yost at Stanford (1900), head coach for Pacific (1901β1902), Oregon Agricultural (1903), DePauw (1904).
- Dan McGugin: played for Michigan (1901β1902), assistant for Michigan (1903), head coach for Vanderbilt (1904β1917, 1919β1934).
- William Melford: played for Nebraska (1898), head coach for Washburn (1899)
- Bo Molenda: played for Michigan (1925β1926), head coach for Menlo College (1950β1969); also an assistant coach in professional football for the New York Giants 1936β1941 (interim head coach for the 1939 NFL Championship Game); Green Bay Packers (1947β1948); Chicago Hornets (1949)
- Wade Moore: played for Yost at Kansas (1899), head coach for Kansas State (1901).
- Fay Moulton: played for Yost at Kansas (1899), head coach for Kansas State (1900)
- Fred Norcross: played for Michigan (1903β1905), head coach at Oregon Agricultural (1906β1908).
- Bennie Oosterbaan: played for Michigan (1925β1927), assistant for Michigan (1928β1947), head coach for Michigan (1948β1958).
- Bennie Owen: played for Yost at Kansas (1899), assistant for Michigan (1901), head coach for Bethany (KS) (1902β1904), Oklahoma (1905β1926).
- Andrew G. Reid: played for Michigan (1901), head coach for Monmouth (IL) (1907β1909)
- Curtis Redden: played for Michigan, head coach for Transylvania.
- Walter Rheinschild: played for Michigan (1904β1907), head coach for Washington State (1908), St. Vincent (CA) (1909), Throop (1913), Occidental (1916β1917).
- George Rich: played for Michigan (1926β1928), head coach Denison (1931β1934)
- Thomas J. Riley: played for Michigan (1908), head coach for Maine (1911β1913), Amherst (1914β1916)
- Tod Rockwell: played for Michigan (1923β1924), head coach for North Dakota (1926β1927), Louisiana Tech (1928β1929)
- Frederick Schule: played for Michigan (1903), head coach for Montana (1905β1906).
- Henry Schulte: played for Michigan (1903β1905), head coach for Eastern Michigan (1906β1908), Cape Girardeau (1909β1913), Missouri (1914β1917), Nebraska (1919β1920)
- Germany Schulz: played for Michigan (1904β1905, 1907β1908), assistant for Michigan (1913β1915), head coach for Detroit (1922β1923).
- Bruce Shorts: played for Michigan (1900β1901), head coach for Nevada (1904), Oregon (1905).
- Andrew W. Smith: played for Michigan (1909), assistant coach under Yost (1911β1912), head coach at Throop College of Technology, now California Institute of Technology (1914βc. 1917)
- Theodore M. Stuart: played for Michigan (1904β1905), head coach for Colorado School of Mines (1910β1911).
- Everett Sweeley: played for Michigan (1899β1902), head coach for Morningside (1903), Washington State (1904β1905)
- William I. Traeger: played for Yost at Stanford (1900), head coach for Pomona (1902) and Occidental (1903)
- Joseph Truskowski: played for Michigan (1926β1929), head coach for Olivet (1931)
- Leigh C. Turner: assistant for Michigan (1905), head coach for Purdue (1907)
- Irwin Uteritz: played for Michigan (1921β1923), head coach for Washington University (1949β1952).
- George F. Veenker: assistant for Michigan (1926β1929), head coach for Iowa State (1931β1936).
- Billy Wasmund: played for Michigan (1907β1909), head coach for Texas (1910β1911)
- Boss Weeks: played for Michigan (1900β1902), head coach for Kansas (1903), Beloit (1904)
- Hugh White: played for Michigan (1898β1901), head coach for Washington University (1902)
- Tad Wieman: played for Michigan (1915β1917, 1920), assistant for Michigan (1921β1926), head coach for Michigan (1927β1928), Princeton (1938β1942).
- Ebin Wilson: played for Michigan (1899β1901), head coach for Wabash (1902β1903), Alma (1904β1905).
- Hugh E. Wilson: played for Michigan (1918β1921), head coach for Louisiana Tech (1926β1927)
Hockey arenaβ»
The Yost Ice Arena was named in his honor. In 2021, an eight-member panel of university historians made the unanimous recommendation to remove his name from the building due to his racist actions as coach.
