• The 1927 Coe Crimson football team represented Coe College as a member of the Midwest Conference (MWC) during the 1927 college football season. Led by...
    6 KB (320 words) - 02:19, 11 July 2024
  • The Coe Kohawks football team represents Coe College in college football at the NCAA Division III level. The Kohawks are members of the American Rivers...
    35 KB (679 words) - 00:53, 12 October 2024
  • 1922 Coe Crimson football team represented Coe College as a member of the newly-formed Midwest Conference (MWC) during the 1922 college football season...
    12 KB (760 words) - 16:16, 20 July 2024
  • teams), finished in a tie for sixth place in the MWC, and were outscored by a total of 95 to 45. The 1946 Coe Kohawks football team represented Coe College...
    36 KB (2,230 words) - 03:04, 28 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Harvard–Yale football rivalry
    Harvard–Yale football rivalry is renewed annually with The Game, an American college football match between the Harvard Crimson football team of Harvard...
    150 KB (13,680 words) - 20:16, 11 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for List of 100-point games in college football
    In college football, games in which 100 points are scored by a single team are rare, especially since 1940. In the post-World War II era, it is considered...
    141 KB (6,365 words) - 02:13, 15 September 2024
  • Moray Eby (category Coe Kohawks football coaches)
    an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Coe College from 1914 to 1942. Eby played college football at the University...
    12 KB (161 words) - 00:24, 17 July 2024
  • Chowan Hawks, reverted from "Braves" in 2006 Coe Kohawks, adopted in 1922; previously known as the "Crimson" and the "Warriors" Colgate Raiders, changed...
    76 KB (7,946 words) - 22:57, 23 September 2024
  • played gives the final rating, "ILLINOIS BEST FOOTBALL TEAM OF YEAR," The Syracuse Herald, Dec. 4, 1927, p23 "Notre Dame's Easy Win Over S.C. Gives Irish...
    24 KB (1,866 words) - 18:47, 12 March 2024
  • Hawaii; member of the executive council of the Republic of Hawaii Curtis Coe Bean (1846) – delegate from the Territory of Arizona to the U.S. House of...
    134 KB (12,583 words) - 03:04, 14 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for 1924 college football season
    The 1924 college football season was the year of the Four Horsemen as the Notre Dame team, coached by Knute Rockne, won all of its games, including the...
    23 KB (1,547 words) - 13:16, 30 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for 1922 college football season
    1922 college football season had a number of unbeaten and untied teams, and no clear-cut champion, with the Official NCAA Division I Football Records Book...
    31 KB (2,236 words) - 23:24, 1 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for 1906 college football season
    college football season was the first in which the forward pass was permitted. Although there was no clear cut national championship, there were two teams that...
    27 KB (3,343 words) - 00:54, 2 October 2024
  • Waseda University (category American football in Japan)
    research standard in Japan in terms of research fundings per researchers in COE Program, and it is one of only two private universities within the top 15...
    54 KB (5,652 words) - 02:55, 22 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Cornell University
    I-A Football National Champions". NCAA. 2006. Archived from the original on 26 August 2006. Retrieved 5 September 2006. "Cornell out to snap Crimson's Ivy...
    194 KB (17,044 words) - 18:52, 15 October 2024
  • 2007. WSU's athletic teams are called the Cougars and the school colors are crimson and gray. Six men's and nine women's varsity teams compete in NCAA Division...
    123 KB (12,491 words) - 14:17, 13 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Robert
    Robert (redirect from Robert (footballer))
    Robert Edward Chambliss (1904–1985), white supremacist terrorist Robert Glen Coe (1956–2000), American murderer Robert Wayne Danielson (1946–1995), American...
    93 KB (11,007 words) - 06:39, 21 October 2024
  • (1895), national championship-winning football coach and two-time All-American at Harvard: 112  C. Douglas Dillon (1927), United States Secretary of the Treasury;...
    68 KB (5,706 words) - 21:05, 18 October 2024
  • return to Pasadena to face Stanford's PCC champion team. United Press called the 1927 Rose Bowl "the football championship of America", and the game was considered...
    28 KB (2,289 words) - 07:24, 17 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for List of people from Texas
    1989), offensive tackle for Carolina Panthers Emory Bellard (1927–2011), college football coach Martellus Bennett (born 1987), tight end for New England...
    362 KB (41,673 words) - 23:10, 19 October 2024
  • Tottenham Hotspur and England Malcolm Allison (1927–2010) – footballer for West Ham United and football manager Colin Cowdrey (1932-2000) – cricketer for...
    45 KB (5,542 words) - 15:46, 13 October 2024
  • documentary, Roses of Crimson, and hailed as "the football game that changed the South". Alabama was the first Southern football team to be invited to play...
    25 KB (1,964 words) - 07:24, 17 August 2024
  • amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Howard Carson, 63, American football player (Los Angeles Rams). Hank Coe, 74, American politician, member of the Wyoming Senate...
    337 KB (24,570 words) - 15:13, 22 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for 1933 college football season
    Although future President Richard M. Nixon had been on the freshman football team at Whittier, he was not part of the varsity squad that played against...
    27 KB (1,593 words) - 06:29, 27 September 2024
  • The 1957 college football season was the 89th season of intercollegiate football in the United States. It concluded with two teams having claim to the...
    53 KB (2,703 words) - 02:48, 8 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for 1961 college football season
    The 1961 college football season was the 93rd season of intercollegiate football in the United States. Two teams have a claim to the 1961 major college...
    54 KB (2,449 words) - 22:04, 15 October 2024
  • Wesleyan's teams were referred to as "The Red and Black" and "The Methodists". Many schools, including several other Methodist ones, also claimed crimson and...
    107 KB (9,733 words) - 00:27, 21 October 2024
  • Falmouth Commodores (category Cape Cod Baseball League teams)
    Falmouth from 1925 to 1927, was team MVP in 1925, and finished the 1927 season playing for the Detroit Tigers. National Football League running back Curly...
    176 KB (11,454 words) - 11:03, 9 October 2024
  • the bowl games. The undefeated and eventual Rose Bowl champion Alabama Crimson Tide was selected as national champion by the other contemporary math system...
    26 KB (1,493 words) - 07:24, 17 August 2024
  • Bowls, falling to Columbia in the 1934 Rose Bowl and 1934 Alabama Crimson Tide football team the 1935 game. Determined not three-peat, the Stanford scored...
    28 KB (2,143 words) - 08:21, 22 September 2024