Sport(s) | Football, basketball, baseball, track and field |
---|---|
Biographical details | |
Born |
Three Oaks, Michigan |
April 7, 1893
Died | February 8, 1967 Ann Arbor, Michigan |
(aged 73)
Playing career | |
Football | |
1910–1913 | Michigan State Normal |
Basketball | |
1910–1914 | Michigan State Normal |
Baseball | |
c. 1912 | Michigan State Normal |
1913–1914 | Kalamazoo Kazoos |
1915 | Brantford Red Sox |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
Football | |
1916 | Michigan State Normal (assistant) |
1917 | Michigan State Normal |
1919–1920 | Michigan State Normal |
1925–1948 | Michigan State Normal |
Basketball | |
1917–1921 | Michigan State Normal |
1925–1932 | Michigan State Normal |
1935–1940 | Michigan State Normal |
1944–1946 | Michigan State Normal |
Baseball | |
1920–1921 | Michigan State Normal |
Administrative career (AD unless noted) | |
1948–1963 | Michigan State Normal / Eastern Michigan |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 114–58–15 (football) 160–29 (basketball) 9–14 (baseball) |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
Football 1 MIAA (1925) 4 MCC (1927–1930) |
Elton James Rynearson, Sr. (April 7, 1893 – February 8, 1967) was an American athlete, coach, and college athletics administrator. He was affiliated with Eastern Michigan University (known as Michigan State Normal College prior to 1956) for most of his life, beginning his association with the school as a student in 1910 and retiring as the school's athletic director in 1963.
Rynearson was born in Three Oaks, Michigan. He was the son of Isaiah Rynearson and Grace Ann McCarten. He attended Michigan State Normal College from 1910 to 1914 and played for the football, baseball, and basketball teams. He was the captain of the basketball team his junior and his senior year, during which time the team achieved a record of 17–8. Eastern Michigan University records also list Rynearson as the basketball team captain for the 1916–17 season, in which the team's record was 15–1.
Rynearson played three years of minor league baseball from 1913 to 1915 for the Kalamazoo Kazoos in the Southern Michigan League (1913–1914) and the Brantford Red Sox in the Canadian League (1915).
The 1916 Michigan State Normal College yearbook, The Aurora, lists Rynearson as an assistant coach of the football team, and he assumed head coaching responsibilities in 1917. Over the course of his career, he coached at least one year in every varsity sport at Michigan State Normal, including football, basketball, baseball and track. In 28 years as the head football coach, Rynearson compiled a record of 114–58–15. He led the 1925 and 1927 football teams to undefeated 8–0 records. Between 1925 and 1927, his teams compiled a record of 22–1 and outscored their opponents by a combined score of 405 to 31. In 17 years as the basketball coach, he compiled a record of 141–100. During a four-year stretch from 1917 to 1921, he led the basketball team to a combined record of 48–9, including a one-loss season in his first year as the coach. He also served as athletic director from 1948 to 1963.
Rynearson continued to live in Ypsilanti, Michigan in his later years. In November 1966, the National Football Foundation awarded him the Willie Heston Award, given each year to an individual personifying the leadership qualities developed by football.
Rynearson suffered a heart attack on January 28, 1967, and died one week later at St. Joseph Hospital in Ann Arbor, Michigan. His funeral was held at St. John's Catholic Church in Ypsilanti.