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Clark Shaughnessy

 
Wikipedia: Clark Shaughnessy
Clark D. Shaughnessy

Title Head coach
College Chicago, Hawaii, Maryland, Pittsburgh, Stanford, Tulane
Sport Football
Born 6 March 1892
Place of birth St. Cloud, Minnesota
Died 15 May 1970
Place of death Santa Monica, California
Career highlights
Overall 113-98-12 (college)
14-7-3 (NFL)
Coaching stats
College Football DataWarehouse
Playing career
1911–1913 Minnesota
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1915-1926
1927–1932
1933-1939
1940-1941
1942
1943-1945
1946
1948-1949
1965
Tulane
Loyola (New Orleans)
Chicago
Stanford
Maryland
Pittsburgh
Maryland
Los Angeles Rams (NFL)
Hawaii
College Football Hall of Fame, 1968 (Bio)

Clark Daniel Shaughnessy (March 6, 1892 – May 15, 1970) was an American football coach. He was born in St. Cloud, Minnesota, the second son of Edward and Lucy Shaughnessy.

After playing as a fullback at the University of Minnesota, Shaughnessy coached at Tulane University and Loyola of the South between 1915 and 1932. From 1933 to 1939 Shaughnessy coached at the University of Chicago. While there, he developed a friendship with Chicago Bears owner and coach George Halas, helping him to implement Shaughnessy's version of the T-formation offense.

The T-formation was decades old, but Shaughnessy adapted it to make the quarterback the focus of the offense. This helped to make the passing game a more important part of play, and his success spawned imitators. Within a few years, most other teams had abandoned the single wing offense for the T-formation. Shaughnessy's innovations revolutionized the game of football at both the professional and collegiate level. The two coaches scouted, recruited and signed Columbia University quarterback Sid Luckman to execute the complex offense. During Luckman's first years with the Bears, Shaughnessy was a constant source of encouragement. Playing Shaughnessy's offense, the Bears became a powerhouse, winning four NFL Championships between 1940 and 1946.

After the University of Chicago dropped its football program, Shaughnessy coached Stanford University for two seasons, winning the Rose Bowl in 1941. Jim Johnson's book The Wow Boys covers in detail the 1940 season in which he first implemented a revolutionary new version of the T formation at Stanford. While coaching at Stanford he helped Frankie Albert, a left-handed scrambler who struggled in the single-wing formation the previous season, thrive in the new offense. Albert was named an All-American in 1941 and 1942, then had a long career with the 49ers after World War II. Although Albert was born in Chicago, he was a prep star at Glendale High School in Southern California.

He also had stints as head coach at the University of Maryland and another at the University of Pittsburgh. He was hired to install the T offense for Sammy Baugh and the Washington Redskins from 1944 to 1945.

In 1948, he surprised many observers by leaving the college ranks to coach the Los Angeles Rams. Shaughnessy posted a 6-5-1 record in his first season, with Bob Waterfield as his quarterback. During the 1949 season, Shaughnessy innovated again, making Elroy "Crazy Legs" Hirsch into a permanent flanker, leaving only two backs in the backfield. This was the first "Pro Set" offense used consistently. With Waterfield and rookie Norm Van Brocklin at QB, the Rams posted a 8-2-2 record and won their division. Tom Fears set a new NFL record for receptions in a season with 77. Despite this success, the 1949 Rams lost to the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFL Championship game during a rainstorm. Shaughnessy was fired at the end of the season because of friction with owner Dan Reeves. The Shaughnessy offense, led by Waterfield and Van Brocklin, featuring Fears and Hirsch, but coached by Joe Stydahar, won the Western Conference in 1950 and 1951 and the NFL title in 1951, shattering NFL offensive records along the way.

Shaughnessy rejoined Halas in Chicago in 1951, serving for 11 years as a technical adviser and vice president of the Bears. While there, he developed revolutionary defensive strategies, using shifts, stunts, and a variety of alignments to create an attacking defense.

Shaughnessy returned to coaching for one season, serving as head coach at the University of Hawaii in 1965. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1968.

After his retirement, Shaughnessy lived in Santa Monica, California. He died there after a brief illness at the age of 78.

Head Coaching Record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl Coaches# AP°
Tulane (Independent) (1915–1926)
1915 Tulane 4–4
1916 Tulane 4–3–1
1917 Tulane 5–3
1918 Tulane 4–1–1
1919 Tulane 6–2–1
1920 Tulane 6–2–1
1922 Tulane 4–4
1923 Tulane 6–3–1
1924 Tulane 8–1
1925 Tulane 9–0–1
1926 Tulane 3–5–1
Tulane: 59–28–7
Chicago (Big Ten Conference) (1933–1939)
1933 Chicago 3–3–2
1934 Chicago 4–4
1935 Chicago 4–4
1936 Chicago 2–5–1
1937 Chicago 1–6
1938 Chicago 1–6–1
1939 Chicago 2–6
Chicago: 17–34–4
Stanford (Pacific Coast Conference) (1940–1941)
1940 Stanford 10–0 7–0 1st W Rose 2
1941 Stanford 6–3 4–3 4th
Stanford: 16–3–0
Maryland (Southern Conference) (1942, 1946)
1942 Maryland 7–2
1946 Maryland 3–6
Maryland: 10–8–0
Pittsburgh (Independent) (1943–1945)
1943 Pittsburgh 3–5
1944 Pittsburgh 4–5
1945 Pittsburgh 3–7
Pittsburgh: 10–17–0
Hawaii (Independent) (1965)
1965 Hawaii 1–8–1
Hawaii: 1–8–1
Total: 113–98–12
      National Championship         Conference Title         Conference Division Title
Indicates BCS bowl game. #Rankings from final Coaches Poll.
Preceded by
Jack Faber
University of Maryland Head Football Coach
1942
Succeeded by
Clarence Spears
Preceded by
Bear Bryant
University of Maryland Head Football Coach
1946
Succeeded by
Jim Tatum
Preceded by
Jim Asato
University of Hawaii Head Football Coaches
1965
Succeeded by
Phil Sarboe

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