Oscar Dahlene
Sport(s) | Football |
---|---|
Biographical details | |
Born |
United States | April 24, 1886
Died |
October 22, 1949 63) Tuscaloosa, Alabama | (aged
Playing career | |
1908–1909 | Kansas |
Position(s) | Placekicker |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1910 | Ottawa |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 2–3–1 |
Oscar J. Dahlene was an American college football player and coach. He later became the eighth president of Pritchett College in Glasgow, Missouri, serving from 1917 until 1920.[1][2] He died in 1949 in Alabama.[3]
Playing history
Dahlene joined the football program his junior year at the University of Kansas as a placekicker and fullback[4] under head coach A. R. Kennedy.
As of the completion of the 2007 season, 1908 was the last season that the school would have finished the season undefeated and untied. KU was the undisputed Missouri Valley Conference champions and finished with a record of 9 wins, zero losses, and zero ties.[5] As a kicker, he was the only player to score in the first half of the Nebraska game in 1908, scoring 16 points.[6] Kansas won the game by a score of 20-15,[7] thus making Dahlene's 16 points critical to their undefeated 9-0 season and conference title.
For the 1909 season, KU would end up 8-1[8] and would mark the best start of 8 wins and 0 losses that the school would have until the 2007 season.[9]
Coaching history
After graduation from the University of Kansas, Dahlene would be named the fourth head college football coach for the Ottawa University Braves located in Ottawa, Kansas and he held that position for the 1910 season. His career coaching record at Ottawa was 2 wins, 3 losses, and 1 tie. This ranks him 24th at Ottawa in total wins and 20th at Ottawa in winning percentage (0.333). [10] During his one season as head coach, he was outscored by one point: 29 points to 30.
Dahlene's first game as a head coach was against his former mentor, A. R. Kennedy from the University of Kansas.
Season Results Table[11]
Game # | W/L | Opponent | Score | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | L | Kansas | 0-11 | Opposing coach A. R. Kennedy accumulated more wins than any other coach at KU and is second in winning percentage. Game was played October 10, 1910 in Lawrence, Kansas.[12] |
2 | W | Washburn University | 9-0 | Washburn ended the season 4-4[13] |
3 | T | Baker University | 3-3 | Baker returned to competition this year because the Kansas conference of the Methodist church had banned the game from the Baker campus in 1893[14] |
4 | W | Haskell Indian Nations University | 11-0 | Home game on November 13, 1910[15] This was one of seven losses for Haskell, who completed the season at an uncharacteristic poor record of 2-7[16] |
5 | L | Kansas Normal School | 0-5 | Opposing coach Fred Honhart completed season 5-2.[17] |
6 | L | William Jewell College | 6-11 | William Jewell fielded Charles M. Boyer, future US Army Colonel and member of the Southern Football Officials’ Association[18] |
References
- ↑ Missouri Historical Review, 26:223-235, “Pritchett College,” Smith, T. Berry (1932)
- ↑ Chicago Daily News, 1919 Almanac Archive (large file to load)
- ↑ Lawrence Journal World Monday, October 24, 1949
- ↑ 1909 Kansas Jayhawker Yearbook, page 212
- ↑ University of Kansas 1908 Football Records
- ↑ 1909 Kansas Jayhawker Yearbook, page 216
- ↑ KU Sports Football History, Win/Loss Record 1890 - 1910
- ↑ University of Kansas 1909 football records
- ↑ KU Sports News
- ↑ "2012 Football Media Guide" (PDF). Ottawa Braves. p. 7. Retrieved February 26, 2013.
- ↑ Ottawa University 1910 season results
- ↑ A.R. "Bert" Kennedy's 1910 season at KU
- ↑ Washburn University football guide
- ↑ Kansas Historical Quarterly College Football in Kansas
- ↑ College Football Reference, Ottawa University
- ↑ ShrpSports.com 1910 Haskell Football
- ↑ Emporia State media guide
- ↑ Arlington National Cemetery, Charles M. Boyer
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