Jim Lansing Explained

Jim Lansing
Birth Date:16 September 1919
Birth Place:Pelham, New York, U.S.
Death Place:New Rochelle, New York, U.S.
Player Years1:1940–1942
Player Team1:Fordham
Player Years2:1946
Player Team2:Fordham
Player Positions:End
Coach Years1:1947–1954
Coach Team1:Fordham (assistant)
Coach Years2:1955–1961
Coach Team2:Blessed Sacrament HS (NY)
Coach Years3:1964–1971
Coach Team3:Fordham
Overall Record:30–22–3 (college)
Awards:

James Samuel Lansing (September 16, 1919 – December 2, 2000) was a college football player and coach at Fordham University. As an All-American end in the 1940s, Lansing participated in the 1941 Cotton Bowl Classic and 1942 Sugar Bowl. Prior to the start of his senior season he was called into duty by the Navy Air Corps to fight in World War II as a fighter pilot. Upon return to Fordham for the 1946 season, Lansing injured his shoulder in the first game, ending his football playing career.

Lansing then served as an assistant coach for Fordham from 1947 through the 1954 seasons, after which the university dropped the football program. Several years after a six-year coaching stint at Blessed Sacrament High School in New Rochelle, Lansing returned to Fordham to take over as the new head football coach. In eight seasons, Lansing compiled an overall record of 30–22–3. He stayed at Fordham to serve as an assistant athletic director and the director of intramural athletics.

In his early years, Lansing grew up in Pelham, New York and graduated from Pelham Memorial High School. He then graduated from Seton Hall Preparatory School in South Orange, New Jersey before attending Fordham.[1]

Head coaching record

College

Notes and References

  1. [Frank Litsky|Litsky, Frank]