75 years: the publisher looks back.I love magazines. All kinds of magazines. This one especially--for lots of great reasons. I remember discovering Scholastic Coach in the stacks at McKeldin Library at the University of Maryland University of Maryland can refer to:
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] It turned out that Scholastic Coach was the brainchild of a future Hall of Fame football coach. Herb McCracken Herb McCracken (June 20, 1899 – March 11, 1995) was a head football coach at Allegheny College and Lafayette College. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1973. , who had played "Pop Warner Pop Warner refers to
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of to run the magazine. The following summer, it was back to Lafayette. The magazine has only had two editors--the gifted Jack Lippert from 1931-36 and Herman Masin ever since. Right from the start, the nation's leading coaches shared their knowledge with their colleagues in these pages. In the first issue, Andy Kerr This article is about the Scottish politician. For the football and basketball coach, see Andrew Kerr (coach). Andy Kerr (born 17 March 1962, East Kilbride, South Lanarkshire) is a Labour Member of the Scottish Parliament for East Kilbride constituency, a seat of Colgate wrote about the intricacies of his offense, Michigan head coach Harry Kipke covered the Wolverines' punting game, and former national mile champion Ray Conger authored an inspiration piece on cross-country. But even at the start, Coach was the proving ground for unknown writers who'd eventually become legends in their own right. Take the second issue, for example. It included a persuasive story on the need for including dance in the physical education curriculum. The author was a young physical education major at the University of Pittsburgh, Eugene C. Kelly. It turned out that he knew a little something about his subject. It wasn't many years later that he began thrilling movie audiences with his own dancing. Yes, it was that Gene Kelly Noun 1. Gene Kelly - United States dancer who performed in many musical films (1912-1996) Eugene Curran Kelly, Kelly . That was just the start of things. Through the years, Herman was in the business of discovering great young unknown coaches who had something to offer to the profession. A young West Virginia West Virginia, E central state of the United States. It is bordered by Pennsylvania and Maryland (N), Virginia (E and S), and Kentucky and, across the Ohio R., Ohio (W). Facts and Figures Area, 24,181 sq mi (62,629 sq km). Pop. high school football coach named Ben Schwartzwalder Ben Schwartzwalder (June 2, 1909--April 28, 1993) was a Hall of Fame football coach at Syracuse University. He played center at West Virginia, despite weighing only 146 pounds, and was also a member of the school's wrestling team. reported on coaching clinics before becoming a clinic headliner himself at Syracuse. A Syracuse alum named Al Davis For other persons named Al Davis, see Al Davis (disambiguation). Allen "Al" Davis (born July 4, 1929 in Brockton, Massachusetts) is an American football executive, who currently serves as the president and managing general partner of the NFL's Oakland Raiders. was a young coach at Adelphi College in 1951 when Herman began publishing him. A decade later, after stops at The Citadel, Southern Cal, and the San Diego Chargers
abbr. 1. National Basketball Association 2. National Boxing Association NBA (US) n abbr (= National Basketball Association) → Basketball-Dachverband (= when his first words landed in these pages. Bill Walsh, long before he was "The Genius," did the same in the early 1960s. And the list goes on. Throughout the decade of the '70s, Coach was in the clinic business, starting with basketball. John Wooden had already won seven national championships when he arrived in White Plains, NY, for the first one. He was incredible. Everyone wanted a piece of the Wizard of Westwood and the coach held court in the lobby of the Roger Treat Hotel until 4 am, when his last questioner packed it in for the night. And he was ready to go for his first "formal" session at 9! The clinics helped create lifelong relationships with the greats like Grant Teaff and Charlie McClendon, long before they took over the management of our great partners at The American Football Coaches Association The American Football Coaches Association is an association of football coaches on all levels and is responsible for the Coaches Poll that determines the national champion each year. . The immortal Bear Bryant answered questions in a motel in Elmsford, NY, well into the night before an unforgettable clinic appearance. Perhaps the most unforgettable clinic moment came on a Sunday morning in Allentown, PA, in 1977. John Madden, fresh off a Super Bowl XI win with the Raiders, was at the blackboard, the leading coaching aid of its day, lecturing on special teams--a Madden specialty. Seated in the front row was a surprise visitor, Philadelphia Eagles' head coach Dick Vermeil, notebook in hand, making copious notes. At the end of the fabulous three-hour session, Vermeil ver·meil n. 1. Vermilion or a similar bright red color. 2. Gilded silver, bronze, or copper. adj. Bright red in color. walked up to the clinic director and asked if he could talk for a while. Vermeil went on to deliver two unscheduled hours of perhaps the best clinic talk ever. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] At about the same time, we made another discovery. Every coach in America wanted to know more about strength training. That's when we ran into an unknown young coach on Joe Paterno's Penn State staff. Dan Riley called himself "the dumbbell Dumbbell An investment strategy, used mainly for bonds, where holdings are heavily concentrated in both very short and long term maturities. Notes: This is also known as a barbell, charting on a timeline gives the appearance of a barbell or dumbbell. coach," though he was anything but. He began a feature called "The Power Line," which he assembled every month for the next couple of decades. It was a winner--and so was he. By the time he turned the reins over to Michigan State's Ken Mannie, Riley had gone on to the Washington Redskins and, later, the Houston Texans, becoming the role model for many of the nation's great strength coaches. We can't imagine Coach & AD magazine without Power Line. Nor can we foresee the day when Person-to-Person isn't the backbone of the editorial package. It started, innocently enough, in 1981 with Gerry Faust, a high school coach (Cincinnati Moeller) who had been tapped to take over the football program at Notre Dame. The response from readers was so positive that we knew P-to-P had to continue. Getting it done wasn't always easy. A few months later, the legendary Dean Smith of North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. returned a call for an interview. It was 11:30 at night and he called me at home--but that's when he was available. Since then, for 25 years, Person-to-Person has become a virtual who's who of American coaching. You'll find the all-time list elsewhere in this issue. That's the way it has gone for 75 years. Getting to know so many of the men and women who have made coaching the nation's best profession has been a life highlight. Obviously this magazine wouldn't have been around were it not for our great advertisers, so many of whom have been part of the Coach family since its fairly humble beginnings in 1931. Nor would we have survived without our readers who renew their subscriptions at a greater rate than any other magazine at Scholastic, which publishes more than three-dozen of them regularly! This issue is also a loving tribute to Herman L. Masin, whose 70 years of service to coaches and to sports in America has made our every working day a special pleasure. But it's the coaches, the famous and the not-so-famous, who have impacted the lives of tens of millions of young people throughout these last 75 years, who are our heroes. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for all you do. |
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