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Bob Voigts

Bob Voigts
A picture of Bob Voigts and Alex Sarkisian kissing the game ball after the Rose Bowl in 1949
Voigts and Northwestern center Alex Sarkisian kiss the game ball after winning the Rose Bowl in 1949.
Sport(s) Football, basketball, baseball
Biographical details
Born (1916-03-29)March 29, 1916
Evanston, Illinois
Died December 7, 2000(2000-12-07) (aged 84)
Wilmette, Illinois
Playing career
Football
1936–1938 Northwestern
Basketball
1936–1939 Northwestern
Position(s) Tackle (football)
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1939–1940 Illinois Wesleyan (assistant)
1941 Yale (line)
1942–1943 Great Lakes (assistant)
1946 Cleveland Browns (assistant)
1947–1954 Northwestern
Basketball
1939–1941 Illinois Wesleyan
Baseball
1940 Illinois Wesleyan
Head coaching record
Overall 33–39–1 (football)
25–16 (basketball)
Bowls 1–0

Werner Robert "Bob" Voigts (March 29, 1916 – December 7, 2000) was an American football and basketball player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Northwestern University from 1947 to 1954, compiling a record of 33–39–1. Voigts led the 1948 Northwestern Wildcats team to the Rose Bowl, the first in school history, where they defeated California, 20–14.

Voigts was a native of Evanston, Illinois, where Northwestern's main campus is located. He attended Northwestern and played on the school's football team between 1936 and 1938. In his sophomore year, the Wildcats won the Big Ten Conference, and Voigts was named an All-American tackle. After college, Voigts served as an assistant football coach and head basketball coach at Illinois Wesleyan University before moving briefly to Yale University, where he was a football line coach. He entered the U.S. Navy during World War II in 1942 and was stationed outside of Chicago where he met Paul Brown, the head coach of the base's football team. When Brown became head coach of the Cleveland Browns after the war, he hired Voigts as a tackle coach. After a year with the Browns, Voigts became head coach at Northwestern.

Voigts resigned as Northwestern's head coach in 1955, citing growing criticism of his coaching after a string of losing seasons. He left football but stayed in Evanston, where he ran a real estate business for 30 years. He died in 2000.


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