Word: coaches
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...despite these things, there are no such enigmas as scouting problems Contests which draw huge crowds come, not every weekend, but at long intervals like festivals and vacations. They are occasions, not common occurances. Paid coaches, likewise, are rather the exception than the rule. Even a paid coach works largely through the team captain. The captain, being an undergraduate and to other things, only a peer of his subordinates on the team is a much less despotic ruler than the average coach. Where coaches are not paid, those of college teams and sometimes those of university teams also they...
...never twice the same--but that the tutorial idea places a restraint upon the conduct of athletics in Oxford and in Cambridge that is wanting in America. Men direct athletics who are concerned about scholarship. They make of athletics a part of education. They are teachers more than coaches. Yet this explanation does not directly point to the solution of American problems. Here too the voluntary coach was the first preceptor in sport. The lure of big profits and large fame--characteristically American lines--proved stronger than ever they could abroad. American problems will be solved rather by a revision...
...minute, soon falling to a 32 beat, which held until the three mile mark was reached. Here the stroke mounted to 35. During the last few-yards the beat was lowered to 29. The men were is good condition to paddle back to the boat-house, but Coach E. J. Brown '96 took no chances with the inclement weather, and sent his charges back in the launch...
...members of the Crimson racquet team were granted positions on a mythical all-Eastern tennis team chosen by Coach Dell of Princeton. J. F. W. Whitbeck '27, leader of this year's court aggregation, and L. H. Gordon '27, number two player on the team, both of whom will go to England this summer with the combined Harvard-Yale tennis team which will meet the Oxford-Cambridge players, are ranked fourth and tenth respectively. Two players from Princeton, Yale, Harvard, Williams, and one from Dartmouth have been named to make up the team...
...elect of the Nassan racquetmen is ranked as the number one man as he has not been defeated in intercollegiate contests this season. Marsh of Williams is number two, while Part-ridge of Dartmouth is in the third position. Following is the ranking of the other men chosen by Coach Dell: Captain Watson of Yale, fifth: Sullivan of Lehigh, sixth: Wolf of Williams, seventh: Appel of Princeton, eight: McGlinn of Yale, ninth: Gordon of Harvard, tenth: Milten of Pennsylvania, eleventh: Rowden of Columbis, thirteenth...