John G. Griffith | |
Birth Date: | 4 January 1880 |
Birth Place: | Iowa City, Iowa, U.S. |
Death Place: | Pasadena, California, U.S. |
Player Years1: | 1897–1900 |
Player Team1: | Iowa |
Player Positions: | Fullback |
Coach Sport1: | Football |
Coach Years2: | 1901 |
Coach Team2: | Simpson (IA) |
Coach Years3: | 1902–1906 |
Coach Team3: | Idaho |
Coach Years4: | 1907–1908 |
Coach Team4: | Iowa (assistant) |
Coach Years5: | 1909 |
Coach Team5: | Iowa |
Coach Years6: | 1910–1914 |
Coach Team6: | Idaho |
Coach Years7: | 1915–1916 |
Coach Team7: | Oklahoma A&M |
Coach Years8: | 1917 |
Coach Team8: | New Mexico A&M |
Coach Sport9: | Basketball |
Coach Years10: | 1905–1907 |
Coach Team10: | Idaho |
Coach Years11: | 1908–1910 |
Coach Team11: | Iowa |
Coach Years12: | 1910–1915 |
Coach Team12: | Idaho |
Coach Years13: | 1915–1917 |
Coach Team13: | Oklahoma A&M |
Coach Years14: | 1917–1920 |
Coach Team14: | New Mexico A&M |
Coach Sport15: | Baseball |
Coach Years16: | 1903–1907 |
Coach Team16: | Idaho |
Coach Years17: | 1911–1915 |
Coach Team17: | Idaho |
Admin Years1: | 1918–1921 |
Admin Team1: | New Mexico A&M |
Overall Record: | 49–38–5 (football) 101–80 (basketball) 9–5 (baseball) |
John George "Pink" Griffith [1] [2] (January 4, 1880 – March 23, 1948) was an American football player and coach of football, basketball, and baseball.[3]
He served as the head football coach at Simpson College (1901), the University of Idaho (1902–1906, 1910–1914), the University of Iowa (1909), Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College—now Oklahoma State University–Stillwater (1915–1916), and New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts—now New Mexico State University (1917),[3] compiling a career college football record of 49–38–5. Griffith was also the head basketball coach at Idaho (1905–1907, 1910–1915), Iowa (1907–1910), Oklahoma A&M (1915–1917), and New Mexico A&M (1917–1920), tallying a career college basketball mark of 101–80. He also coached baseball at Idaho for eight seasons.[4] [5]
Born in Iowa City, Iowa, Griffith was a four-time college football letter winner for the University of Iowa from 1897 to 1900. Griffith, a fullback, played for some of the greatest teams in Iowa football history.
Against Illinois in 1899, Griffith returned a punt 85 yards as Iowa won, 58–0, to cap an undefeated season. After the game, referee R. T. Hoagland of Princeton said, "The dodging run of Griffith down the field for a touchdown was the best piece of individual playing that I ever saw. The men (of the 1899 Hawkeyes) are all stars; they make the best team I ever saw."[6]
In Iowa's first year in the Western Conference (now known as the Big Ten) in 1900, Griffith was named Iowa's team captain. The team won the Western Conference title in Iowa's first year in the league. Iowa had to settle for a controversial 5–5 tie against Northwestern in Griffith's final game at Iowa. The entire team except Griffith ate a bad batch of creamed potatoes and got food poisoning the day before the game.[7]
Still, Griffith did not suffer a defeat in his final twenty games as a player at Iowa, going 17–0–3. His last collegiate loss was late in his sophomore season.
Griffith graduated from Iowa in 1901, and coached at Simpson (IA) for a year. In 1902, he was hired as head football coach and athletic director at the University of Idaho in Moscow. When Iowa football coach Alden Knipe retired after the 1902 season, school officials considered hiring Griffith but went with John Chalmers instead. Griffith continued as Idaho's football coach through 1906.[8]
When Chalmers was succeeded by Mark Catlin as Iowa's head coach, Griffith left Idaho to serve as Catlin's assistant coach at Iowa in 1907 and 1908. the 1908–1909 season, Iowa's first basketball season in the Big Ten.
Prior to the 1909 football season, Caitlin left Iowa for Lawrence University in Wisconsin, and the Hawkeyes hired Griffith as their ninth head football coach. He was the first Iowa graduate to lead the football team and coached Iowa to a 2–4–1 record in 1909; the star player that season was Walter "Stub" Stewart.
Griffith finished out the 1909–1910 basketball season, his third as a head basketball coach. His team went 11–3 that year, bringing Griffith's three year basketball coaching record to 29–14. After the basketball season, Griffith announced he was leaving Iowa, and Stewart replaced him as the basketball coach.
After just one season as head football coach, Griffith left Iowa and returned to Idaho to become the head of their entomology department.[9] He also served as their head football coach again from 1910 through 1914, and his ten-year record at Idaho was 28–22–2 .
Griffith also coached football at Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State University) in 1915 and 1916, compiling an 8–9–1 record. In 1917, he led the football team at New Mexico A&M (now New Mexico State University) to a 4–2 record.[10]
Griffith died in 1948 at age 68 in Pasadena, California, and is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale.