Harvey Holmes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harvey R. Holmes was an American college football coach at the University of Utah (1900-1903), the University of Southern California (1904-1907), and the Academy of Idaho (now Idaho State University) (1909-1914).
Holmes attended the University of Wisconsin, where he lettered in football in 1897 and 1898. He became coach at the University of Utah in 1900, and led the team to a record of 12-8-1; he was the first Utah coach to compile a winning record. But his most enduring contribution at Utah may have been his composition of the lyrics to the school song "Utah Man." [1]
In 1904 Holmes became the first salaried head coach of the USC football team, and he compiled a 19-5-3 (.759) record over four seasons. USC's teams were called the Methodists before becoming the Trojans in 1912. In 1905, Holmes was the coach of the first USC team to play outside of Southern California. On November 4, playing a game at Stanford University, the Methodists were trampled 16-0 by the traditional West Coast powerhouse; it was also USC's first game ever against major college competition, an experiment which the team would not repeat until 1914. While USC and Stanford would not meet again until 1918 (Stanford dropped football for rugby during those years), this was the beginning of USC's oldest rivalry. But college football was going through a crisis period in which numerous players were dying in games every year, and many schools dropped the sport in favor of rugby for several seasons; the University of California switched from football to rugby from 1906 through 1914, and Stanford dropped football from 1906 through the end of World War I in 1918. Given its schedule featuring small colleges, high schools, and military and club teams, USC in that period had little need for a football coach with Holmes' credentials, and he departed in 1908; the university eventually switched to rugby from 1911 to 1913. Holmes' 1906 and 1907 teams had a combined record of 7-1-2, and outscored their opponents 218-20.
Holmes also coached the USC track team from 1905 to 1908, and was the first formal coach of the baseball team in 1908, posting a record of 17-2. He was succeeded as football coach by USC Law School graduate Bill Traeger.
In 1909 Holmes became football coach at the Academy of Idaho, where his teams had a record of 28-8 over six seasons, including perfect records of 4-0 and 6-0 in his first two years.
[edit] References
- Florence, Mal (1980). The Trojan Heritage: A Pictorial History of USC Football. Virginia Beach, VA: JCP Corp., p. 20. ISBN 0-938694-01-4.
- 2004 USC Trojans Football Media GuidePDF (1.85 MiB)
Preceded by Wilson (1898) |
University of Utah Head Football Coach 1900-1903 |
Succeeded by Joe Maddock |
Preceded by John Walker |
University of Southern California Head Football Coach 1904-1907 |
Succeeded by Bill Traeger |
Preceded by Win Cutter |
University of Southern California Track Coach 1905-1908 |
Succeeded by Dean Cromwell |
Preceded by First coach |
University of Southern California Baseball Coach 1908 |
Succeeded by Curtiss Bernard (1911) |
Preceded by J. S. Morris |
Academy of Idaho Head Football Coach 1909-1914 |
Succeeded by Reuben Bronson |