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American football player, coach, and lawyer (1872?1938)
Philip King
![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/97/Philip_King_FB_coach.jpg/220px-Philip_King_FB_coach.jpg) |
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Born
| (
1872-03-16
)
March 16, 1872
Washington, D.C.
, U.S.
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Died
| January 7, 1938
(1938-01-07)
(aged 65)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
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1890?1893
| Princeton
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Position(s)
| Quarterback
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1896?1902
| Wisconsin
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1903
| Georgetown
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1905
| Wisconsin
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1897
| Wisconsin
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1899
| Georgetown
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1900?1901
| Wisconsin
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Overall
| 73?14?1 (football)
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3
Western
(1896, 1897, 1901)
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3× Consensus
All-American
(
1891
,
1892
,
1893
)
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College Football Hall of Fame
Inducted in 1962 (
profile
)
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Philip King
(March 16, 1872 ? January 7, 1938) was an
American football
player, coach, and lawyer. He played
quarterback
for the
Princeton Tigers football
team of
Princeton University
from 1890 to 1893, and was selected to the
College Football All-America Team
in 1891, 1892, and 1893. After his playing days, he served as the head football coach at the
University of Wisconsin?Madison
from 1896 to 1902 and again in 1905, and at
Georgetown University
in 1903, compiling a career
college football
record of 73?14?1. He was inducted into the
College Football Hall of Fame
as a player in 1962.
Early life
[
edit
]
King, who was Jewish, was born in
Washington, D.C.
[1]
[2]
Coaching career
[
edit
]
At Wisconsin, King compiled a 66?11?1 (.853) record. The
Badgers
had four nine-win seasons during his tenure. King's 1896 and 1897 teams won the first two football championships of the
Big Ten Conference
, then known as the Western Conference. King's 1901 Wisconsin team went 9?0, outscored its opponents 317?5, and tied with
Michigan
for another conference title. His 66 wins was the most of any head coach in program history until
Barry Alvarez
passed him in 1999.
In 1903, King guided the
Georgetown Blue and Gray
to a 7?3 record.
Head coaching record
[
edit
]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
External links
[
edit
]
Links to related articles
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- D. P. Morgan
- P. T. Kimball
- Richard Hodge
- J. Hancock
- Edgar Allan Poe
(1889)
- Philip King
(1891?1893)
- William Ward
(1894)
- Billy Suter
- F. L. Smith (1896)
- John Baird
(1897)
- A. V. Duncan
- Ralph Hutchinson
- A. E. Meier
- C. J. Freeman
- F. G. Pearson
- J. Roy Vetterlein
- Edward Dillon
(1906?1907)
- Frank Bergin
- Ballou (1910)
- Hobey Baker
- Frank Murrey
(1918)
- John Strubing (1919)
- Donold Lourie
(1920?1921)
- John P. Gorman
- Dan Caulkins
- Dutch Hendrian
- David Allerdice (1939?1940)
- Dick Kazmaier
(1951)
- Ron Landeck (1965)
- Scott MacBean (1969)
- Rod Plummer (1970)
- Fred Dalzell (1972)
- Ron Beible (1973?1975)
- Kirby Lockhart (1977)
- Ken Barrett (1978)
- Mark Lockenmeyer (1980)
- Bob Holly
(1981)
- Brent Woods (1982)
- Doug Butler (1983?1985)
- Jason Garrett
(1987?1988)
- Joel Sharp (1989?1990)
- Chad Roghair (1991)
- Joel Foote (1992?1993)
- Brock Harvey (1995)
- Harry Nakielny (1997)
- John Burnham (1998)
- David Splithoff (2000?2002)
- Matt Verbit (2002?2004)
- Jeff Terrell (2005?2006)
- Bill Foran (2007)
- Greg Mroz (2007)
- Brian Anderson (2007?2008)
- Tommy Wornham (2009?2011)
- Andrew Dixon (2010)
- Connor Kelley (2010)
- Quinn Epperly (2011?2014)
- Connor Michelsen (2012?2014)
- Chad Kanoff
(2015?2017)
- John Lovett
(2018)
- Kevin Davidson
(2018?2019)
- Cole Smith (2021)
- Blake Stenstrom (2022)
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# denotes interim head coach
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