sport.wikisort.org - AthleteWilliam Harold Hess (August 18, 1895 – November 9, 1982) was an American college football and basketball coach. He served as the head coach at Loyola Marymount University from 1923 to 1927.
American football and basketball coach
Harold Hess Hess at Penn State in 1921 |
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Born | August 18, 1895[1] Belle Vernon, Pennsylvania |
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Died | November 9, 1982(1982-11-09) (aged 87)[2] Los Angeles, California |
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1916 | Penn State |
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1919–1920 | Penn State |
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Position(s) | Fullback, punter, guard |
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1922 | USC (freshman) |
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1923–1927 | Loyola (CA) |
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1924–1925 | Loyola (CA) |
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Overall | 23–14–4 (football) |
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Early life
A native of Belle Vernon, Pennsylvania near Pittsburgh,[3] Hess attended Belle Vernon High School.[4] Hess went on to college at Pennsylvania State University, where he played on the football team in 1916 and from 1919 to 1920.[5] He played as a fullback and was considered a "star punter" by The Pittsburgh Press.[4][6] In 1919, during preparation for the rivalry game against Pittsburgh, team captain Bob Higgins had noticed that the Panthers tended to rush ten players when the opposing team elected to punt. He devised a trick play using Hess, the team's punter. Early in the game, Penn State lined up to punt, and when Pittsburgh rushed ten men, Hess lobbed a 25-yard pass to Higgins, who was running free, and he took the ball 92 yards for a touchdown. The play shifted momentum decisively in Penn State's favor, and the Nittany Lions went on to win, 20–0.[7]
For his senior campaign during the 1920 season, Hess was moved from fullback to guard,[8] and his teammates elected him as captain.[9] At Penn State, Hess was a member of the Kappa Sigma fraternity and studied agriculture.[3]
Coaching career
In 1922, Hess served as the freshman team coach for USC, whose varsity faced Penn State in that year's Rose Bowl. Because of his knowledge of the opponent, he helped prepare USC for the bowl game, which they won, 14–3.
In 1923, Hess was considered a candidate for the Long Beach State head coaching position.[10] That year, he took over as head coach at Loyola Marymount in Los Angeles, California. There, he introduced the system used at Penn State.[11] In January 1928, he resigned from Loyola,[12] where he compiled a 23–12–4 record.[13]
Head coaching record
Year |
Team |
Overall |
Conference | Standing |
Bowl/playoffs |
Loyola Lions (Independent) (1923–1927) |
1923 |
Loyola |
4–4 | | | |
1924 |
Loyola |
4–3–1 | | | |
1925 |
Loyola |
4–2 | | | |
1926 |
Loyola |
6–0–2 | | | |
1927 |
Loyola |
5–3–1 | | | |
Loyola: |
23–12–4 | |
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Total: | 23–12–4 | |
References
- Draft registration card dated June 1917 for William Harold Hess, born August 18, 1895, agricultural student at Penn State College. Ancestry.com. World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 [database on-line]. Registration Location: Fayette County, Pennsylvania; Roll: 2022797; Draft Board: 3.
- Death record for William Harold Hess, born August 18, 1895, in Pennsylvania, died November 9, 1982, at Los Angeles. Ancestry.com. California Death Index, 1940-1997 [database on-line].
- LaVie 1921, p. 133, Pennsylvania State University, 1921.
- Hess to Lead Penn State, The New York Times, December 13, 1919.
- "Penn State All Time Football Lettermen" (PDF), 2010 Penn State Football Media Guide, p. 194, Pennsylvania State University, 2010.
- State's Outlook Bright, The Pittsburgh Press, November 30, 1919.
- Greatest Moments in Penn State Football History, p. 12, Epic Sports, 1999, ISBN 1-928846-16-5.
- LaVie 1922, p. 379, Pennsylvania State University, 1922.
- Lions Didn't Deserve First Rose Bowl, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 30, 1994.
- Invitations to Compete at Great Penn Relay Sent to American and Foreign Colleges; HOLD CARNIVAL LATE IN APRIL; Oxford, Cambridge Among Invited Guests; Greater Number of Entries Expected This Year; Long List of Events Carded for Big Festival, The Los Angeles Times, January 14, 1923.
- Pecarovich Installs Rockne System at Loyola College; LIONS UNDERGO GRID REVAMPING New Coach Uses Notre Dame Methods on Squad Thirteen Letter Men Back on Pigskin Machinc No Sensational Results Are Expected This Year, The Los Angeles Times, October 1, 1928.