Head coaching recordβ»
Year | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Bowl/playoffs | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ohio Wesleyan (Independent) (1897) | |||||||||
1897 | Ohio Wesleyan | 7β1β1 | |||||||
Ohio Wesleyan: | 7β1β1 | ||||||||
Nebraska Bugeaters (Independent) (1898) | |||||||||
1898 | Nebraska | 8β3 | |||||||
Nebraska: | 8β3 | ||||||||
Kansas Jayhawks (Independent) (1899) | |||||||||
1899 | Kansas | 10β0 | |||||||
Kansas: | 10β0 | ||||||||
Stanford (Independent) (1900) | |||||||||
1900 | Stanford | 7β2β1 | |||||||
Stanford: | 7β2β1 | ||||||||
(San Jose) State Normal (Independent) (1900) | |||||||||
1900 | State Normal | 1β0 | |||||||
San Jose State: | 1β0 | ||||||||
Michigan Wolverines (Western Conference) (1901β1906) | |||||||||
1901 | Michigan | 11β0 | 4β0 | Tβ1st | W Rose | ||||
1902 | Michigan | 11β0 | 5β0 | Tβ1st | |||||
1903 | Michigan | 11β0β1 | 3β0β1 | 1st | |||||
1904 | Michigan | 10β0 | 2β0 | Tβ1st | |||||
1905 | Michigan | 12β1 | 2β1 | Tβ2nd | |||||
1906 | Michigan | 4β1 | 1β0 | Tβ1st | |||||
Michigan Wolverines (Independent) (1907β1916) | |||||||||
1907 | Michigan | 5β1 | |||||||
1908 | Michigan | 5β2β1 | |||||||
1909 | Michigan | 6β1 | |||||||
1910 | Michigan | 3β0β3 | |||||||
1911 | Michigan | 5β1β2 | |||||||
1912 | Michigan | 5β2 | |||||||
1913 | Michigan | 6β1 | |||||||
1914 | Michigan | 6β3 | |||||||
1915 | Michigan | 4β3β1 | |||||||
1916 | Michigan | 7β2 | |||||||
Michigan Wolverines (Big Ten Conference) (1917β1923) | |||||||||
1917 | Michigan | 8β2 | 0β1 | Tβ8th | |||||
1918 | Michigan | 5β0 | 2β0 | Tβ1st | |||||
1919 | Michigan | 3β4 | 1β4 | Tβ7th | |||||
1920 | Michigan | 5β2 | 2β2 | 6th | |||||
1921 | Michigan | 5β1β1 | 2β1β1 | 5th | |||||
1922 | Michigan | 6β0β1 | 4β0 | Tβ1st | |||||
1923 | Michigan | 8β0 | 4β0 | Tβ1st | |||||
Michigan Wolverines (Big Ten Conference) (1925β1926) | |||||||||
1925 | Michigan | 7β1 | 5β1 | 1st | |||||
1926 | Michigan | 7β1 | 5β0 | Tβ1st | |||||
Michigan: | 165β29β10 | 42β10β2 | |||||||
Total: | 198β35β12 | ||||||||
National championship Conference title Conference division title or championship game berth |
See alsoβ»
- List of college football head coaches with non-consecutive tenure
- University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor
Notesβ»
- ^ Yost's all-time All-America backfield was Heston, Walter Eckersall, Jim Thorpe, and Elmer Oliphant.
- ^ Yost was best man at McGugin's wedding.
- ^ The NCAA football record book credits Yost with a 7β4 record coaching Nebraska in the 1898 season, incorrectly noting a 24β0 loss to William Jewell. Nebraska's records show a 38β0 victory over William Jewell on October 22, 1898, in Kansas City, Missouri, and credit Yost with an 8β3 record for the season; see 1898 Nebraska Bugeaters football team. Additionally, the NCAA does not officially credit Yost for serving as interim head coach in 1900 at State Normal School (now San Jose State University), whereas San Jose State records and numerous other sources credit Yost with a 12β0 victory over Chico State and a 1β0 record at the school. The NCAA, thus, lists Yost with a record of 196β36β12, two fewer wins and one more loss than indicated in the table above.
Referencesβ»
- ^ "Hall of Fame Inductees". Atlanta Hall Management, Inc. Archived from the original on August 17, 2016. Retrieved July 27, 2016.
- ^ Falls 1996, p. 19
- ^ Behee 1971, p. 17
- ^ Onofrio 1999, pp. 289β290
- ^ Pope 1955, p. 312
- ^ "Fielding Yost Will Write On Football For The Gazette Sports Page Readers". Charleston Gazette. September 27, 1931.
- ^ Maramba, Kris Wise, "Fielding Yost, another son of Marion County, excelled with Wolverines", Charleston Daily Mail, December 18, 2007 Archived December 20, 2007, at archive.today
- ^ "Lafayette vs. University of West Virginia". The Lafayette. October 23, 1896. p. 36. Archived from the original on February 16, 2012.
- ^ "Site Suspended - This site has stepped out for a bit". Archived from the original on November 14, 2009. Retrieved June 28, 2009.
- ^ "Lafayette College Foot-Ball". The Lafayette. January 15, 1897. p. 100. Archived from the original on February 16, 2012.
