Puny Wilson
T. F. "Puny" Wilson was a well-known American football player and coach. He was an All American running back at Texas A&M University in the early 1920s under coach Dana X. Bible. Wilson graduated from Texas A&M in 1924 and was later inducted into school's hall of fame.[1]
In 1938, Wilson became head football coach at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas. He compiled a 50–49–6 overall record in 11 seasons. He also briefly coached later news anchor Dan Rather.[2]
References
Further reading
- Carter, Bo; McKenzie, Mike (2002). Tales from Aggieland: Home of the Twelfth Man. Sports Publishing. ISBN 1582613311.
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- S. R. Warner (1912–1913)
- Gene Barry (1914–1917)
- No team (1918)
- Gene Barry (1919)
- James Gee (1920–1922)
- J. W. Jones (1923–1935)
- Henry O. Crawford (1936–1937)
- Puny Wilson (1938–1942)
- No team (1943–1945)
- Puny Wilson (1946–1951)
- Paul Pierce (1952–1967)
- Tom Page (1968–1971)
- Allen Boren (1972–1973)
- Billy Tidwell (1974–1977)
- Melvin Brown (1978–1981)
- Ron Randleman (1982–2004)
- Todd Whitten (2005–2009)
- Willie Fritz (2010– )
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- E. A. Berry (1917–1919)
- Paul Boynton (1919–1920)
- John Ashcraft (1920–1922)
- J. W. Jones (1922–1936)
- Clyde White (1936–1938)
- Puny Wilson (1938–1942)
- No team (1942–1944)
- Puny Wilson (1944–1945)
- Jack Williams (1945–1956)
- Bruce Craig (1956–1964)
- Archie Porter (1964–1975)
- Dennis Price (1975–1979)
- Bob Derryberry (1979–1981)
- Robert McPherson (1981–1986)
- Steve Tucker (1986–1987)
- Gary Moss (1987–1988)
- Jeff Dittman # (1988–1989)
- Larry Brown (1989–1991)
- Jerry Hopkins (1991–1998)
- Bob Marlin (1998–2010)
- Jason Hooten (2010– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.
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