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词条 Percy Haughton
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Head coaching record

     Football 

  3. Notes

  4. References

  5. External links

{{Infobox college coach
| name = Percy Haughton
| image = Percy Duncan Haughton in 1916.jpg
| alt =
| caption =
| sport = Football, baseball
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1876|7|11}}
| birth_place = Staten Island, New York
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1924|10|27|1876|7|11}}
| death_place = New York City
| alma_mater =
| player_sport1 = Football
| player_years2 = 1898
| player_team2 = Harvard
| player_sport3 = Baseball
| player_years4 = 1899
| player_team4 = Harvard
| player_positions = Tackle (football)
| coach_sport1 = Football
| coach_years2 = 1899–1900
| coach_team2 = Cornell
| coach_years3 = 1908–1916
| coach_team3 = Harvard
| coach_years4 = 1923–1924
| coach_team4 = Columbia
| coach_sport5 = Baseball
| coach_years6 = 1915
| coach_team6 = Harvard
| overall_record = 97–17–6 (football)
23–7 (baseball)
| bowl_record =
| tournament_record =
| championships = Football
4 National (1908, 1910, 1912–1913)
| awards = Football
All-American, 1898
| coaching_records =
| CFBHOF_year = 1951
| CFBHOF_id = 1276
}}

Percy Duncan Haughton (July 11, 1876 – October 27, 1924) was an American football and baseball player and coach. He served as head football coach at Cornell University from 1899 to 1900, at Harvard University from 1908 to 1916, and at Columbia University from 1923 to 1924, compiling a career college football record of 97–17–6. The Harvard Crimson claimed national champions for three of the seasons that Haughton coached: 1910, 1912, and 1913. Haughton was also Harvard's head baseball coach in 1915[1] and part owner of the Boston Braves from 1916 to 1918.[2] He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1951.

Biography

He was born on July 11, 1876. Haughton attended Groton School, graduating in 1895, and then went on to Harvard College, graduating in 1899.

Haughton and his wife owned Gould Island in Rhode Island where Haughton trained the Harvard football team.[2] Apocryphal tales[3] assert that before the 1908 Harvard-Yale Game, Haughton strangled a bulldog in the locker room to motivate his players.

He bought the Boston Braves with Arthur Chamberlin Wise in 1916.[4]

Haughton became Columbia's football coach in spring 1923 as the school re-established a team that had been dissolved in 1905 following allegations that football had become too violent. To alleviate concerns that the game was still too violent, Haughton promised to instil discipline in his players, saying: "It will be my purpose to teach the men what they should learn in order to better prepare for life after the university. If I can do that, if I can contribute toward qualifying them for the finest type of citizenship, I will be satisfied."[5]

Haughton died at age 48 on October 27, 1924, after becoming ill on the Columbia football field. The cause of death was classified as acute indigestion.[6][7]

Head coaching record

Football

{{CFB Yearly Record Start | type = coach | team = | conf = | bowl = | poll = no }}{{CFB Yearly Record Subhead
| name = Cornell Big Red
| conf = Independent
| startyear = 1899
| endyear = 1900
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1899
| name = Cornell
| overall = 7–3
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1900
| name = Cornell
| overall = 10–2
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
| name = Cornell
| overall = 17–5
| confrecord =
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Subhead
| name = Harvard Crimson
| conf = Independent
| startyear = 1908
| endyear = 1916
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = national
| year = 1908
| name = Harvard
| overall = 9–0–1
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1909
| name = Harvard
| overall = 8–1
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = national
| year = 1910
| name = Harvard
| overall = 9–0–1
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1911
| name = Harvard
| overall = 6–2–1
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = national
| year = 1912
| name = Harvard
| overall = 9–0
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship = national
| year = 1913
| name = Harvard
| overall = 9–0
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1914
| name = Harvard
| overall = 7–0–2
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1915
| name = Harvard
| overall = 8–1
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1916
| name = Harvard
| overall = 7–3
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
| name = Harvard
| overall = 72–7–5
| confrecord =
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Subhead
| name = Columbia Lions
| conf = Independent
| startyear = 1923
| endyear = 1924
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1923
| name = Columbia
| overall = 4–4–1
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Entry
| championship =
| year = 1924
| name = Columbia
| overall = 4–1{{#tag:ref|Paul Withington coached the last four games of the season after Haughton's death on October 27, 1924.|group="n"|name=1924season}}
| conference =
| confstanding =
| bowlname =
| bowloutcome =
| bcsbowl =
| ranking = no
| ranking2 = no
}}{{CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
| name = Columbia
| overall = 8–5–1
| confrecord =
}}{{CFB Yearly Record End
| overall = 97–17–6
| bowls = no
| poll = no
| polltype =
}}

