Dana M. King | |
Birth Date: | 1890 |
Death Date: | (aged 62) |
Death Place: | Glenford, Ohio, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | Ohio University |
Player Sport1: | Football |
Player Years2: | c. 1915 |
Player Team2: | Ohio |
Player Sport3: | Baseball |
Player Years4: | c. 1915 |
Player Team4: | Ohio |
Player Positions: | End (football) |
Coach Sport1: | Football |
Coach Years2: | 1917 |
Coach Team2: | Hamilton HS (OH) |
Coach Years3: | 1919–1929 |
Coach Team3: | Hamilton HS (OH) |
Coach Years4: | 1930 |
Coach Team4: | Cincinnati (assistant) |
Coach Years5: | 1931–1934 |
Coach Team5: | Cincinnati |
Coach Years6: | 1939–1941 |
Coach Team6: | Cincinnati Bengals |
Coach Years7: | 1943–1945 |
Coach Team7: | Hamilton HS (OH) |
Coach Sport8: | Basketball |
Coach Years9: | 1917–1929 |
Coach Team9: | Hamilton HS (OH) |
Coach Sport10: | Baseball |
Coach Years11: | 1936 |
Coach Team11: | Cincinnati |
Admin Years1: | 1932–1936 |
Admin Team1: | Cincinnati |
Overall Record: | 25–10–1 (college football) 5–9 (college baseball) 8–14–2 (pro football) |
Championships: | Football 2 Buckeye (1933–1934) |
Dana M. King (1890 – April 19, 1952) was an American football and baseball coach. He served as the head football coach at the University of Cincinnati from 1931 to 1934, compiling a record of 25–10–1.
King graduated from Ohio University in 1917. He played football for the Bobcats as an end.
King served as football coach at Hamilton High School.[1] He coached 16 seasons (1917, 1919–1929 and 1943–1945), going 104–26–8, with his only losing season being in 1917 (3–5–1). From 1926 to 1929, his team went 35–2–1 with a 10–0 season in 1929 in which they scored 332 points while allowing only 19. From 1928 to 1930, his team had an 18-game winning streak. His teams used single-wing and double-wing offenses for most of his career before going to a T-formation attack in his term in the 1940s. He also served time as coach for baseball, track, and basketball. For basketball, he coached from 1917 to 1929, with an 18–0 team in 1926–27 before losing in the District Tournament finals. He went 148–59 as coach. In the 1920s, he served as city recreation director, along with overseeing development of the playground system in the city. He also helped establish softball leagues and coached a local American Legion football team.
King joined the University of Cincinnati as an assistant football coach in 1930. He became coach the next year, along with athletic director in 1932. In his four seasons as coach, he went 25–10–1, with two conference titles. He stepped down as coach in 1934, although he stayed on as athletic director until 1936.[2]
In 1939, King became coach of the original Cincinnati Bengals. They went 6–2 in 1939, good for second in the American Professional Football Association. They joined the American Football League in 1940. They went 1–7 in 1940 and 1–5–2 in 1941 before disbanding after World War II shuttled the league and the team.
King returned to Hamilton High School in 1942 to serve as head football coach and athletic director. He left coaching after 1945 due to ill health.
After the 1946–47 school year, he retired as a math teacher. He was inducted into the Butler County Sports and Hamilton School Athletic Halls of Fame. King died on April 19, 1952, at his home in Glenford, Ohio.[3]