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Thomas Kelly (coach)

Thomas Kelley
Sport(s) Football, basketball
Biographical details
Born c. 1888
Playing career
Football
1906, 1908–1909 Chicago
Position(s) Tackle
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1911–1913 Muhlenberg
1914 Missouri Mines
1915–1917 Alabama
1919 Missouri (assistant)
1920–1921 Idaho
1922 Missouri
Basketball
1912–1914 Muhlenberg
1916–1917 Alabama
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1915 Alabama
1920–1922 Idaho
Head coaching record
Overall 56–24–3 (football)
18–23 (basketball)

Thomas Kelley (born c. 1888) was an American football player and coach of football and basketball. He served as the head football coach at Muhlenberg College (1911–1913), the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy—now the Missouri University of Science and Technology (1914), the University of Alabama (1915–1917), the University of Idaho (1920–1921), and the University of Missouri (1922), compiling a career college football coaching record of 56–24–3. Kelley was also the head basketball coach at Muhlenberg from 1912 to 1914 and Alabama for the 1916–17 season, tallying a career college basketball record of 18–23. In addition, he served as the athletic director at Idaho from 1920 to 1922.

Kelley played college football as a tackle at the University of Chicago under head coach Amos Alonzo Stagg.

In 1915 at Alabama, Kelley coached only the first half of season (4–0) before he came down with typhoid fever. Athletic director B. L. Noojin and former Alabama quarterback Farley Moody took over the head coaching duties for the remaining four games of the season. The 2–2 mark achieved in Kelly's absence is still credited to his record at Alabama of 17–7–1.

Kelley served in the U.S. Army in World War I and returned to coaching as an assistant at Missouri in 1919. He moved west in 1920 and accepted the dual position of athletic director and head football coach at Idaho; under his leadership the Vandals were admitted to the Pacific Coast Conference in 1922. After two years in Moscow, Kelley accepted the position of head football coach at Missouri in June 1922 at a salary of $4,500 per year, but resigned prior to the completion of his first season.


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