Notes

1. ^Harvard University Base Ball Club. Records of Organized Baseball at Harvard : an inventory
2. ^"A GOULD ISLAND CHRONOLOGY And Some Associated Historical Notes" By Captain Frank Snyder (USN Ret Naval War College Professor) Jamestown Historical Society {{cite web |url=http://jamestownhistoricalsociety.org/media/Occasional%20Paper%203%20-%20Gould%20Island.pdf |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2009-01-04 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060429003539/http://jamestownhistoricalsociety.org/media/Occasional%20Paper%203%20-%20Gould%20Island.pdf |archivedate=2006-04-29 |df= }} (PDF)(Accessed January 4, 2009)
3. ^Thecrimson.harvard.edu{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
4. ^{{cite news|author=|title=P. D. Haughton Buys Boston Nationals. Harvard Football Coach Heads Syndicate of Baseball Club Owners. Stallings As Manager. James E. Gaffney Surprises Sporting Circles by Disposing of Braves. Price Said to be $500,000 |date=January 9, 1916|quote=Associated with him as head of a syndicate of Boston men is Arthur C. Wise, member of a local banking firm. |work=The New York Times|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9E00E3D61739E233A2575AC0A9679C946796D6CF|accessdate=2008-08-08}}
5. ^[https://www.nytimes.com/1923/04/06/archives/butler-attends-haughton-dinner-columbia-president-optimistic-in.html "Butler Attends Haughton Dinner: Columbia President Optimistic in Talk Before Enthusiastic Alumni"], The New York Times. April 6, 1923. Page 13.
6. ^{{cite news|title=Percy D. Haughton Expires Suddenly. Famous Football Coach Taken Ill on Columbia Field, Dies Soon After Being Rushed To Hospital. Deep Sorrow at Harvard Associates Stunned by the Sad News. Preeminent In Modern Game. Last Words Said Jokingly To Dr Withington|newspaper=Boston Daily Globe|date=October 28, 1924|url=https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/boston/access/1082798542.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI&type=historic&date=Oct+28%2C+1924&author=&pub=Boston+Daily+Globe+(1923-1927)&desc=PERCY+D.+HAUGHTON+EXPIRES+SUDDENLY&pqatl=google}}
7. ^{{cite news|title=Percy Haughton Buried at Boston|newspaper=The New York Times|date=October 31, 1924|url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1924/10/31/101619406.pdf}}

References

{{Reflist}}

External links

  • {{cfbhof|id=1276|name=Percy Haughton}}
  • {{Find a Grave}}
{{Cornell Big Red football coach navbox}}{{Harvard Crimson football coach navbox}}{{Harvard Crimson baseball coach navbox}}{{Columbia Lions football coach navbox}}{{Atlanta Braves owners}}{{Atlanta Braves Presidents}}{{Navboxes| title = Percy Haughton—championships
| list1 ={{1898 Harvard Crimson football navbox}}{{1908 Harvard Crimson football navbox}}{{1910 Harvard Crimson football navbox}}{{1912 Harvard Crimson football navbox}}{{1913 Harvard Crimson football navbox}}
}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Haughton, Percy}}

16 : 1876 births|1924 deaths|19th-century players of American football|American football tackles|Boston Braves owners|Columbia Lions football coaches|Cornell Big Red football coaches|Harvard Crimson baseball coaches|Harvard Crimson baseball players|Harvard Crimson football coaches|Harvard Crimson football players|College Football Hall of Fame inductees|People from Staten Island|Sportspeople from Staten Island|Players of American football from New York (state)|Harvard College alumni

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