*** Welcome to piglix ***

Warren Steller

Warren Steller
Warren Steller.jpg
Sport(s) Football, basketball, baseball
Biographical details
Born (1897-10-08)October 8, 1897
Died August 6, 1974(1974-08-06) (aged 76)
Playing career
Football
1917 Oberlin
1919 Oberlin
Basketball
1917–1918 Oberlin
Baseball
c. 1918 Oberlin
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1924–1934 Bowling Green State Normal
Basketball
1922–1923 Wesleyan
1924–1925 Bowling Green State Normal
Baseball
1923 Wesleyan
1925 Bowling Green State Normal
1928–1959 Bowling Green State Normal
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1924–1941 Bowling Green State Normal
Head coaching record
Overall 40–21–19 (football)
18–12 (basketball)
228–164 (baseball)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Football
3 Northwestern Ohio IAA (1925, 1928–1929)

Warren Steller (October 8, 1897 – August 6, 1974) was an American football, basketball, and baseball player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Bowling Green State Normal Schoo—now known as Bowling Green State University—from 1924 to 1934, compiling a record of 40–21–19. Steller was also the head basketball coach at Wesleyan University in 1922–23 and at Bowling Green in 1924–25, tallying a career college basketball mark of 18–12. In addition, he was the head baseball coach at Wesleyan in 1923 and at Bowling Green in 1925 and again from 1928 to 1959, amassing a career college football record of 228–164. Steller attended Oberlin College, where he played football, basketball, and baseball, and is considered one of the finest athletes ever to play for the Yeoman. In 1921, the Oberlin football team beat Ohio State, 7–6, the last time an intrastate opponent beat Ohio State. Steller scored the winning touchdown. In 1965, Bowling Green renamed its baseball stadium Warren E. Steller Field in dedication to the former coach.

In 1921, Oberlin's football team beat Ohio State, 7–6, at Columbus. The Ohio State team had gone to the Rose Bowl the previous season. That was the last time an intrastate team beat Ohio State. Steller scored the winning touchdown after the team made an 85-yard march down the field in the third quarter, culminating in a short pass across the goal line and a point-after. Ohio State's coach, John Wilce, was so upset by the loss that he made his squad stay on the field after the game for a special practice session.

Steller's 1944 baseball team at Bowling Green was Ohio college champions.


...
Wikipedia

...