- BILL HESS QUITS POST AT LOYOLA; "Red" Flaherty Mentioned to Succeed Popular Grid Coach Next Season, The Los Angeles Times, January 25, 1928.
- Harold "Bill" Hess Coaching Records By Year Archived October 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, College Football Data Warehouse, retrieved June 6, 2011.
Penn State Nittany Lions starting quarterbacks |
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- Shorty Miller (1910–1913)
- Harold Hess (1919)
- Glenn Killinger (1920–1921)
- Bill Smaltz (1939–1941)
- Elwood Petchel (1946–1948)
- Owen Dougherty (1949)
- Vince O'Bara (1950)
- Bob Szajna (1951)
- Tony Rados (1952–1953)
- Don Bailey (1954)
- Bobby Hoffman (1955)
- Milt Plum (1956)
- Al Jacks (1957)
- Richie Lucas (1958–1959)
- Galen Hall (1960–1961)
- Pete Liske (1962–1963)
- Gary Wydman (1964)
- Jack White (1965)
- Tom Sherman (1966–1967)
- Chuck Burkhart (1968–1969)
- Mike Cooper (1970)
- John Hufnagel (1971–1972)
- Tom Shuman (1973–1974)
- John Andress (1975)
- Chuck Fusina (1976–1978)
- Dayle Tate (1979)
- Todd Blackledge (1980–1982)
- Doug Strang (1983–1984)
- John Shaffer (1985–1986)
- Matt Knizner (1987)
- Tom Bill (1988)
- Tony Sacca (1988–1991)
- John Sacca (1992)
- Kerry Collins (1991–1994)
- Wally Richardson (1995–1996)
- Mike McQueary (1997)
- Kevin Thompson (1998–1999)
- Rashard Casey (2000)
- Matt Seneca (2001)
- Zack Mills (2001–2004)
- Michael Robinson (2005)
- Anthony Morelli (2006–2007)
- Daryll Clark (2008–2009)
- Rob Bolden (2010–2011)
- Matt McGloin (2010–2012)
- Christian Hackenberg (2013–2015)
- Trace McSorley (2016–2018)
- Sean Clifford (2019–present)
- Will Levis (2019–2020)
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- Frank Haggerty (1904–1906)
- Walter Hempel (1907–1908)
- Walter Rheinschild (1909)
- No team (1910–1919)
- Ralph Jesson (1920)
- James Linden (1921)
- Jimmy Smith (1922)
- Harold Hess (1923–1927)
- Mike Pecarovich (1928)
- William L. Driver (1929)
- Tom Lieb (1930–1938)
- Mike Pecarovich (1939)
- Marty Brill (1940–1941)
- Bernie Bradley (1942)
- No team (1943–1945)
- Tony DeLellis (1946)
- Bill Sargent (1947–1948)
- Jordan Olivar (1949–1951)
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Loyola Marymount Lions men's basketball head coaches |
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- No coach (1906–1907)
- No team (1907–1908)
- Unknown (1908–1910)
- No team (1910–1911)
- Unknown (1911–1912)
- No team (1912–1913)
- Unknown (1913–1914)
- No records (1914–1923)
- Thomas Flaherty (1923–1924)
- Harold Hess (1924–1925)
- George Casey (1925–1926)
- John Richlie (1926–1929)
- Joseph Donahue (1929–1931)
- No teams (1931–1934)
- William Sargent (1934–1936)
- Jimmy Needles (1936–1940)
- Bernie Bradley (1940–1942)
- No coach (1942–1943)
- Thomas Korn (1943–1944)
- No team (1944–1946)
- Scotty McDonald (1946–1952)
- Edwin Powell (1952–1953)
- Bill Donovan (1953–1961)
- John Arndt (1961–1968)
- Richard Baker (1968–1973)
- Dave Benaderet (1973–1979)
- Ron Jacobs (1979–1980)
- Ed Goorjian (1980–1985)
- Paul Westhead (1985–1990)
- Jay Hillock (1990–1992)
- John Olive (1992–1997)
- Charles Bradley (1997–2000)
- Steve Aggers (2000–2005)
- Rodney Tention (2005–2008)
- Bill Bayno (2008)
- Max Good (2008–2014)
- Mike Dunlap (2014–2020)
- Stan Johnson (2020– )
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