Noble pictured in Reveille 1934, Mississippi State yearbook
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Sport(s) | Football, basketball, baseball, track |
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Biographical details | |
Born |
Learned, Mississippi |
May 6, 1893
Died | February 2, 1963 Vicksburg, Mississippi |
(aged 69)
Alma mater | Mississippi A&M |
Playing career | |
1911–1915 | Mississippi A&M |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
Football | |
1916 | Mississippi College |
1917–1918 | Ole Miss |
1919–1921 | Mississippi A&M (assistant) |
1922 | Mississippi A&M |
1923–1929 | Mississippi A&M (assistant) |
Basketball | |
1918–1919 | Ole Miss |
Baseball | |
1918–1919 | Ole Miss |
1920–1943 | Mississippi A&M/State |
1946–1947 | Mississippi State |
Administrative career (AD unless noted) | |
1930–1934 | Mississippi State |
1937–1959 | Mississippi State |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 11–14–3 (football) 0–3 (basketball) 277–205–9 (baseball) |
Clark Randolph "Dudy" Noble (May 6, 1893 – February 2, 1963) was an American football, basketball, and baseball player, track athlete, coach, and college athletics administrator.
Born in Learned, Mississippi, Noble attended Mississippi State University (then known as Mississippi A&M College) in Starkville, Mississippi. During his college days he earned 14 varsity letters in four sports—football, basketball, baseball and track. He graduated in 1915.
After his college playing days were over, Noble went on to coach basketball, football, and most notably baseball at the college level for three different schools in his home state; Mississippi College, The University of Mississippi, and his alma mater Mississippi A&M.
His first coaching job was as the head football coach at Mississippi College in 1916. While there he earned his first coaching victory when he led the Choctaws to a 13–6 upset over Mississippi State in a game played in Aberdeen, Mississippi. The Choctaws finished the season with a record of 4-3
In 1917 Noble became the head football coach at the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss), a position he held for two seasons. During his two years as the Rebels' head coach he compiled a record of 2–7–1 and went 0–3 against his alma mater, Mississippi A&M. He holds the distinction of having been the only head coach to lose two Egg Bowls in one season (1918). For the 1918–19 season he served as the head basketball coach at Ole Miss going 0–3. He had his most success in Oxford as the baseball coach compiling an overall record of 10–4 in the 1918 and 1919 seasons.
Starting in 1920 Noble took over as skipper of the Mississippi State baseball team, a position that he held for 26 seasons until 1947 (MSU had no baseball team in 1944 and 1945). As head baseball coach he compiled a record 267–201–9 and won three Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association championships. During his time as head baseball coach he awarded Dave "Boo" Ferris the first full baseball scholarship in Mississippi history. Noble also served one season as the Bulldogs' head football coach going 3–4–2 in 1922, including a victory over his former squad from Ole Miss.