James B. Craig

James B. Craig

NFL player
Name=James B. Craig


DateOfBirth=
Birthplace=
DateOfDeath=
Deathplace=
Position=QB and HB
College=University of Michigan, 1911-1913
Awards=All-American, 1913
Honors=
DatabaseFootball=
years=
teams=
CollegeHOF=
HOF=
College coach infobox
Name = James B. Craig


DateOfBirth = c. 1892
Birthplace =
DateOfDeath =
Sport = Football
College = Arkansas
Title = Head coach
CurrentRecord =
OverallRecord = 3-4-0
Awards =
Championships =
CFbDWID =
Player =
Years =
Team =
Position =
Coach = Y
CoachYears = 1919
CoachTeams = Arkansas
FootballHOF =
CollegeHOFID =

James B. “Jimmy” Craig (born c. 1892 in Detroit, Michigan, date of death unknown) was an All American football halfback and quarterback who played with the University of Michigan Wolverines from 1911-1913. He was named an All-American in 1913. He also served as the athletic director and head football coach at the University of Arkansas from 1919-1920.

The Craig brothers: track champions

Before Craig ever played a down for the Wolverines, he established himself as one of the top hurdlers in the country. In a meet against Cornell in March 1911, Craig broke the world indoor record running the convert|49|yd|m|sing=on high hurdles in 5 1-5 seconds. [cite news|title=Cornell Wins But Michigan Smashes Athletic Records|publisher=Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette|date=1911-03-27|accessdate=2007-12-14] And in 1912, Craig won the low hurdles competition in the 1912 Eastern Inter-Collegiate Athletic Association.cite news|title=University Director of Athletics Arrives|publisher=Fayetteville Democrat|date=1919-09-12|accessdate=2007-12-14] cite news|title=The Engineer of High School Athletics|publisher=Gazette-Mail (Charleston, West Virginia)|date=1962-02-04|accessdate=2007-12-14] [cite news|title=Jimmy Craig to Give Orange Stars a Battle|publisher=Syracuse Herald|date=1912-03-22|accessdate=2007-12-14] Craig’s older brother, Ralph Craig, was also a track star at the University of Michigan who went on to win the gold medals in the 100 and 200-meter events at the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm, Sweden.

College football at Michigan

The 1911 season

Craig debuted with the Michigan Wolverines football team in 1911, playing games at both quarterback and halfback. In October 1911, Coach Fielding Yost worked with Craig as a quarterback. Yost reported in early October that he was attaining considerable success with Craig, but he was "far from being a finished performer." Yost noted that Craig was diligent and he "runs the team fast and uses his brains in directing plays." [cite news|title=Wolverine Team Should Be One of Best Eleven: New Players Are Showing Up Particularly Well and Yost Should Have an Extremely Fast line|publisher=Syracuse Herald|date=1911-10-02|accessdate=2007-12-14]

The Wolverines finished the 1911 season with a 5-1-2 record. They started the season with convincing wins against and Case Institute of Technology, 24-0, Michigan Agricultural College, and Ohio State, 19-0, and narrowly beat Vanderbilt, 9-8. After starting the season 4-0, the Wolverines went 1-1-2 in their final four games, including a loss to Cornell and ties with Syracuse and Nebraska.

In the Syracuse game, Craig suffered an injury to his ribs (believed to be torn cartilage) after being “fiercely tackled” and was expected to be unable to play "for an indefinite period." [cite news|title=Get Confidence from Last Game: Jimmy Craig Is Seriously Injured|publisher=Syracuse Herald|date=1911-11-08|accessdate=2007-12-14]

