Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Claude E Thornhill

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Sport(s)
  
Football

1920
  
Buffalo All-Americans

Positions
  
Tackle, Guard

1920
  
Cleveland Tigers

Role
  
American football player

1917–1919
  
Massillon Tigers

Name
  
Claude Thornhill

1913–1916
  
Pittsburgh

1917
  
Pittsburgh (assistant)


Born
  
April 14, 1893 Richmond, Virginia (
1893-04-14
)

Died
  
June 30, 1956, Berkeley, California, United States

Claude Earl "Tiny" Thornhill (April 14, 1893 – June 30, 1956) was an All-American college football player at Pittsburgh and the head football coach at Stanford from 1933 to 1939.

Contents

Playing career

Thornhill played college football at the University of Pittsburgh under legendary coach Glenn "Pop" Warner. An All-American guard and tackle, Thornhill was given the ironic nickname "Tiny" due to his imposing size. Following his graduation from Pitt, Tiny became an assistant coach to Pop Warner but left midway through the season to play pro football with the Massillon Tigers, with teammates that included Knute Rockne, Jock Sutherland, Gus Dorais, Bob Higgins, and Bob Peck. He also played in the first-ever National Football League season in 1920 for the Cleveland Tigers and Buffalo All-Americans.

Coaching career

After leaving pro football, Thornhill returned to Pitt as an assistant coach to Warner. In 1922, Warner accepted the head coaching position at Stanford, but as he had two years to finish his contract at Pitt, sent Thornhill and Andrew Kerr ahead to coach Stanford in preparation of his arrival in 1924.

Thornhill served as offensive line coach under Warner until 1933, when Warner left Stanford to take the head coaching job at Temple University and Thornhill was named head coach. In his first three years, Thornhill's team, which had named itself the Vow Boys due to their promise never to lose to USC, led his Indians to the Rose Bowl each season. Thornhill was the first Stanford coach to lead his team to postseason play in his first three seasons, a feat not matched until David Shaw's 2011 to 2013 teams. Stanford lost Thornhill's first two appearances, but won the 1936 Rose Bowl over SMU, 7–0.

After the first three seasons, Thornhill's teams went steadily downhill, culminating in a 1–7–1 season in 1939, after which Thornhill was fired and replaced by Clark Shaughnessy.

Thornhill died in Berkeley, California in 1956 of a heart ailment. He was inducted into the Beaver County Sports Hall of Fame in 1978.

References

Claude E. Thornhill Wikipedia