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Paul Stagg

Paul Stagg
Sport(s) Football, baseball, tennis
Biographical details
Born (1909-03-18)March 18, 1909
Chicago, Illinois
Died September 4, 1992(1992-09-04) (aged 83)
South Holland, Illinois
Playing career
Football
1929–1931 Chicago
Position(s) Quarterback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1932 Chicago (assistant)
1933 Pacific (CA) (freshmen)
1934–1936 Moravian
1937–1940 Springfield (MA)
1941–1946 Worcester Tech
1947–1960 Pacific (OR)
Baseball
1935–1936 Moravian
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1934–1937 Moravian
1947–1961 Pacific (OR)
1961–1967 Pacific (CA)
Head coaching record
Overall 94–99–12 (football)
12–8 (baseball)
Bowls 2–0
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
3 NWC (1949, 1951–1952)

Paul Stagg (March 18, 1909 – September 4, 1992) was an American football player, coach, and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at Moravian College (1934–1936), Springfield College (1937–1940), Worcester Polytechnic Institute (1941–1946), and Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon (1946–1960), compiling a career college football record of 94–99–12. Stagg played football as a quarterback at the University of Chicago, where his father, Amos Alonzo Stagg, was the head coach. He was an assistant coach under his father at Chicago in the fall of 1932 before graduating in December with a Bachelor of Science, majoring in geography. He followed the elder Stagg in 1933 to the University of the Pacific in , where he served as an assistant coach for a season before taking the head coaching job at Moravian. Paul Stagg returned to the University of the Pacific in 1961 as director of physical education and intercollegiate athletics, a capacity in which he served until 1967.

Stagg's older brother, Amos, Jr., also played quarterback at Chicago under their father and was a later the head football coach at Susquehanna University. The two brothers coached against one another twice. In 1935, Amos Jr.'s Susquehanna Crusaders and Paul's Moravian Greyhounds played to a 0–0 tie in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. The following year, Moravian beat Susquehanna, 26–16, in Selinsgrove.


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