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Pepper Rodgers

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Sport(s)
  
Football

1958–1959
  
Air Force (assistant)

1965–1966
  
UCLA (assistant)

Name
  
Pepper Rodgers

Spouse
  
Janet Lake (m. 1975)

1951–1953
  
Georgia Tech

1960–1964
  
Florida (assistant)

1967–1970
  
Kansas

Role
  
American football player

Positions
  
Quarterback, Placekicker

Pepper Rodgers graphicsfansonlycomphotosschoolsgeotsportsm
Born
  
October 8, 1931 (age 92) Atlanta, Georgia (
1931-10-08
)

Education
  
Georgia Institute of Technology

Books
  
Fourth and Long Gone, Installing Football's Wishbone T Attack

Similar People
  
Janet Lake, Michael Oher, John Lee Hancock, Robert Dix

Pepper Rodgers Show - Memphis Showboats USFL


Franklin C. "Pepper" Rodgers (born October 8, 1931) is a former American football player and coach. He served as the head coach at the University of Kansas (1967–1970), University of California, Los Angeles (1971–1973), and the Georgia Institute of Technology (1974–1979), compiling a career college football record of 73–65–3. Rodgers was also the head coach of the United States Football League's Memphis Showboats from 1984 to 1985 and of the Canadian Football League's Memphis Mad Dogs in 1995. He also served as the Washington Redskins director of football from 2001 to 2004. At 69, he was considered for the Redskins' head coaching position before Norv Turner's eventual firing during the 2000 season.

Rodgers played college football at Georgia Tech, where he was a member of the Yellow Jackets' 1952 national championship team as a backup quarterback and placekicker. As a coach, he led the Kansas Jayhawks to a share of the Big Eight Conference title in 1968, the program's most recent conference championship. With the Memphis Showboats of the USFL, Rodgers was the first professional coach of future Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive end Reggie White.

Rodgers is the author of Fourth and Long Gone, a fictional book published in 1985 that is a bawdy roman a clef of his experiences as a college football coach and recruiter. He also wrote an autobiography: Pepper, written with Al Thomy. Rodgers graduated from Georgia Tech in 1955.

References

Pepper Rodgers Wikipedia