Kip Taylor Explained

Kip Taylor
Birth Date:25 November 1907
Birth Place:Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.
Death Place:Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.
Player Years1:1927–1930
Player Team1:Michigan
Player Positions:End
Coach Years1:1935–1939
Coach Team1:George Rogers Clark HS (IN)
Coach Years2:1940–1945
Coach Team2:Pioneer HS (MI)
Coach Years3:1946
Coach Team3:Syracuse (ends)
Coach Years4:1947–1948
Coach Team4:Michigan State (ends)
Coach Years5:1949–1954
Coach Team5:Oregon State
Overall Record:20–36 (college)

LaVerne Harrison "Kip" Taylor (November 25, 1907 – July 17, 2002) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head coach at Oregon State College, now Oregon State University, from 1949 to 1954, compiling a record of 20–36. He played college football as an end as the University of Michigan from 1927 to 1930.

Playing career

Taylor earned all-state honors in football and basketball at Pioneer High School. He attended the University of Michigan, graduating with an education degree in 1931. There he played right end for the Wolverines. Taylor scored the first touchdown at Michigan Stadium in 1927.

Coaching career

Taylor began his coaching career at the high school level. He was the head football coach at George Rogers Clark High School in Whiting, Indiana before returning to his alma mater, Pioneer High School, as head football coach in 1940.[1] In six seasons at Pioneer, he led his teams to a record of 37–5 with undefeated seasons in 1940, 1941, and 1943. In January 1946, he was hired as an assistant coach at Syracuse University to serve under head football coach Biggie Munn.[2]

At Oregon State, Taylor's teams had a 20–36 record in his six seasons guiding the Beavers, but that included a 5–1 record against Oregon. In his first season, he led the 1949 Oregon State Beavers football team to an upset of eighth-ranked Michigan State, 25–20, when they were three-touchdown underdogs.

Under Taylor's watch the Oregon State football team was racially integrated for the first time. In 1951 he added two black players to the squad, defensive halfback Bill Anderson and halfback and safety Dave Mann. Both would start for Taylor during that season.[3]

Later life and death

Taylor managed the Columbia Edgewater Country Club in Portland, Oregon, and the University of Michigan Golf Course before retiring in 1972. Taylor died of natural causes on July 17, 2002, in Ann Arbor, Michigan.[4]

Head coaching record

College

[5]

Notes and References

  1. News: . LaVerne Taylor New Pioneer Grid Coach . . . . May 12, 1940 . 11 . October 21, 2020 . .
  2. News: . Ann Arbor Coach Gets Bid To Join Munn At Syracuse . . . . January 15, 1946 . 8 . October 21, 2020 . .
  3. Pigskin Review: Oregon State vs. Southern California, (Los Angeles: University of Southern California), vol. 30, no. 3 (Oct. 13, 1951), pp. 7, 10.
  4. News: . Ex-OSU coach Kip Taylor dies . . . . July 19, 2002 . 15 . October 21, 2020 . .
  5. Web site: Kip Taylor. College Football Data Warehouse. https://web.archive.org/web/20150906043647/http://www.cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/coaching/alltime_coach_year_by_year.php?coachid=2307. September 6, 2015.