Hall of Fame
Glenn "Pop" Warner helped fashion football in many ways.
Consider the facts: he was the first to coach the dummy-
scrimmage; he introduced the practice of numbering plays; he
was the first to teach the spiral punt and one of the first to
advocate the spiral pass; he was the first to use the football
huddle; he invented the double-wing formation, with an
unbalanced line for more blocking strength. From 1895
through 1938, his teams at Georgia, Cornell, Carlisle,
Pittsburgh, Stanford and Temple rolled to a combined record
of 319-106-32. He had 47 players selected to the All-
America football team, including the legendary Jim Thorpe.
What else did Warner come up with during his illustrious
career? How about mousetrap plays, the screen pass, the
rolling block, the naked reverse, hidden-ball plays, series
plays, the unbalanced line and backfield. All came from
Warner's fertile and imaginative mind. He also left another
kind of legacy: "You cannot play two kinds of football at once,
dirty and good.... You play the way you practice. Practice
right...and you will react right." Glenn Scobey Warner was
born April 5, 1871, in Springville, New York. He enrolled at
Cornell University and, as the oldest freshman, was given the
nickname "Pop". He played guard on the football team 1892-94.
He died Sept. 7, 1954. A national network of football leagues
for junior players was named for him. In 1997 the U.S. Postal
Service issued a 32-cent Pop Warner stamp.