Dutch Bergman Bergman in 1927 |
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| Born | (1895-02-23)February 23, 1895 Peru, Indiana, U.S. |
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| Died | August 18, 1972(1972-08-18) (aged 77) Washington, D.C., U.S. |
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| 1915–1916, 1919 | Notre Dame |
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| Position | Halfback |
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| 1920–1922 | New Mexico A&M |
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| 1924–1926 | Dayton (assistant) |
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| 1927–1929 | Minnesota (assistant) |
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| 1930–1940 | Catholic University |
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| 1943 | Washington Redskins |
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| 1920–1922 | New Mexico A&M |
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| 1928–1930 | Minnesota |
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| 1921–1923 | New Mexico A&M |
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| Overall | 71–36–5 (college football) 6–3–1 (NFL) 12–5 (college basketball) 27–34–1 (college baseball) |
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| Bowls | 1–0–1 |
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Arthur J. "Dutch" Bergman (February 23, 1895 – August 18, 1972) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at the New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, now New Mexico State University, from 1920 to 1922[1] and at The Catholic University of America from 1930 to 1940, compiling a career college football record of 71–36–5. Bergman was the head coach of the National Football League's Washington Redskins for one season in 1943, tallying a mark of 6–3–1.
During his tenure, the Cardinals went 59–31–4, including a victory in the 1936 Orange Bowl and a tie in the 1940 Sun Bowl. Bergman left the university when the sport was discontinued in 1941 because of World War II, later coaching the Washington Redskins to the 1943 NFL Championship Game, which they lost to the Chicago Bears.
Bergman is still the winningest varsity football coach in Catholic University history and was inducted into their Hall of Fame in 1982.
Head coaching record
| Year
|
Team
|
Overall
|
Conference |
Standing
|
Bowl/playoffs
|
| New Mexico A&M Aggies (Independent) (1920–1922)
|
| 1920
|
New Mexico A&M
|
5–1–1 |
|
|
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| 1921
|
New Mexico A&M
|
2–2 |
|
|
|
| 1922
|
New Mexico A&M
|
5–2 |
|
|
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| New Mexico A&M:
|
12–5–1 |
|
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| Catholic University Cardinals (Independent) (1930–1940)
|
| 1930
|
Catholic University
|
1–8 |
|
|
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| 1931
|
Catholic University
|
8–1 |
|
|
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| 1932
|
Catholic University
|
6–1–1 |
|
|
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| 1933
|
Catholic University
|
6–3 |
|
|
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| 1934
|
Catholic University
|
4–3–1 |
|
|
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| 1935
|
Catholic University
|
8–1 |
|
|
W Orange
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| 1936
|
Catholic University
|
4–4 |
|
|
|
| 1937
|
Catholic University
|
5–3 |
|
|
|
| 1938
|
Catholic University
|
5–3 |
|
|
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| 1939
|
Catholic University
|
8–1–1 |
|
|
T Sun
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| 1940
|
Catholic University
|
4–3–1 |
|
|
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| Catholic University:
|
59–31–4 |
|
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| Total: |
71–36–5 |
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NFL
| Team |
Year |
Regular season |
Postseason
|
| Won |
Lost |
Ties |
Win % |
Finish |
Won |
Lost |
Win % |
Result
|
| WAS |
1943
|
6 |
3 |
1 |
