John William Hobbs "Doc" Pollard (February 22, 1872 – May 2, 1957) was an American football player and coach of football, basketball, and baseball. He served as the head football coach at Lehigh University in 1901, at the University of Rochester from 1902 to 1905, at the University of Alabama from 1906 to 1909, and at Washington and Lee University from 1910 to 1911, compiling a career college football record of 47–36–7 . Pollard also coached baseball at Alabama from 1907–1910 and at Washington and Lee, tallying a career college baseball mark of 86–31–1.
Early life and education
Pollard was born on February 22, 1872 in Brentwood, New Hampshire. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1895 and earned an MD from the University of Vermont in 1901.[1]
Coaching career
Lehigh
Pollard was the ninth head football coach for at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and he held that position for the 1901 season. His coaching record at Lehigh was 1 wins, 11 losses, and 0 ties. This ranks him 29th at Lehigh in terms of total wins and 29th at Lehigh in terms of winning percentage.[2]
Alabama
Pollard was named the head football coach at the University of Alabama where he stayed from 1906 until the end of the 1909 season. He found more success at Alabama, where his teams accumulated a record of 21 wins, 4 losses, and 5 ties.
His success at Alabama was not without failures. The first season Pollard coached the Crimson Tide, they achieved a record of 5 wins and 1 loss. However, that one loss was a 78–0 thrashing by Vanderbilt in Nashville, Tennessee.[3] 1907, Pollard's second season at Alabama, was similar. The team produced a record of 5 wins, 1 loss, and 2 ties. However, the one loss was a 54–4 pounding by Sewanee.[4] By 1909, his team produced more consistent results. No team scored on the Crimson Tide until the last two games, and their only loss came in the last game of the season by a score of 12–6 against LSU at home.[5]
Washington and Lee
Pollard coached at Washington and Lee University in 1911, finishing with a record of 4–2–2.[6]
Head coaching record
Football
References
External links
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- J. W. H. Pollard (1901–1912)
- Tom Keady (1912–1913)
- S. E. Muthart (1913–1915)
- Harry Haring (1915–1916)
- Roy Geary (1916–1919)
- J. Murphy (1919–1921)
- Ray Fisher (1921–1922)
- James A. Baldwin (1922–1925)
- Charles Lingle (1925–1926)
- Roy Geary (1926–1932)
- Fay Bartlett (1932–1934)
- Glen Harmeson (1934–1937)
- Paul Calvert (1937–1941)
- Marty Westerman (1941–1942)
- James Gordon (1942–1943)
- Leo Prendergast (1943–1946)
- Dan Yarbro (1946–1950)
- Tony Packer (1950–1966)
- Pete Carril (1966–1967)
- Roy Heckman (1967–1972)
- Tom Pugliese (1972–1975)
- Brian Hill (1975–1983)
- Tom Schneider (1983–1985)
- Fran McCaffery (1985–1988)
- Dave Duke (1988–1996)
- Sal Mentesana (1996–2002)
- Billy Taylor (2002–2007)
- Brett Reed (2007– )
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Pound sign (#) denotes interim athletic director.
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Pound sign (#) denotes interim coach.
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Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coaches.
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- C. L. Krebs (1906–1909)
- F. J. Pratt (1909–1910)
- J. W. H. Pollard (1910–1913)
- W. C. Raftery (1913–1923)
- K. E. Hines (1923–1924)
- Eddie Cameron (1924–1925)
- Richard Smith (1925–1930)
- Ray Ellerman (1930–1932)
- Harry Young (1932–1939)
- Cookie Cunningham (1939–1942)
- George Proctor (1942–1943)
- No team (1943–1945)
- Harry Young (1945–1946)
- Carl Wise (1946–1948)
- Bob Spessard (1948–1949)
- Conn Davis (1949–1950)
- Scott Hamilton (1950–1952)
- William McCann (1952–1957)
- Weenie Miller (1957–1958)
- Robert McHenry (1958–1964)
- Verne Canfield (1964–1995)
- Kevin Moore (1995–1999)
- Jeff Lafave (1999–2003)
- Adam Hutchinson (2003– )
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