Homer Woodson Hargiss Explained

Homer Woodson Hargiss
Birth Date:1 September 1887
Birth Place:Cherokee County, Kansas, U.S.
Death Place:Lawrence, Kansas, U.S.
Player Sport1:Football
Player Years2:1905–1909
Player Team2:Kansas State Normal
Player Positions:Fullback[1]
Coach Sport1:Football
Coach Years2:1910–1912
Coach Team2:College of Emporia
Coach Years3:1913
Coach Team3:Kansas (assistant)
Coach Years4:1914–1917
Coach Team4:Kansas State Normal
Coach Years5:1918–1919
Coach Team5:Oregon Agricultural
Coach Years6:1920–1927
Coach Team6:Kansas State Normal/Teachers
Coach Years7:1928–1932
Coach Team7:Kansas
Coach Sport8:Basketball
Coach Years9:1918–1920
Coach Team9:Oregon Agricultural
Coach Sport10:Track and field
Coach Years11:1932–1943
Coach Team11:Kansas
Overall Record:102–54–16 (football)[2]
10–25 (basketball)
Championships:Football
4 KCAC (1915–1916, 1926–1927)
1 Big Six (1930)

Homer Woodson "Bill" Hargiss (September 1, 1887 – October 15, 1978) was an American athlete and coach. He played American football and basketball and also competed in track and field events. Additionally, Hargis coached athletics in Kansas and Oregon. As an American football coach during the sport's early years, Hargis was an innovator. He was among few coaches in using the forward pass and the huddle, now staple features of the game.

Playing career

Hargiss participated in sports at Kansas Normal College, now Emporia State University. He was a standout at the college in football, baseball, basketball, gymnastics, boxing, and track and field. Emporia State honored him in 1982 by inducting him into their "Athletic Hall of Honor"—the first year the honor was available,[3] as a distinguished alumni in 1970,[4] and for the all-Centennial Team in 1997.[5]

Coaching career

College of Emporia

Hargiss' first coaching job came as the head coach of the College of Emporia (C of E) in Emporia, Kansas. The school had a well-developed rivalry with Kansas State Normal School, where Hargiss played quarterback the previous year, and would later coach.[6]

At C of E, Hargiss developed plays using talented quarterback Arthur Schabinger that most had never seen before, namely the forward pass and the option pass.

Forward pass

In the team's 1910 game at Washburn, Arthur Schabinger has been credited by some to have thrown the first legal forward pass in college football history.[7] While this claim is widely disputed by other colleges (there are multiple claims dating back to 1906), College of Emporia most certainly was one of the first innovators of the play particularly to throw "overhand" forward passes instead of the more common "underhand" passes.[8] The school was using the forward pass as a regular play three years before Knute Rockne and Notre Dame.[9]

For the second to last game in 1910, Schabringer scored seven touchdowns in a 107–0 win over Pittsburg Normal. The forward pass played a major role in the game as well.[10]

Option pass

Hargiss also ran the option pass play (possibly the first of all time) at the College of Emporia in 1910. The "option pass" play was a sweep to the end with halfbacks that would either pass or run depending on how the defensive play would develop.[11]

Oregon State

Hargiss was the head football, basketball, and track coach at Oregon State University from 1918 to 1919.[12] During his tenure there, he compiled a 6–8–1 record.[13] From 1918–1920 he also coached the Oregon State Beavers basketball team.[14]

Emporia State

Hargiss was the ninth and twelfth head football coach for Emporia State University (called Kansas Normal School at the time) in Emporia, Kansas and he held that position for twelve seasons, from 1914 until 1917 and then returning from 1920 until 1927. His overall coaching record at Emporia State was 61–23–11. This ranks him third at Emporia State in terms of total wins and first at Emporia State in terms of winning percentage.[15]

In the 1920 game against Washburn University under coach Dwight Ream, Emporia State fullback Jack Reeves sustained a neck injury that resulted in his death.[16] The 1922 season also saw the loss of player Don Davis (it is not known if Davis died from play or natural causes).[17]

While at Kansas Normal, Hargiss coached the 1926 team to an undefeated season and outscored their opponents 144 to 3. The closest game of the season was a 6–0 battle against Hargiss's former team, the College of Emporia.[18]

Kansas

From 1928 to 1932, Hargiss served as the head football coach at University of Kansas, compiling a record of 18–16–2. He was fired as football coach on October 10, 1932, two days after the Jawhawks lost at home to Oklahoma, 21–6. Hargiss was succeeded by assistant coach Adrian Lindsey.[19]

Football developments

Use of the huddle

Oregon State was one of the first schools nationally to use the huddle formation in a game. It happened against the University of Washington in Seattle in 1918. Hargiss instructed the starters that once they returned to the field, they were to stand 10 yards behind the ball before the beginning of each play and whisper to one another what they were going to do next.[20]