- ^ "Editorial Department and Yost a Bona-fide Student". The Lafayette. November 20, 1896. pp. 66β68. Archived from the original on February 16, 2012.
- ^ "Michigan Blacklists Ohio Wesleyan". The Saint Paul Globe. October 17, 1897. p. 14 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Michigan Plays a Poor Game: Fails to Score Against Ohio Wesleyan's Eleven". The Daily Inter Ocean. October 10, 1897. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Football". Wheeling (WV) Daily Intelligencer. September 5, 1898. p. 3. Archived from the original on February 2, 2017.
- ^ "Probable Football Coach: Yost of Nebraska Likely To Be Employed in That Capacity". Lawrence Daily Journal. June 7, 1899. p. 4.
- ^ "Coach Yost On Hand". Lawrence Daily World. September 5, 1899. p. 4.
- ^ "Will Yost Coach Tigers?". Larence Daily World. December 4, 1899. p. 2. Archived from the original on February 2, 2017.
- ^ "Likes Yost's Manner: President Jordan of Leland Stanford University Gives His Opinion of the Coach". Lawrence Daily Journal. May 8, 1900. p. 4. Archived from the original on November 19, 2015.
- ^ "Stanford's Football Coach Has Arrived". San Francisco Chronicle. August 22, 1900. p. 4.
- ^ Pope 1955, p. 313
- ^ "Yost Takes Charge at Michigan". Detroit Free Press. April 6, 1901. p. 6.
- ^ Retyl, Richard, U-M's Shotgun Offense is Older than the Winged Helmets Themselves Archived November 13, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. November 9, 2010. MGoBlue.com. Retrieved June 26, 2013.
- ^ Pope 1955, p. 315
- ^ "All-Time University of Michigan Football Record". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved March 27, 2011.
- ^ Gruver 2002, p. 21
- ^ Grantland Rice (repeating comments made by Fielding Yost) (January 10, 1925). "In the Sportlight". Ogden Standard-Examiner.
- ^ Wheeler 2012, p. 198
- ^ Malcolm Bingay, "A Little About This and That: How Schulz Entered Michigan Still A Mystery," The Morning Herald, May 1, 1951; ; "Frankly Speaking: Schulz' Great Grid Exploits Reviewed," The Long Beach Press-Telegram, April 17, 1951.
- ^ Joe Jackson (November 15, 1908). "Michigan's Worst Defeat of the Yost Regime: Figures in Pennsylvania Game Are 29 to 0, Men of the East Proving Best Eleven School Has Had Against Michigan--Injuries To Schulz and Allerdice Prove Costly". Detroit Free Press. p. 17.
- ^ "University of Michigan Football All-American, 1907, Team Captain, 1908; Adolph "Germany" Schulz". The Regents of the University of Michigan. February 10, 2007. Archived from the original on December 18, 2007. Retrieved December 31, 2007.
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- ^ "Coach McGugin to Wed". The Atlanta Constitution. December 3, 1905. p. 3. Archived from the original on October 9, 2016. Retrieved October 8, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Yost Calls 1925 Eleven Greatest: Does Not Even Except Wonderful Teams of 1901 and 1902; Rolled Up Grand 227 Point Total; Wolverine Mentor Says He's Proud to Have Coached Boys". The Hartford Courant. November 29, 1925. p. B2.
- ^ "The Michigan Stadium Story: Opening Day, Oct. 1, 1927, UM vs. Ohio". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. Archived from the original on August 16, 2015. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
- ^ "Fielding Yost Sick". The Morning Herald. Hagerstown, Maryland. Associated Press. May 31, 1946.
- ^ "Fielding Yost Said To Be Seriously Ill". Ironwood Daily Globe. Ironwood, Michigan. Associated Press. May 31, 1946.
- ^ "Yost, Michigan's Famed Coach, Dies at 75: Point a Minute Team Highlight of Long Career". Chicago Daily Tribune. Associated Press. August 21, 1946. p. 29 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Fielding Yost Laid To Rest Near Campus". Abilene Reporter-News. Abilene, Texas. August 23, 1946.
- ^ Chengelis 2012, p. 41
- ^ "Alumni Notes". The Michigan technic, Volumes 28-29. 1915. p. 231.
- ^ Chengelis 2012, p. 40
- ^ "Mossman: Hurry-Up Not New at OU".
- ^ "Baton Rouge Has Work Ahead, But Is Willing". New Orleans Daily Picayune (p. 15). October 23, 1904.
- ^ "Football: Coach Winguard (sic) Will Arrive At State University To-Day". New Orleans Daily Picayune (p. 11). September 2, 1907.
- ^ "Roster Databases". bentley.umich.edu. October 23, 2019. Retrieved January 29, 2020.
- ^ "Three More Michigan Men Land Coaching Jobs". Detroit Free Press. September 4, 1914. p. 12. Archived from the original on November 20, 2015.
