Star Wood | |
Player Sport1: | Football |
Player Team2: | Milligan |
Player Sport3: | Basketball |
Player Years4: | c. 1934 |
Player Team4: | Milligan |
Player Sport5: | Baseball |
Player Years6: | c. 1934 |
Player Team6: | Milligan |
Coach Sport1: | Football |
Coach Years2: | 1936 |
Coach Team2: | Coeburn HS (VA) (assistant) |
Coach Years3: | 1937–1939 |
Coach Team3: | Milligan (line) |
Coach Years4: | 1942 |
Coach Team4: | Appalachian State (backfield) |
Coach Years5: | 1944–1945 |
Coach Team5: | NC State (assistant) |
Coach Years6: | 1947–1949 |
Coach Team6: | Tennessee Tech (assistant) |
Coach Years7: | 1950–1951 |
Coach Team7: | Tennessee Tech |
Coach Years8: | 1952–1953 |
Coach Team8: | East Tennessee State |
Coach Years9: | 1955–1965 |
Coach Team9: | East Tennessee State |
Admin Years1: | 1954–1962 |
Admin Team1: | East Tennessee State |
Overall Record: | 74–67–7 |
Bowl Record: | 3–1 |
Championships: | 1 OVC (1962) |
Awards: | 2× OVC Coach of the Year (1957, 1962) |
Sterling "Star" Wood was an American football coach and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at Tennessee Polytechnic Institute—now known as Tennessee Tech—in Cookeville, Tennessee from 1950 to 1951, and East Tennessee State University in Johnson City, Tennessee from 1952 to 1953 and 1955 to 1965. Wood was also the athletic director at East Tennessee State from 1954 to 1962.[1] [2]
Wood attended Big Stone Gap High School in Big Stone Gap, Virginia, where he lettered in football, baseball, and track before graduating as valedictorian of his class in 1931. He moved on to Milligan College in Milligan College, Tennessee, earning varsity letters in football, basketball, and baseball. He received a Master of Arts degree from the University of Tennessee in 1940.
Wood began his career as a teacher at the Roaring Fork mining camp and then as an English teacher and assistant football coach at Coeburn High School in Coeburn, Virginia. He then returned to Milligan College as an English instructor and line coach to assist head football coach Steve Lacy. Wood was the backfield coach under Beattie Feathers at Appalachian State Teachers College—now known as Appalachian State University in 1942 and also an assistant under Feathers at North Carolina State University. He was an assistant football coach at Tennessee Tech under Hooper Eblen for three seasons before succeeding Eblen as head football coach in December 1949.[3]