Ned Mathews | |
Birth Date: | 11 August 1918 |
Birth Place: | Provo, Utah, U.S. |
Position1: | Running back |
College: | UCLA |
Playing Years1: | 1941–1943 |
Playing Team1: | Detroit Lions |
Playing Years2: | 1944 |
Playing Team2: | Hollywood Rangers |
Playing Years3: | 1945 |
Playing Team3: | Boston Yanks |
Playing Years4: | 1946 |
Playing Team4: | Chicago Rockets |
Playing Years5: | 1947 |
Playing Team5: | San Francisco 49ers |
Coaching Years1: | 1946 |
Coaching Team1: | Chicago Rockets |
Coaching Years2: | 1948 |
Coaching Team2: | UCLA |
Coaching Years3: | 1949–1951 |
Coaching Team3: | Arizona |
Ned Alfred Mathews (August 11, 1918 - September 18, 2002) was a professional American football player who played running back for four seasons in the National Football League for the Detroit Lions and Boston Yanks.[1] With the Lions, he led the league in kickoff returns and ranked second in interceptions thrown.[2] He also played in the American Football League for the Hollywood Rangers, with whom he scored 18 touchdowns on 65 carries.[3] Mathews was a college football quarterback at UCLA.
In 1945, Mathews entered the United States Army and coached football, basketball, and baseball for Fort MacArthur. Upon his discharge a year later, he was a player-coach for the Chicago Rockets in the All-America Football Conference before joining the San Francisco 49ers.[4] He returned to UCLA as a backfield coach in 1948 and served in the same position at Arizona the following year.[5] He coached at Arizona for two years; after the 1951 season, amid turmoil involving incumbent head coach Bob Winslow, Mathews was suggested as his successor by the team's players, but the program instead hired Warren B. Woodson who did not retain Mathews. Mathews remained in Tucson as a businessman.[6] [7]