Despite the rib injury, Craig came back to lead the Wolverines to an 11-9 win over Pennsylvania two weeks later. News accounts at the time reported that the "craftiness of Coach Yost and the speed of ‘Jimmy’ Craig" led Michigan to the win in an icy blizzard at Ferry Field.cite news|title=Pennsy Beaten in Close Game: Michigan, Aided Greatly by Craig, Wins by a Margin of Two Points|publisher=The New York Times|date=1911-11-19|accessdate=2007-12-14] cite news| title=Michigan Pulls Game Out of Fire, Defeating Pennsylvania, 11 to 9: Gridiron Dope Generally Upset|publisher=Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette|date=1911-11-19|accessdate=2007-12-14] Late in the game, Craig scored the winning touchdown on a “double pass.” In one of Yost’s “trick plays,” Michigan’s “interference started to the right,” and the ball was then shot to Craig, waiting far to the left. Craig dodged two tacklers, and sprinted convert|26|yd|m for a touchdown. The New York Times and referred to Craig as “Michigan’s offensive and defensive hero” in a “clean, snappy, spectacular, thrilling” game.

The 1912 season

In 1912, the Wolverines again got off to a 3-0 start with convincing wins over Case (34-0), Michigan Agricultural College (55-7), and Ohio State (14-0). After the first three games, the Syracuse Herald noted that “according to all the reports from Ann Arbor, (Craig) is tearing up the opposing lines with ease.” [cite news|title=Former Players To Turn Out To Aid Orange Team|publisher=Syracuse Herald|date=1912-10-21|accessdate=2007-12-14]

After the strong start, Michigan lost two of three games to Syracuse (7-18) and Pennsylvania (21-27). In the final game of the season, Michigan beat Cornell, 13-7, with the help of “speed merchant” Jimmy Craig. [cite news|title=Michigan 13, Cornell 7|publisher=Evening Chronicle (Marshall, Michigan)|date=1912-11-16|accessdate=2007-12-14]

At the end of the season, Craig won numerous accolades for his strong performance:
*Craig was reputed to be “the best foot ball player ‘Hurry Up’ Yost has had at Michigan since Willie Heston.”cite news|title=Banner Year for the Craig Family: Ralph Craig Grabs Honors for America in Olympic Games; Jimmy Is a Hummer; Climbed off Crutches to Win Football Games for Coach Yost|publisher=The Waterloo Times-Tribune|date=1912-12-15|accessdate=2007-12-14]
*“If it wasn’t for Jimmie Craig it is doubtful if Yost would know he had a football team this year. The fleet halfback has been Michigan’s only hero.”
*Craig was “as game as a terrier ever tossed into a pit.”
*“Jimmy literally climbed off crutches to enter the big games – those with Pennsylvania and Cornell.”
*Fielding Yost, who was not known to praise his players publicly, said of Craig: “Is Jimmy Craig ‘game?’ You’ll have to invent a new word, more emphatic than that, when you describe him.”

Craig’s “holdout stunt” in 1913

In the summer of 1913, Craig shocked the football world when he announced that he would not play football in 1913. There were varying accounts in the press as to the reason for his decision. In initial comments, Craig said he needed to drop athletics or fall behind in his university courses.cite news|title=Pressure Will Be Brought on Craig|publisher=Anaconda Standard (Montana)|date=1913-08-31|accessdate=2007-12-14] A second reason given for the decision was a bad knee.cite news|title=Craig Rejoins Michigan Eleven|publisher=The New York Times|date=1913-10-23|accessdate=2007-12-14] A third reason discussed in the press was that Craig decided not to play because he was not selected as captain of the 1913 team. “Craig has never admitted that that was the reason he was out but it is the general accepted belief here that it was so. Craig said he was staying out until the Syracuse game due to a bad knee and too much work in the university.” [cite news|title=Angry Students at Michigan May Ask Jim Raynsford to Resign|publisher=Syracuse Herald|date=1913-11-19|accessdate=2007-12-14]

Whatever the reason, Craig’s decision was the subject of extensive attention. A wire service report in August 1913 suggested that as long as Craig stuck to his decision to give up football, every conversation would turn to his “holdout stunt.” The report also noted: “If the … football star really needs the time he might devote to football for his studies it is a pity. He will hardly gain all the time he hopes by quitting, for much of it will be taken up by the persistence of the well-wishers of the football team. And, moreover, in the end he is almost certain to give way.”