.650 |
1st in NFL Eastern |
1 |
1 |
.500 |
Lost to Chicago Bears in NFL Championship Game
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References
External links
|
|---|
- 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– )
|
New Mexico State Aggies men's basketball head coaches |
|---|
- No coach (1904–1906)
- John O. Miller (1906–1908)
- V. Kays (1908–1909)
- George Lain (1909–1910)
- Art Badenoch (1910–1913)
- No team (1913–1914)
- Clarence W. Russell (1914–1917)
- John G. Griffith (1917–1920)
- Dutch Bergman (1920–1922)
- R. R. Brown (1922–1926)
- Arthur Burkholder (1926–1927)
- Ted Coffman (1927–1929)
- Jerry Hines (1929–1940)
- Julius H. Johnston (1940–1942)
- No team (1942–1944)
- Kermit Laabs (1944–1946)
- Jerry Hines (1946–1947)
- John Gunn (1947–1949)
- George McCarty (1949–1953)
- Presley Askew (1953–1965)
- Jim McGregor (1965–1966)
- Lou Henson (1966–1975)
- Ken Hayes (1975–1979)
- Weldon Drew (1979–1985)
- Neil McCarthy (1985–1997)
- Lou Henson (1997–2005)
- Tony Stubblefield # (2005)
- Reggie Theus (2005–2007)
- Marvin Menzies (2007–2016)
- Paul Weir (2016–2017)
- Chris Jans (2017–2022)
- Greg Heiar (2022–2023)
- Jason Hooten (2023– )
# denotes interim head coach
|
New Mexico State Aggies athletic directors |
|---|
- B. P. Fleming (1902–1908)
- John O. Miller (1910–1911)
- Art Badenoch (1911–1914)
- Clarence W. Russell (1914–1918)
- John G. Griffith (1918–1921)
- Dutch Bergman (1921–1923)
- R. R. Brown (1923–1927)
- Ted Coffman (1927–1929)
- Jerry Hines (1929–1940)
- Kermit Laabs (1940–1946)
- Jerry Hines (1946–1947)
- Raymond A. Curfman (1947–1949)
- Vaughn Corley (1949–1951)
- George McCarty (1951–1953)
- Presley Askew (1953–1958)
- Warren B. Woodson (1958–1967)
- Lou Henson (1967–1975)
- Keith Colson (1975–1986)
- Al Gonzales (1986–1997)
- Jim Paul (1997–1999)
- Brian Faison (1999–2004)
- McKinley Boston (2004–2014)
- Mario Moccia (2015–2025)
- Amber Burdge # (2025– )
# denotes interim athletic director
|
|
|---|
- James Johnson (1910)
- J. J. McDade (1911)
- Harry McDevitt (1912)
- Ed Greer (1913)
- John Madden (1914)
- Fred K. Nielsen (1915–1916)
- No team (1917–1918)
- Tom Tracey (1919)
- Harry Robb (1920–1921)
- Jim Dooley (1922)
- Tom Gormley (1923–1924)
- John B. McAuliffe (1925–1929)
- Dutch Bergman (1930–1940)
- No team (1941–1946)
- Gene Augusterfer (1947)
- Tom Chisari (1948)
- Jan Jankowski (1949–1950)
- No team (1951–1964)
- Ron McManes (1965)
- Joe Glodeck (1966)
- Bill Daley (1967–1968)
- Todd Gabbett (1969–1970)
- Dave Veshosky (1971)
- Joe Pascale (1972–1973)
- R. J. Skelley (1974)
- Joe Pascale (1975–1984)
- Ro Waldron (1985–1986)
- Fred O'Connor (1987–1989)
- Rick Novak (1990–1993)
- Tom Clark (1994–2000)
- Rob Ambrose (2001)
- Tom Mulholland (2002–2003)
- Tom Clark (2004–2005)
- Dave Dunn (2006–2015)
- Bill Bachman (2016)
- Mike Gutelius (2017–2019)
- No team (2020)
- Mike Gutelius (2021– )
|
Washington Commanders head coaches |
|---|
Formerly the Boston Braves (1932), Boston Redskins (1933–1936), Washington Redskins (1937–2019), and Washington Football Team (2020–2021) |
- Lud Wray (1932)
- William Henry Dietz (1933–1934)
- Eddie Casey (1935)
- Ray Flaherty (1936–1942)
- Dutch Bergman (1943)
- Dudley DeGroot (1944–1945)
- Turk Edwards (1946–1948)
- John Whelchel (1949)
- Herman Ball (1949–1951)
- Dick Todd # (1951)
- Curly Lambeau (1952–1953)
- Joe Kuharich (1954–1958)
- Mike Nixon (1959–1960)
- Bill McPeak (1961–1965)
- Otto Graham (1966–1968)
- Vince Lombardi (1969)
- Bill Austin (1970)
- George Allen (1971–1977)
- Jack Pardee (1978–1980)
- Joe Gibbs (1981–1992)
- Richie Petitbon (1993)
- Norv Turner (1994–2000)
- Terry Robiskie # (2000)
- Marty Schottenheimer (2001)
- Steve Spurrier (2002–2003)
- Joe Gibbs (2004–2007)
- Jim Zorn (2008–2009)
- Mike Shanahan (2010–2013)
- Jay Gruden (2014–2019)
- Bill Callahan # (2019)
- Ron Rivera (2020–2023)
- Dan Quinn (2024–present)
# denotes interim status
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- Head coach: Knute Rockne
- Assistant coach: Gus Dorais
*selected national champion by NCF
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