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Charlie Bachman
American football player, head coach

Charlie Bachman

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American football player, head coach
A.K.A.
Charles William Bachman, Jr.
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Chicago
Place of death
Port Charlotte
Age
93 years
Family
Children:
Charles Bachman
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Charles William Bachman, Jr. (December 1, 1892 – December 14, 1985) was an American college football player and head coach. Bachman was an Illinois native and an alumnus of the University of Notre Dame, where he played college football. He served as the head football coach of Northwestern University, Kansas State College, the University of Florida, Michigan State College, and Hillsdale College. Bachman was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1978.

Early life and education

Bachman was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1892. He received his high school education at Inglewood High School in Chicago, where he was standout athlete in football and track and field. Bachman attended the University of Notre Dame from 1914 to 1916, and played for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team alongside Knute Rockne. He was named an All-American at guard in 1916, making Walter Camp's second team. Bachman briefly held the world record in the discus throw during the spring of 1917, and spent the 1917 fall season helping to coach the football team at DePauw University. In 1918, Bachman returned to the field, playing center for the legendary U.S. Navy team at Great Lakes Naval Station. The Great Lakes team posted a 7–0–2 record; it beat Navy, Illinois and Purdue, tied Bachman's former Notre Dame team, and defeated Mare Island Marine Base in the Rose Bowl. His Great Lakes teammates included Paddy Driscoll and George Halas.

Coaching career

In 1919, at age 26, Bachman began his head coaching career at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. Bachman brought a number of former players returning from World War I military service to Northwestern, but his team posted a disappointing 2–5 record. He moved on to Kansas State College in Manhattan, Kansas following this season, and the losing record proved to be an aberration; from 1920 to 1927, Bachman posted a record of 33–23–9 at Kansas State. In 1924, Bachman's K-State team beat the University of Kansas for the first time in eighteen years. Bachman coached Kansas State's first All-American, and under his leadership the school also permanently returned to its former nickname of Wildcats and began using a live bobcat as a mascot.

Bachman accepted the head coaching position at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida in 1928, where he posted an 8–1 record his first season, the best in the Florida Gators' history up to that time. The 1928 Gators' sole loss came in their final game of the season, a disappointing 12–13 upset by Robert Neyland's 8–0–1 Tennessee Volunteers in Knoxville. While at Florida, Bachman coached the Gators' first first-team All-American, Hall of Fame end Dale Van Sickel, in 1928 and 1929. He also led the 1929 Gators in their first major intersectional match-up, a "neutral site" game in Miami against John McEwan's 7–2 Oregon Ducks football team, with the Gators coming away with the 20–6 victory. Bachman's first two seasons with the Gators were his most successful, but he continued to lead the Gators Eleven for five seasons, posting an overall record of 27–18–3. Dashwood Hicks, a lineman for the Gators in 1928, said "I've never seen a man eat and sleep football like Bachman. He couldn't sit down and talk without drawing plays or something."

Bachman left Florida to become the head football coach of Michigan State College in East Lansing, Michigan, coaching from 1933 to 1942 and from 1944 to 1946. Similar to the situation he inherited at Kansas State, Michigan State had not beaten the University of Michigan for eighteen years (1916–1933), but under Bachman, Michigan State defeated Michigan four consecutive seasons (1934–1937). Bachman's overall record at Michigan State was 70–34–10. His Spartan teams were also notable because he outfitted them in gold and black uniforms instead of the official school colors of green and white.

In 1953, Bachman was named the head football coach at Hillsdale College in Hillsdale, Michigan. He held that position for one season, posting a record of 5–3–2.

Coaching tree

  • Joe Bedenk: assistant for Florida (1927–1930), head coach for Penn State (1949).
  • Goof Bowyer: played for Florida (1926–1928), head coach for Florida Southern (1931–1932).
  • Ben Clemons: played for Florida (1928–1931), assistant for Florida (1933–1935).
  • Brady Cowell: played for Kansas State (1919–1921), assistant for Florida (1924–1932), head coach for Stetson (1935–1948).
  • Ray D. Hahn: played for Kansas State (1920–1922), head coach for South Dakota Mines (1929–1934), Betheny (1938–1956).
  • Nash Higgins: assistant for Florida (1927–1933), head coach for Tampa (1933–1940).
  • Joe Holsinger: played for Kansas State (1925–1927), assistant for Florida (1928–1932), Wisconsin (1933–1934), Michigan State (1939–1945).
  • Albert Kawal: assistant for Michigan State (1941–1943; 1946), head coach for Drake (1947–1948), Temple (1949–1954).
  • Al Kircher: played for Michigan State (1931–1933), assistant for Michigan State (1939–1949), head coach for Washington State (1952–1955).
  • Alvin Pierson: assistant for Florida (1927–1932), Tampa (1933–1940), head coach for Fresno State (1945; 1949).
  • Tom Sebring: played for Kansas State (1921–1922), head coach for Florida (1925–1927).
  • Dutch Stanley: played for Florida (1926–1928), head coach for Florida (1933–1935)
  • James Van Fleet: assistant for Kansas State (1920).

Life after football

Bachman was inducted into the University of Florida Athletic Hall of Fame as an "honorary letter winner" in 1971, and later, the College Football Hall of Fame in 1978. He died in Port Charlotte, Florida in 1985; he was 93 years old. Bachman was survived by his wife Grace and their three sons, including noted software engineer Charles W. Bachman.

Head coaching record

YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffs
Northwestern Purple (Big Ten Conference) (1919)
1919Northwestern2–51–4T–7th
Northwestern:2–51–4
Kansas State Wildcats (Missouri Valley Conference) (1920–1927)
1920Kansas State3–3–30–3–18th
1921Kansas State5–34–2T–2nd
1922Kansas State5–1–23–1–23rd
1923Kansas State4–2–22–2–25th
1924Kansas State3–4–11–4–18th
1925Kansas State5–2–13–2–1T–3rd
1926Kansas State5–32–2T–6th
1927Kansas State3–52–48th
Kansas State:33–23–917–20–7
Florida Gators (Southern Conference) (1928–1932)
1928Florida8–16–13rd
1929Florida8–26–14th
1930Florida6–3–14–2–17th
1931Florida2–6–22–4–215th
1932Florida3–61–620th
Florida:27–18–319–14–3
Michigan State Spartans (Independent) (1933–1946)
1933Michigan State4–2–2
1934Michigan State8–1
1935Michigan State6–2
1936Michigan State6–1–2
1937Michigan State8–2L Orange
1938Michigan State6–3
1939Michigan State4–4–1
1940Michigan State3–4–1
1941Michigan State5–3–1
1942Michigan State4–3–2
1942Michigan State4–3–2
1942Michigan State4–3–2
1943No team—World War II
1945Michigan State5–3–1
1946Michigan State5–5
Michigan State:70–34–10
Hillsdale Chargers (Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association) (1953)
1953Hillsdale5–3–2
Hillsdale:5–3–2
Total:137–83–24

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