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W. A. Cunningham

W. A. Cunningham
Sport(s) Football, basketball
Biographical details
Born (1886-07-09)July 9, 1886
Nashville, Tennessee
Died August 15, 1958(1958-08-15) (aged 72)
Atlanta, Georgia
Alma mater Vanderbilt University
Playing career
Football
1906 Vanderbilt
Position(s) End
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1910–1919 Georgia
1921 SMU
Basketball
1910–1911 Georgia
1916–1917 Georgia
Head coaching record
Overall 44–24–10 (football)
10–6 (basketball)

William Alexander Cunningham (July 9, 1886 – August 15, 1958) was an American football and basketball coach. He served as the head football coach at the University of Georgia from 1910 to 1919 and as co-head football coach at Southern Methodist University (SMU) in 1921 with Victor Kelly and J. Burton Rix, compiling a career college football record of 44–24–10. Cunningham was also the head basketball coach at Georgia (1910–1911, 1916–1917), tallying a mark of 10–6.

Cunningham was the 14th head football coach at the University of Georgia and brought both continuity and success to the team. In the 18 years of the Georgia Bulldogs football program at prior to his arrival, the team had 13 different head coaches with no head coach serving for more than three years. Cunningham was a graduate of Vanderbilt University and gained football experience under longtime Vanderbilt Commodores football head coach Dan McGugin. Cunningham wan active member of the Sigma Chi Fraternity's Alpha Psi chapter as an undergraduate at Vanderbilt and the Delta chapter at Georgia during law school. He was a faculty advisor for the Delta chapter during his coaching career at Georgia.

Cunningham came to the attention of Steadman Vincent Sanford, then the athletic director at Georgia, when the baseball team that Cunningham was coaching, Gordon Military Institute, was playing at the Bulldogs. Sanford had a conversation with Cunningham and presented him with a $1,350 contract on the spot. Bob McWhorter followed his coach to Georgia.

During Cunningham's ten-year tenure as head football coach at Georgia, the Bulldogs only played eight seasons, disbanding the team in 1917 and 1918 as a result of World War I, but his teams produced seven winning seasons, two more than in the first 18 years of the program's history before Cunningham took the reins. Cunningham compiled a 43–18–9 coaching record at Georgia. He also coached Georgia's first All-American, McWhorter, and George "Kid" Woodruff, who assumed the head coaching duties at Georgia in 1923.


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