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Perry Moss

Perry Moss
Perry Moss - 1948 Bowman.jpg
Moss on a 1948 Bowman football card
Sport(s) Football, baseball
Biographical details
Born (1926-08-04)August 4, 1926
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Died August 7, 2014(2014-08-07) (aged 88)
Deltona, Florida
Playing career
Football
1944 Tulsa
1946–1947 Illinois
1948 Green Bay Packers
Position(s) Quarterback
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1949 Illinois (freshmen)
1950–1951 Washington (assistant)
1952 LSU (backfield)
1955–1957 Miami (FL) (backfield)
1958 Wisconsin (backfield)
1959 Florida State
1960–1962 Montreal Alouettes
1964–1965 Charleston Rockets
1968 Marshall
1988 Chicago Bruisers
1990 Detroit Drive
1991–1997 Orlando Predators
Baseball
1955 Miami (FL)
Head coaching record
Overall 4–15–1 (college football)
86–35–1 (AFL)
15–7 (college baseball)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
2 (ArenaBowl II & ArenaBowl IV)
Awards
AFL Coach of the Year (1988, 1992, 1994)

Perry Lee Moss (August 4, 1926 – August 7, 2014) was an American football player, coach, and executive. Moss played tailback at the University of Tulsa and quarterback at Illinois during the 1940s. As a Tulsa tailback, he was on the Orange Bowl team that beat Georgia Tech, 26–12, in the 1945 Orange Bowl and later as an Illinois T-quarterback, he directed a Rose Bowl team which routed UCLA, 45–14, in 1947. Moss served two years in the United States Air Force between his playing time at Tulsa and Illinois. At Illinois, he was named to All-Big Ten Conference and All-American teams. He was drafted in 1948 by the Green Bay Packers in the 13th round (111th pick overall) and played at the professional level for one year before returning to Illinois as an assistant. He started one game at quarterback for the Packers.

Moss served as head baseball coach and backfield coach at the University of Miami in 1955 and University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1958. In 1959, he was named as the head football coach and athletic director at Florida State, and compiled a 4–6 record and later at Marshall University in 1968 where he compiled an 0–9–1 record before resigning in the wake of NCAA recruiting violations. Twenty-eight members of the 1969 Thundering Herd presented a petition to West Virginia Governor Arch A. Moore Jr. to reinstate Moss for 1970, but the university instead named 1969 interim coach Rick Tolley, known as a brutal disciplinarian, to the post permanently. The decision undoubtedly saved Moss' life, for Tolley, 37 players and 37 others perished on November 14, 1970 in the crash of Southern Airways Flight 932 following Marshall's loss at East Carolina.


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Wikipedia

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