Mike Ahearn | |
Birth Date: | 28 November 1878 |
Birth Place: | Rotherham, England |
Death Place: | Manhattan, Kansas, U.S. |
Player Sport1: | Football |
Player Years2: | c. 1900 |
Player Team2: | Massachusetts Agricultural |
Player Sport3: | Basketball |
Player Years4: | 1902–1904 |
Player Team4: | Massachusetts Agricultural |
Player Sport5: | Baseball |
Player Years6: | 1898 |
Player Team6: | Massachusetts Agricultural |
Player Years7: | 1901–1904 |
Player Team7: | Massachusetts Agricultural |
Coach Sport1: | Football |
Coach Years2: | 1905–1910 |
Coach Team2: | Kansas State |
Coach Sport3: | Basketball |
Coach Years4: | 1906–1911 |
Coach Team4: | Kansas State |
Coach Sport5: | Baseball |
Coach Years6: | 1904–1910 |
Coach Team6: | Kansas State |
Admin Years1: | 1920–1947 |
Admin Team1: | Kansas State |
Overall Record: | 39–12 (football) 28–27 (basketball) 90–35–12 (baseball) |
Championships: | Football: 2 KCAC (1909–1910) Basketball: 1 KCAC (1910) Baseball: 2 KCAC (1907–1908) |
Michael Francis Ahearn (November 28, 1878 – February 5, 1948) was a British-American athlete and college athletics administrator. Ahearn played and coached American football, basketball, and baseball, and was a college professor and athletic director at Kansas State Agricultural College—now known as Kansas State University.[1] He also helped guide the evolution of the rules of modern football, serving ten years on the college football rules committee (1922–1931), initially under Secretary Walter Camp and alongside Amos Alonzo Stagg.[1]
He was selected as a charter member of the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame.
Over the years, Ahearn served Kansas State in a variety of roles that included coach, professor, head of the Department of Physical Education, and director of athletics. He is considered the "Father of Kansas State athletics."
In 1905, he officially became the tenth head football coach at Kansas State, but was the first to hold the position for more than one year. He was coach from 1905 until 1910, compiling a record of 39–12. His 39 wins were the most in the history of Kansas State Wildcats football until Bill Snyder passed him in 1995. His winning percentage of .765 is still the highest of any coach in program history.
Ahearn was also the head basketball coach at Kansas State from 1906 to 1911, tallying a mark of 28–27, and the head baseball coach at the school from 1904 to 1910, amassing a record of 90–35–12.
From 1920 until 1947, Ahearn was the athletic director at Kansas State, during which time the school built Memorial Stadium, the Wildcats home football venue from 1922 until 1967.
Ahearn was born on November 28, 1878, in Rotherham, England. He attended Massachusetts Agricultural College, now the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where he lettered in football, basketball, baseball, and ice hockey.[2] Ahearn died on February 5, 1948, in Manhattan, Kansas.[1]
Kansas State honored Ahearn's coaching success in 1911 by naming its first on-campus athletic field Ahearn Field. The location is the current site of Memorial Stadium. The school further honored his memory in 1950 with the opening of Ahearn Field House, which used to house the school's volleyball and indoor track and field teams, and was home to the Kansas State basketball teams from 1950 to 1988.