George W. Bryant

George W. Bryant (June 9, 1873 – May 6, 1947) was an American college sports coach, administrator, and professor. He served as head football coach at the Virginia Military Institute (VMI) in Lexington, Virginia from 1895 to 1896, and at Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa from 1899 to 1913, compiling a career college football record of 53–70–9.[2] Bryant died at the age of 73, on May 6, 1947, at a hospital in Cedar Rapids.[3]

George W. Bryant
Biographical details
Born(1873-06-09)June 9, 1873
Jersey City, New Jersey
DiedMay 6, 1947(1947-05-06) (aged 73)
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Alma materPrinceton University[1]
Playing career
Football
c. 1894Coe
Baseball
c. 1894Coe
Position(s)End, halback (football)
Catcher (baseball)
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1895–1896VMI
1899–1913Coe
Basketball
1900–1904Coe
1905–1911Coe
Track
?–1930Coe
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1899–1914Coe
Head coaching record
Overall53–70–9 (football)
35–49 (basketball)

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall ConferenceStanding Bowl/playoffs
VMI Keydets (Independent) (1895–1896)
1895 VMI 5–1
1896 VMI 3–4
VMI: 8–5
Total:53–70–9
gollark: I would look it up, except I have no idea what search queries to try.
gollark: The thing I was looking at involved sticking somewhat general-purpose computers into the RAM chips, not just having dedicated analog computers for things.
gollark: I've heard about more general ways to achieve similar sorts of thing, like sticking HBM stuff onto GPUs and some computing-in-memory thing.
gollark: And brains are annoying to do things with since they're not understood very well and can't be copied/run in simulation very easily.
gollark: Running neural nets in analog hardware would also be kind of disadvantageous, since you couldn't then copy them very easily or run them on new stuff.

References

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