An eyewitness to the game was veteran Seattle sports columnist Royal Brougham, whose stories of the contest give testimony today to OSU's early use of this pioneering new formation.[21]

Forward pass

While coaching at the College of Emporia, Hargiss would regularly use the forward pass and records show that it was used as early as 1910, three years before Knute Rockne began to regularly call the play.[22] [23]

Honors and legacy

Personal life

Hargiss graduated from Kansas Normal School in Emporia, Kansas. His brother, Floyd Daniel Hargiss was a football coach at Ottawa University in Ottawa, Kansas.[36]

Head coaching record

Football

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hargiss playing football at KSN . oberheide.org. June 8, 2018.
  2. Web site: Football coaching record for H. W. "Bill" Hargiss. oberheide.org.
  3. http://www.emporia.edu/a/athletics/hallofhonornames.htm Emporia State University Athletic Hall of Honor
  4. Web site: Bill Hargiss selected Emporia State University Distinguished Alumnus, 1970. oberheide.org.
  5. Web site: Bill Hargiss selected to the Emporia State University Centennial Team, 1997. oberheide.org.
  6. Web site: Bill Hargiss at the College of Emporia, 1910. oberheide.org.
  7. https://www.kshof.org/hof-profiles.cfm?record_id=38 Kansas Sports Hall of Fame
  8. http://www.oberheide.org/hargiss/Forward%20Pass/First%20use%20forward%20pass.htm Homer Hargiss History
  9. http://www.oberheide.org/hargiss/Forward%20Pass/547/Emporia%20Gazette.htm Emporia Gazette
  10. http://www.emporiagazette.com/ Emporia Gazette
  11. http://www.oberheide.org/hargiss/Forward%20Pass/First%20use%20forward%20pass.htm Oberheide.org
  12. Web site: New football coach for OAC. oberheide.org.
  13. Web site: 2006 Football Media Guide - Year-By-Year Results. Oregon State University. November 14, 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150609140029/http://www.osubeavers.com/pdf4/39515.pdf. June 9, 2015. dead.
  14. Web site: 2005-06 Men's Basketball Media Guide - OSU Team History. Oregon State University. November 14, 2006. PDF. 18. September 29, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180929211120/http://osubeavers.nmnathletics.com//pdf5/21240.pdf?SPSID=27770&SPID=1954&DB_OEM_ID=4700. dead.
  15. Web site: Emporia State University Athletics - 2007 Football Media Guide. www.esuhornets.edu. June 8, 2018. December 21, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191221013501/https://s3.amazonaws.com/sidearm.sites/emporia.sidearmsports.com/documents/2011/12/16/07ESUFBmediaguide.pdf. dead.
  16. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=VbkkAAAAIBAJ&sjid=tQ8GAAAAIBAJ&pg=919,474438&dq=southwestern+football+kansas&hl=en The Woodville Republican
  17. https://archive.org/stream/officialnational07nation/officialnational07nation_djvu.txt The Official National Collegiate Athletic Association football guide
  18. Web site: Bill Hargiss' Undefeated Emporia State Football Season, 1926. oberheide.org.
  19. News: Kansas Fires Grid Coach After Defeat . AP . . October 11, 1932 . March 15, 2011 . Associated Press.
  20. Web site: The Huddle Debate Continues . June 8, 2018.
  21. Web site: Bill Hargiss - First Use of the Offensive huddle, 1918. oberheide.org. June 8, 2018.
  22. Web site: Emporia Gazette. oberheide.org.
  23. Web site: Bill Hargiss - Definitive use of forward pass and the option pass, 1910. oberheide.org.
  24. http://www.kshof.org/hof-profiles.cfm?record_id=19 Kansas Sports Hall of Fame
  25. Web site: Bill Hargiss named to NAIA Track Hall of Fame, 1959 . oberheide.org.
  26. Web site: The Life and Legacy of H. W. " Bill" Hargiss. oberheide.org.
  27. Web site: Bill Hargiss at the University of Kansas, 1928 . oberheide.org.
  28. Web site: John Kuck. oberheide.org.
  29. Web site: Glenn Cunningham . oberheide.org.
  30. Web site: Jim Bausch. oberheide.org.
  31. Web site: Clyde Coffman . oberheide.org.
  32. Web site: Bill Hargiss in College, 1905-1909. oberheide.org.
  33. Web site: Bill Hargiss' youth, 1887. oberheide.org.
  34. Web site: Recovered letters describe Dole's life at KU and in WWII. kuconnection.org. December 26, 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20110719002624/http://www.kuconnection.org/archive/2003/08/news_3.asp. July 19, 2011. dead. mdy-all.
  35. News: Crash of Notre Dame legend left its mark in Kansas. The Topeka Capital-Journal. 2001.
  36. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~rayholt/RobertsFamily/p27.htm Ancestry.com