Lewie Hardage
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lewie_Hardage an entity of type: Thing
Lewis Woolford Hardage (February 11, 1891 – August 29, 1973) was an American college football player and college football and baseball coach. Hardage was an All-Southern halfback every year he played: 1908, 1909, 1911, and 1912—the first two for Mike Donahue's Auburn Tigers of Auburn University and the latter two for Dan McGugin's Vanderbilt Commodores of Vanderbilt University. Sportswriter and historian Fuzzy Woodruff dubbed him "one of the most brilliant and famous ever to run across limed lines in the South" and the South's "fastest back of the 1910-1920 decade."
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Lewie Hardage
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Lewie Hardage
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Oklahoma
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Mercer
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Lewie Hardage
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1973-08-29
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1891-02-11
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8545698
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1111816308
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1913
1932
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1912
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Third-team All-American
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Morgan County Sports Hall of Fame
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One of coach Dan McGugin's six best players
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1891-02-11
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Hardage at Oklahoma
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1973-08-29
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Bethel Wildcats
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Bethel
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coach
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Lewis Woolford Hardage (February 11, 1891 – August 29, 1973) was an American college football player and college football and baseball coach. Hardage was an All-Southern halfback every year he played: 1908, 1909, 1911, and 1912—the first two for Mike Donahue's Auburn Tigers of Auburn University and the latter two for Dan McGugin's Vanderbilt Commodores of Vanderbilt University. Sportswriter and historian Fuzzy Woodruff dubbed him "one of the most brilliant and famous ever to run across limed lines in the South" and the South's "fastest back of the 1910-1920 decade." Hardage served as the head football coach at Mercer University in 1913 and the University of Oklahoma from 1932 to 1934, compiling a career college football head coaching record of 13–17–5. He was later the head baseball coach at the University of Florida from 1937 to 1939, tallying a mark of 35–24–1. Hardage also had stints at the head football coach at The McCallie School in Chattanooga, Tennessee from 1915 to 1917 and Gordon Military College—now known as Gordon State College—in Barnesville, Georgia in 1921. He spent ten seasons, from 1922 to 1931, as the backfield coach at his alma mater, Vanderbilt.
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1932
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T–2nd
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T–16th
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1934
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single
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Football
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1908
1911
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22267
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13–17–5 (college football)
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35–24–1 (college baseball)