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Richard C Nolan

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Sport(s)
  
Football

1940–1941
  
Southwestern (KS)

1935–1939
  
Arkansas City JC


Position(s)
  
Guard

1932–1933
  
Name
  
Richard Nolan

1930–1931
  
Oklahoma Military Academy

Richard C. "Dick" Nolan was an American football coach. He was one of the early adopters of a heavier schedule than his peer schools, playing 12 games a year. He would later use football as a physical fitness tool to develop physical fitness in the United States Navy.

Contents

High school and Junior College

A native of Picher, Oklahoma, Nolan played guard and also served as captain of the Picher Gorillas football team in 1929. After graduating from Picher High School, Nolan was an all-state junior college football player at Oklahoma Military Academy.

Emporia State

After completing his studies at the junior college level, Nolan attended Emporia Teachers College and was named to the All-Kansas football team while playing for that school's program under head coach Fran Welch. Nolan also received a master's degree from Emporia Teachers College.

Arkansas City Junior College

Nolan was the head football coach at Arkansas City Junior College in Arkansas City, Kansas from 1935 to 1939. While at Arkansas City Junior City College, Nolan's teams were undefeated at home for four years. The school has since disbanded its football program.

Southwestern College

In 1940, Nolan was hired by the Southwestern College Moundbuilders as the school's athletic director and head football coach. One newspaper noted that Nolan had his work cut out for him at Southwestern: "Football, however, been on the slide at Winfield since 1934 and Nolan faces a difficult problem of bringing the boys back into the money." Another Kansas newspaper in March 1940 wrote:

"Nolan knows football. Better than that, Nolan knows football players. It is reported that he drove through Frontenac, where every boy is either a potential all state guard or fullback, with an empty car. He left the town, bound for Arkansas City, with players jammed in the seats and standing on the running board."

During Nolan's first year with the Moundbuilders, interest in football grew, as one Kansas newspaper reported: "Football interest continues rampant here. The largest opening crowd in many years saw the Builders play Alva last week."

Nolan was a supporter of a heavier schedule than most schools at the time, choosing to play twelve games in the 1941 regular season when most schools would only play eight. It was not until 2005 that schools would widely pursue twelve games in a regular season.

Nolan was the ninth football coach at the Southwestern and held that position two seasons, from 1940 to 1941. His overall coaching record at Southwestern was 12 wins, 8 losses, and 2 ties.

Military service and football

With the entry of the United States into World War II following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Nolan enlisted in the U.S. Navy. In July 1942, Nolan was assigned along with other athletic coaches to participate in a "physical hardening program" at the Naval Air Corps' pre-flight training program at Gardner Air Base.

In 1944, Nolan was appointed the head football coach for a U.S. Navy football team known as the Norman Navy Zoomers. That year, he coached the Zoomers to a 15-0 victory over the Oklahoma A&M football team that went on to win the Cotton Bowl Classic on January 1, 1945. He continued serving in the Navy after World War II and was the Operations Officer at the Dallas Naval Air Station as of March 1947.

References

Richard C. Nolan Wikipedia


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