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Definition of Football coach
1. Noun. A coach of football players.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Football Coach
Literary usage of Football coach
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sunset by Southern Pacific Company, Southern Pacific Company. Passenger Dept (1914)
"... football coach, who has piloted nine different teams to championships in as
... football a football coach, one of the most interesting men in the game. ..."
2. American Physical Education Review by American Physical Education Association (1905)
"You have probably all heard of the $5000 salary paid to a college football coach
for ten weeks' services. There are several colleges that pay $3000 to their ..."
3. Football for Public and Player by Herbert Reed (1913)
"While it does not follow that a great football coach might have been a Napoleon,
I am convinced that the Little Corporal could have been a mighty football ..."
4. "The Kentuckian" by Isaac Marshall Page (1906)
"FAMES HOLLAND YALE, '99, the football coach Herbert Cox. CHARLEY WILLIAMS, his
son from West Point, who returns home for the annual football game GUS ..."
5. Teaching the Common Branches: A Textbook for Teachers of Rural and Graded by Werrett Wallace Charters (1913)
"If a football coach does not put snap into his team, it is beaten and he ...
It would be better for him if he were in the limelight like a football coach. ..."
6. Our Navy in the War by Lawrence Perry (1918)
"In the Fifth District, Doctor Charles M. Wharton, of Philadelphia, a prominent
neurologist and University of Pennsylvania football coach, took charge late ..."