George Gibson | |
Birth Date: | 2 October 1905 |
Birth Place: | Kendaia, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | Midland, Texas, U.S. |
Position1: | Guard |
College: | Minnesota |
Coaching Years1: | 1930 |
Coaching Team1: | Minneapolis Red Jackets |
Coaching Years2: | 1930 |
Coaching Team2: | Frankford Yellow Jackets |
Coaching Years3: | 1934–1938 |
Coaching Team3: | Carleton |
Playing Years1: | 1930 |
Playing Team1: | Minneapolis Red Jackets |
Playing Years2: | 1930 |
Playing Team2: | Frankford Yellow Jackets |
Career Highlights: |
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Databasefootball: | GIBSOGEO01 |
Coachpfr: | GibsGe0 |
George Randall Gibson (October 2, 1905 – August 19, 2004) was an American football player and coach. He played college football as a guard at the University of Minnesota from 1926 to 1928. He was captain of the 1928 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team and was named to the 1928 College Football All-America Team. Gibson was a teammate and roommate of Bronko Nagurski. The two are jointly honored as the namesakes of the Minnesota Golden Gophers football training complex, the Gibson-Nagurski Football Complex.[1] While at the University of Minnesota, Gibson was a member of Sigma Chi fraternity.[2] Gibson later worked as an assistant coach at Minnesota.[3]
Gibson was one of eleven All-American football players to appear in the 1930 film Maybe It's Love.[4]
Gibson was a professional player and coach in the early National Football League (NFL). In 1930, Gibson joined the Minneapolis Red Jackets as a player-coach. Later that season, he moved to the Frankford Yellow Jackets. His career NFL coaching record was 3–10–1.
Gibson later coached the line at Carleton College and signed a contract to play with the Green Bay Packers but did not play.[5] Instead, he chose to earn his Ph.D. in geology from the University of Minnesota and became a geology professor at Carleton College, where he also coached the football team from 1934 to 1938. In 1936, Carleton went 6–1 with the only loss coming to Iowa. His coaching record at Carleton was 21–13–2.
In 1938, Gibson worked as a geologist for the Socony-Vacuum Oil Company in Egypt. In 1941, he took a job as a geologist for the Magnolia Petroleum Company[6] and moved to Midland, Texas.[7] He later worked as a geologist for the Richfield Oil Company and for the Seaboard Oil Corporation. In 1952, he started his own consulting business and worked as a geologic consultant in the Philippines, New Zealand, Turkey, Egypt, South Africa, and Lesotho, as well as in the United States.[8] He was inducted into the Petroleum Museum Hall of Fame in 2001.[9]
Gibson died at his home in Midland, Texas on August 19, 2004, at the age of 98.