Dale R. Sprankle | |
Birth Date: | 4 August 1898 |
Birth Place: | Beach City, Ohio, U.S. |
Death Place: | Albion, Michigan, U.S. |
Player Sport1: | Football |
Player Years2: | c. 1920 |
Player Team2: | Mount Union |
Player Sport3: | Basketball |
Player Years4: | c. 1920 |
Player Team4: | Mount Union |
Player Sport5: | Baseball |
Player Years6: | c. 1920 |
Player Team6: | Mount Union |
Coach Sport1: | Football |
Coach Years2: | 1923–1935 |
Coach Team2: | Adrian |
Coach Years3: | 1936–1946 |
Coach Team3: | Albion |
Coach Sport4: | Basketball |
Coach Years5: | 1923–1936 |
Coach Team5: | Adrian |
Coach Sport6: | Baseball |
Coach Years7: | 1924–1929 |
Coach Team7: | Adrian |
Overall Record: | 91–85–12 (football) 130–122 (basketball) 24–40–1 (baseball) |
Championships: | Football 6 Michigan-Ontario (1930–1935) 2 MIAA (1939–1940) |
Dale Reese Sprankle (August 4, 1898 – November 11, 1963) was an American sports coach and athletic director at both Adrian College and Albion College in Michigan. Over the course of his 35-year career, Sprankle won 23 Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA) conference championships in four sports, making him one of the winningest coaches in that conference's history.
Sprankle was born on August 4, 1898, in Beach City, Ohio. He was the younger brother of LeRoy Sprankle, who would also become an athletics icon, most notably in Eastern Tennessee and South Florida. At the age of 12, his family moved to Canton, Ohio, where he participated in athletics and attended high school. Upon graduation, Sprankle completed his education at the nearby Mount Union College.
In 1923, Sprankle was hired as the director of physical education (athletic director) at Adrian College in Adrian, Michigan. From 1923 to 1936, he was the head coach of basketball, cross country, football, and track and field at the college, compiling a 55–51–8 record in football and a .516 winning percentage in basketball. In 1936, he left to become the assistant athletic director and head coach of cross country, football, and indoor and outdoor track at Albion College. Five years later, Sprankle was promoted to athletic director, the position from which he served at the college until his retirement in 1958. Over the course of the 22 years he coached at Albion, his teams won 23 Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA) championships which is currently tied for seventh all-time in that conference. In the nine seasons that he coached football, between 1936 and 1946, the team went 36–33–4 and won two MIAA championships. In indoor track, Sprankle coached the team for five years and won MIAA championships in each. His outdoor track team also had great success, winning six MIAA championships over the course of eight years. Sprankle's greatest success, however, came with the cross country team, which won 10 MIAA championships in his 12 years of coaching, from 1947 to 1958. In 1958, due to declining health, he retired from his position, but still kept up a close relationship with the school. Sprankle died on November 11, 1963, at the age of 65, following a four-year illness.[1] In 1976, the football stadium at Albion College was renamed Sprankle-Sprandel Stadium in honor of the school's two greatest sports coaches. Thirteen years later, in 1989, Sprankle was inducted into the Albion College Sports Hall of Fame.[2]
Name | Graduation year: sports | Achievements after college | |
---|---|---|---|
Louis Black | 1949: cross country, basketball, football | Played professional basketball with the Detroit Vagabond Kings (NBL) | |
James L. Chapman | 1956: cross country, track | President of West Liberty State College (1970–84) | |
Theodore E. Hagadone | 1951: cross country, track | Superintendent of schools in Vanderbilt, Iron Mountain, Milford, and Riverview, Michigan | |
Lewis F. Moon | 1948: baseball, basketball, football, track | Played with Cardinal's minor league franchise, AD at Lawrence Tech (1964–89) | |
Gary R. Noble | 1957: cross country, track | Rhodes Scholar, deputy director at the CDC, asst. surgeon general in the U.S. Public Health Service | |
Raymond A. Wauthier | 1946: basketball, football | head baseball and basketball coach at Iowa Wesleyan College (1946–48), head baseball and golf coach at Kansas State (1949–86) |