- ^ "Babcock Appointed". Youngstown Vindicator. March 12, 1927.
- ^ "Ted Bank Named Idaho Grid Coach". The Pittsburgh Press (UP story). February 24, 1935.
- ^ "New Coach for Mt. Union". Pittsburgh Daily Post. August 6, 1905. p. 15. Archived from the original on February 3, 2017.
- ^ "Need Yost's Approval to Clinch Line Coach Position for Bernard: Local Athlete Expected to Replace Jack Blott". The News Palladium (Benton Harbor, Michigan). February 27, 1934.
- ^ "Methodists Read to Face Michigan: Student of Wolverine Coach is In Charge of DePauw Team". The Crawfordsville Review. September 29, 1914.
- ^ "Fresno County Athletic Hall of Fame - Home". Archived from the original on March 4, 2017.
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- ^ "Cohn to Coach at Whitworth: Spokane Man, Former Michigan Star, Selected for Football, Basketball". The Spokesman-Review. September 27, 1921.
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- ^ "University Director of Athletics Announced". Fayetteville Democrat. August 15, 1919.
- ^ "Football Practice: Tulane Begins Tomorrow β Conch Curtis Arrived and Took Charge β Schedule of Games". Galveston Daily News. September 20, 1908.
- ^ "Ex-Wolverine Dies". The Holland Evening Sentinel. November 10, 1949.
- ^ "Dr. Dunlap Chosen: Allegheny College Trustees Elect Physical Director". The Gazette Times. August 22, 1912.
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- ^ The Rainbow of the Delta Tau Delta, Volume 29. Delta Tau Delta fraternity. 1905. p. 68.
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- ^ Willard, Julius (1940). History of Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science. pp. 503β04. Archived from the original on July 20, 2014.
- ^ Charles Baird (October 11, 1908). "Ann Arbor Giants Ready for the Football Season". Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette.
- ^ ""Hub" Huebel Was An Escanaba Visitor". Escanaba Daily Press. August 16, 1913.
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- ^ Brandstatter 2005, p. 170
- ^ "'George Lawton Will Coach the 1913 U. of D. Football Eleven: Former U. of M. Fullback and Punter to Take Charge of the Destinies of Local University Team--Good Material at Hand". Detroit Free Press. August 29, 1913. Archived from the original on February 2, 2017. Retrieved July 6, 2017.
- ^ "George Little, Michigan Grid Mentor, Is Named Athletic Director By Wisconsin: Takes Place Left Vacant by Tom Jones". The Detroit Free Press. January 22, 1925. p. 18 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Joe Maddock Chosen Coach By Oregon U". Oakland Tribune. February 8, 1924.
- ^ "MAGOFFLIN TO COACH THE FLICKERTAILS". La Crosse Tribune. July 23, 1908.
- ^ "Maulbetsch Makes Big Hit". Maurice Times. Iowa. September 1917.
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- ^ "From Tingley to Ann Arbor to Nashville: Coach Dan McGugin's Friendship with Fielding Yost". November 24, 2010.
- ^ Willard, Julius (1940). History of Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science. pp. 504β505. Archived from the original on July 20, 2014.
- ^ Welsch, Jeff (January 2003). Tales from Oregon State Sports. Sports Publishing. pp. 16β20. ISBN 978-1-58261-706-0. Retrieved January 9, 2008.
- ^ "Bennie Oosterbaan: Member Biography". National Football Foundation's College Football Hall of Fame.
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- ^ "2010 NCAA Division I Football Records: Coaching Records" (PDF). NCAA. p. 2. Retrieved November 11, 2010.
Bibliographyβ»
- Behee, John Richard (1971). Fielding Yost's Legacy.
- Brandstatter, Jim (2005). Tales From Michigan Stadium. Vol. 2. Sports Publishing LLC. ISBN 9781582618883.
- Chengelis, Angelique (2012). 100 Things Michigan Fans Should Know and Do Before They Die. Triumph Books. ISBN 9781623680701 – via Google Books.
- Falls, Joe (1996). A Legacy of Champions: The Story of the Men Who Built University of Michigan Football. CTC Productions & Sports. ISBN 9780965467100.
- Gruver, Edward (2002). Nitschke. Lanham:Taylor Trade Publishing. ISBN 1-58979-127-4.
- Kryk, John (2015), Stagg vs. Yost: The Birth of Cutthroat Football. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-1442248267
- Onofrio, Jan (1999). West Virginia Biographical Dictionary. Somerset Publishers, Inc.
- Pope, Edwin (1955). Football's Greatest Coaches. Retrieved March 8, 2015 – via archive.org.
- Wheeler, Robert W. (2012). Jim Thorpe: World's Greatest Athlete. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 9780806187327 – via Google Books.
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