Word: hales
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Dupee '01, f.b. 21 5.10 158 A. L. Ferguson '02, r.e. 21 6.00 164 W. M. Fincke '01 S, q.b. 22 5.10 1/2 151 W. M. Gile '01 L S, l.g. 21 6.01 1/2 184 C. Gould '02, l.e. 19 5.09 165 P. T. W. Hale 1 G, f.b. 22 6.00 188 C. J. Hamlin '03, l.t. 19 6.00 192 H. C. Holt '03, c. 19 6.00 195 J. Hyde '02 I S, f.b. 26 6.00 170 P. H. Kunzig '01 L S, l.t. 20 6.02 185 C. G. Miller '01 S, r.h. 21 5.10 172 H. P. Olcott...
...promising. Still all the candidates have proved to be hard workers and the men have shown unusual aptitude in mastering the fine points of the game. The abundance of excellent material for tackle positions and the comparative weakness of the back field suggested the experiment of trying Hale at full-back. This was done early in the season and has proved entirely successful. The development of the line has been steady and consistent, but the back field has been uncertain, and at times slow. The inability to develop reliable halfbacks has made necessary the practice of having line men carry...
...beginning of the season it was planned to develop heavy men in the back field as well as in the line, and Sharpe, Cook and Hale, all big enough for guards, were put in the back positions. The difficulty with this plan became evident in the Dartmouth game, when for the first time Yale lined up against a fast aggressive team. The backs were found to be too slow. From that time every effort has been devoted to making the team quicker. In the Indian game lighter backs were tried, and the good work of Fincke and Dupee made...
...Harvard Religious Union. After Commencement--What next? Dr. Edward Everett Hale. Brooks House...
...field goal after Princeton, having got the ball on Wear's fumble, was unable to go through the line. All of Yale's scores except the first were made by steady rushing and line-smashing tactics, and just as was expected, the Princeton line could not hold it own. Hale and Bloomer were Yale's best gainers, both getting their distance on nearly every rush. The Princeton backs, especially Reiter, played well, but their interference was repeatedly broken up by the Yale forwards before it reached the line. Yale's condition was far superior to that of Princeton, and none...