Dutch Clark
|
No. 7 |
---|
Position: |
Quarterback |
---|
Personal information |
---|
Date of birth: |
(1906-10-11)October 11, 1906 |
---|
Place of birth: |
Fowler, Colorado |
---|
Date of death: |
August 5, 1978(1978-08-05) (aged 71) |
---|
Place of death: |
Cañon City, Colorado |
---|
Career information |
---|
College: |
Colorado College |
---|
Career history
|
---|
As player: |
---|
|
As coach: |
---|
|
Career highlights and awards
|
---|
|
Career NFL statistics |
---|
TD–INT: |
11–26 |
---|
Passing yards: |
1,507 |
---|
Rushing yards: |
2,772 |
---|
Rushing TDs: |
36 |
---|
Player stats at NFL.com |
|
|
|
|
Earl Harry "Dutch" Clark (October 11, 1906 – August 5, 1978) was an American football player and coach. He played college football at Colorado College and then in the National Football League with the Portsmouth Spartans (1931–1932) and Detroit Lions (1934–1938). In his final two seasons with the Lions, he also served as the team's head coach. Clark was also the head coach of the NFL's Cleveland Rams from 1939 to 1942 and of the American Football League's Seattle Bombers in 1944. He also coached as the college level, serving at head football coach at the Colorado School of Mines in 1933 and at the University of Detroit from 1951 to 1953. In addition, he was the head basketball coach at Colorado College from 1930 to 1933 and at the University of Colorado at Boulder for one season in 1934–35. Clark was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1951 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963, honored by both as a player.
Early life
Clark began his football career at center as a freshman at Central High School in Pueblo, Colorado, circa 1922. Coach Oscar “Ollie” Herigstad reassigned young Clark to fullback, where he earned All-State honors for the Wildcats. At Central, he was also an All-State basketball center, and set South-Central League track & field records in the discus and high hurdles. Baseball was his “weak” sport, on account of impaired vision in his left eye. He earned 16 letters, and graduated in 1926.[1]
College playing career
Clark was headed for the University of Michigan and had a stopover at Northwestern University, but ended up at the Colorado College in Colorado Springs. At CC, Clark earned 12 letters and was All-Conference in football, basketball, baseball and track for the Tigers. Coach William T. "Bully" Van DeGraaff used Clark as a rusher, quarterback, drop-kicker, punter, linebacker, safety and punt returner. He rushed for 1349 yards on 135 carries in 1928, his junior year, and scored 103 of CC’s 203 points. In 1928, he became the first All-American football player from any of Colorado’s colleges and universities.[1] He graduated from CC in 1930 with a B.A. in Biology. At Colorado College, he was a member of Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity.
Professional football career
Clark was 6.0 ft (1.83 m) tall and weighed 175–185 lb (79–84 kg) when he began his professional football career as a quarterback, kicker and punter with the short-lived Portsmouth Spartans in Ohio in 1931. The Spartans had only sixteen players on their roster, not unusual at the time. In 1932, Clark led the National Football League in scoring with 55 points.[2] He left pro football after two seasons to coach the Colorado School of Mines Orediggers in 1933, a long-time rival of his alma mater. The Spartans moved to Detroit as a result of the Great Depression, and became the Lions. Clark returned to the Lions in 1934, where he was a triple-option threat on offense through the 1938 season. He was a six-time All-Pro and three-time league scoring leader, and led the Lions to a 26–7 victory over the New York Giants in the 1935 NFL Championship Game. A popular photograph of Clark from the Detroit News was published in Life magazine.[3] Clark was a player-coach in 1937 and 1938, giving him a career-high and league-high salary of $7200. He retired as a player and became the head coach of the Cleveland Rams from 1939 through 1942. Clark served in the US Army during World War II, and as Athletic Director at the University of Detroit after the war.[1]
In 1944, he coached the Seattle Bombers in the short-lived American Football League of the Pacific Coast during its only season.[4][5]
Honors
Entrance to Dutch Clark Stadium in Pueblo, Colorado, with
Pikes Peak in the distant background.
Clark was inducted as a charter member of the College Football Hall of Fame in 1951. The Pro Football Hall of Fame inducted him as a charter member in 1963, along with 16 others including Jim Thorpe, Red Grange and Curly Lambeau. He was a charter member of the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame in 1965, along with footballer-jurist Byron "Whizzer" White and boxer Jack Dempsey. In 1973, Clark became a charter member of the Greater Pueblo Sports Association Hall of Fame. The Colorado College Athletic Hall of Fame inducted him posthumously as a charter member in 1995. The Pueblo Public School Stadium was renamed Earl "Dutch" Clark Stadium in September 1980. A statue of Clark by the Latka Studios was added in 1985.
Head coaching record
College football
References
- 1 2 3 Jack Hildner, “Dutch Clark Was the Greatest of Them All,” Dedication Program for the Centennial vs. Central High School football game, 25 September 1980.
- ↑ Mayer, Larry (March 1, 2014). "Bears played NFL's first indoor game". Chicago Bears. Retrieved March 1, 2014.
- ↑ William Kuenzel, “The Perfect Football Face,” Life, 28 December 1936, p ?
- ↑ Coast Pro League Tilts Lid Sunday, The Milwaukee Journal, August 31, 1944.
- ↑ PCPFL: 1940-45 By Bob Gill, The Coffin Corner, Vol. 4, No. 7, 1982.
External links
|
---|
|
- Unknown (1888–1897)
- Beadle (1898–1903)
- Shorty Ellsworth (1904–1907)
- W. C. Russell (1908)
- Joe Curtis (1909)
- Theodore M. Stuart (1910–1911)
- William E. Johnston & Erle Kristler (1912)
- Erle Kristler & Harry G. Buckingham (1913)
- William J. Hanley (1914–1915)
- F. G. Carter (1916)
- Poss Parsons (1917)
- Irving J. Barron (1918)
- Ralph Glaze (1919–1920)
- Elmer Capshaw (1921)
- Elmer Capshaw & Tim Callahan (1922)
- Tim Callahan (1923)
- Ray Courtright (1924–1926)
- George H. Allen (1927–1930)
- George H. Allen & Elmer Wynne (1931–1932)
- Dutch Clark (1933)
- George W. Scott (1934–1935)
- A. F. White (1936)
- John H. Mason (1937–1943)
- No team (1944–1945)
- John H. Mason (1946)
- Fritz S. Brennecke (1947–1968)
- Marvin L. Kay (1969–1994)
- Versie Wallace (1995–1999)
- Bob Stitt (2000–2014)
- Gregg Brandon (2015– )
|
|
|
---|
|
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.
|
|
|
---|
|
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.
|
|
Dutch Clark—championships, honors, and awards |
---|
|
|
---|
| Players | |
---|
| Coaches | |
---|
| Contributors | |
---|
|
|
|