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Hobbs Adams

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Sport(s)
  
Football, baseball

1935–1939
  
USC (assistant)

Died
  
September 24, 2002

Position(s)
  
End (football)

Role
  
American football player

1924–1925
  
USC

Name
  
Hobbs Adams

1923–1925
  
USC

1940–1941
  
Kansas State


Born
  
November 2, 1902 San Diego, California (
1902-11-02
)

Education
  
University of Southern California

John Hobbs Adams (November 2, 1902 – September 24, 2002) was an American football player and coach. He served two tenures as football coach for the Kansas State Wildcats (separated by his service in World War II) and also coached high school football in San Diego.

Contents

Playing career

Adams grew up in San Diego and attended San Diego High School, where he starred in football, baseball, basketball and track, before graduating in 1922. Adams went on to play at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles where he captained the 1925 Trojan football team and also played baseball.

While playing on the USC football team in 1924, he was a key player that helped the team defeat Syracuse by score of 16–0, where future Kansas State head coach Pappy Waldorf was playing (Adams would later hold the head coaching position at Kansas State).

Assistant coaching

Prior to coaching at Kansas State, Adams was an assistant coach at the University of Southern California (USC) for five seasons under Howard Jones.

Kansas State

Adams was the 18th head football coach for the Kansas State Wildcats in Manhattan, Kansas and he held that position for three seasons: 1940, 1941, and then again in 1946 (Ward Haylett and Lud Fiser were head coaches from 1942 through 1945). His overall coaching record at Kansas State was 4–21–2. The bright spots in his coaching career included a 1940 victory over the cross-state rival Kansas Jayhawks by a score of 20–0 and a 12–6 victory in the 1941 season over the Nebraska Cornhuskers.

References

Hobbs Adams Wikipedia