Anthony Savage Savage pictured as a senior in Tyee 1915, Washington yearbook |
|
| Born | (1893-12-25)December 25, 1893 Buck Mountain, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
|---|
| Died | January 1970 (aged 76) Seattle, Washington, U.S. |
|---|
|
|
| 1914 | Washington |
|---|
|
| 1911–1915 | Washington |
|---|
|
| 1914 | Washington |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Position | End |
|---|
|
|
| 1918 | Washington |
|---|
| 1919 | New Mexico A&M |
|---|
|
| 1913–1915 | Washington |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
| Overall | 3–4–1 (football) 24–2 (basketball) |
|---|
Anthony Savage (December 25, 1893 – January 1970) was an American college football and college basketball player and coach. He served as the head football coach at University of Washington in 1918 and at New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts—now known as New Mexico State University—in 1919, compiling a career college football head coaching record of 3–4–1. Savage played basketball at Washington from 1911 to 1915 and also coached the team for two seasons, from 1913 to 1915. He also played on the Washington baseball and football teams in 1914.[1] He was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity, Kappa Epsilon chapter (UW). He attended the 1914 DKE Convention in New Orleans, LA, where he received an award for having traveled the farthest to attend that convention. Savage was the older brother of another football coach, Joe Savage.
Savage return to the University of Washington in 1922 as a freshman coach.[2]
Head coaching record
| Year
|
Team
|
Overall
|
Conference |
Standing
|
Bowl/playoffs
|
| Washington (Pacific Coast Conference) (1918)
|
| 1918
|
Washington
|
1–1 |
1–1 |
3rd |
|
| Washington:
|
1–1 |
1–1 |
|
| New Mexico A&M Aggies (Independent) (1919)
|
| 1919
|
New Mexico A&M
|
2–3–1 |
|
|
|
| New Mexico A&M:
|
2–3–1 |
|
|
| Total: |
3–4–1 |
|
References
Links to related articles |
|---|
Washington Huskies men's basketball head coaches |
|---|
- No coach (1895–1896)
- No team (1896–1898)
- No coach (1898–1899)
- No team (1899–1901)
- No coach (1901–1905)
- No team (1905–1908)
- David Hall (1908–1910)
- Warner Williams (1910–1911)
- Oscar Olson (1911–1913)
- Anthony Savage (1913–1915)
- John Davidson (1915–1917)
- Claude J. Hunt (1917–1919)
- Stub Allison (1919–1920)
- Hec Edmundson (1920–1947)
- Art McLarney (1947–1950)
- Tippy Dye (1950–1959)
- John Grayson (1959–1963)
- Mac Duckworth (1963–1968)
- Tex Winter (1968–1971)
- Marv Harshman (1971–1985)
- Andy Russo (1985–1989)
- Lynn Nance (1989–1993)
- Bob Bender (1993–2002)
- Lorenzo Romar (2002–2017)
- Mike Hopkins (2017–2024)
- Danny Sprinkle (2024– )
|
|
|---|
- No coach (1889–1890)
- No team (1891)
- W. B. Goodwin (1892–1893)
- Charles Cobb (1894)
- Ralph Nichols (1895–1896)
- Carl L. Clemans (1897)
- Ralph Nichols (1898)
- A. S. Jeffs (1899)
- J. S. Dodge (1900)
- Jack Wright (1901)
- James Knight (1902–1904)
- Oliver Cutts (1905)
- Victor M. Place (1906–1907)
- Gil Dobie (1908–1916)
- Claude J. Hunt (1917)
- Anthony Savage (1918)
- Claude J. Hunt (1919)
- Stub Allison (1920)
- Enoch Bagshaw (1921–1929)
- James Phelan (1930–1941)
- Ralph Welch (1942–1947)
- Howie Odell (1948–1952)
- John Cherberg (1953–1955)
- Darrell Royal (1956)
- Jim Owens (1957–1974)
- Don James (1975–1992)
- Jim Lambright (1993–1998)
- Rick Neuheisel (1999–2002)
- Keith Gilbertson (2003–2004)
- Tyrone Willingham (2005–2008)
- Steve Sarkisian (2009–2013)
- Marques Tuiasosopo # (2013)
- Chris Petersen (2014–2019)
- Jimmy Lake (2020–2021)
- Bob Gregory # (2021)
- Kalen DeBoer (2022–2023)
- Jedd Fisch (2024– )
# denotes interim head coach
|
|
|---|
- William M. Clute (1893)
- No team (1894)
- Alfred Holt (1895)
- No coach (1896)
- Charles M. Barber (1897–1898)
- John O. Miller (1899)
- William A. Sutherland (1900)
- John O. Miller (1901–1907)
- William G. Hummell (1908)
- John H. Squires (1909)
- Art Badenoch (1910–1913)
- Clarence W. Russell (1914–1916)
- John G. Griffith (1917)
- No team (1918)
- Anthony Savage (1919)
- Dutch Bergman (1920–1922)
- R. R. Brown (1923–1925)
- Arthur Burkholder (1926)
- Ted Coffman (1927–1928)
- Jerry Hines (1929–1939)
- Julius H. Johnston (1940–1942)
- Maurice Moulder (1943)
- No team (1944–1945)
- Raymond A. Curfman (1946–1947)
- Vaughn Corley (1948–1950)
- Joseph T. Coleman (1951–1952)
- James Patton (1953–1954)
- Tony Cavallo (1955–1957)
- Warren B. Woodson (1958–1967)
- Jim Wood (1968–1972)
- Jim Bradley (1973–1977)
- Gil Krueger (1978–1982)
- Fred Zechman (1983–1985)
- Mike Knoll (1986–1989)
- Jim Hess (1990–1996)
- Tony Samuel (1997–2004)
- Hal Mumme (2005–2008)
- DeWayne Walker (2009–2012)
- Doug Martin (2013–2021)
- Jerry Kill (2022–2023)
- Tony Sanchez (2024– )
|
1915 Helms Foundation NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans |
|---|
|
|