The pressure on Craig intensified when Michigan lost to Michigan Agricultural College (later known as Michigan State University) for the first time in the school’s history. After a 55-7 drubbing in 1912, the Aggies beat Michigan 12-7 in 1913. Less than a week after the loss, Craig announced he would return. The New York Times reported: “There was joy in the Michigan football camp this afternoon when Jimmy Craig, star halfback on the 1911 and 1912 Michigan football eleven, appeared in uniform and joined his teammates in practice. … Michigan’s defeat by M.A.C. last Saturday and urgent pleading by the entire student body, however, induced him to re-enter the game to-day.” [cite news|title=Craig Joins Squad on Michigan Field: Star Halfback for Two Seasons Likely to Play Against Syracuse|publisher=The Washington Post|date=1913-10-23|accessdate=2007-12-14]

Craig’s All-American performance in 1913

Craig's first game back in the lineup was a 43-8 win against Syracuse. Craig scored a touchdown soon after the game started and added three more in the second period.cite news|title=Michigan Humbles Syracuse, 43 to 7: Western Players Put Up Whirlwind Game and Sweep Easterners Off Their Feet|publisher=The New York Times|date=1913-11-02|accessdate=2007-12-14] cite news|title=Michigan, 43-7: Craig Leads Savage Offense in Victory Over Syracuse Eleven|publisher=The Washington Post|date=1913-11-02|accessdate=2007-12-14] “Jimmy Craig, playing his first game of the season, was the mighty power behind Michigan’s offense. Time after time, for two periods, he dashed around the ends or battered between the tackles.” The New York Times and The Washington Post referred to Michigan as “a savage offense, the product of a desperate eleven,” and noted that the Syracuse line “melted against a whirlwind attack.”

In the final two games, Craig and the Wolverines had convincing wins against Cornell (17-0) and Pennsylvania (13-0) to finish the year 6-1.

Yost referred to the 1913 football team as “the best I ever coached.” cite news|title=The Heston-Schulz Cup|publisher=The Fort Wayne News|date=1913-11-18|accessdate=2007-12-14] At a “smoker” in the team’s honor, Coach Yost presented Craig with the prized Heston-Schulz Cup given to the team’s most valuable player as selected by Yost, Germany Schulz, and the team trainer.

Craig was also chosen by Walter Camp as an All-American in 1913. While Harvard’s Charles Brickley was chosen for other All-American teams, Yost publicly proclaimed Craig as the best all around back in the country. Yost said: “Craig hits his man as hard as any player in the country and is one of the surest tacklers I have ever seen. When he hits a runner around the knees he throws him with such a jar that it usually takes all the spice out of him for the rest of the afternoon. Craig, although he weighs but 160 pounds, is also a better blocker than Brickley. In intercepting forward passes I have never seen his equal, and what he can do in shooting through quick openings in the line and circling ends need not be dwelt upon. As far as scoring points goes, Brickley’s toe makes him more valuable, but otherwise I wouldn’t trade Craig for Brickley or any other back in the country. Craig played wonderful football this year and was far better than last season or 1911.” [cite news|title=Brickley no Equal to Craig, Says Yost|publisher=The Lincoln Daily Star|date=1913-12-21|accessdate=2007-12-14]

In 1929, former Michigan head coach and then University of Wisconsin athletic director, George Little spoke of Craig as an example of a team player. Little told how, at the end of the 1913 football season, after Craig had been named by Walter Camp as an All-American, Craig went to the room of one of his teammates and thanked this player for helping him make the All-American team. Craig said: “I couldn’t have carried the ball if you hadn’t done the blocking.” Little said Craig “had ability, was clean in body, possessed an appreciation of the work of others and was not cocky. When you find one man with all these qualities, you may be sure he has everything necessary for success.” [cite news|title=George Little of University Gives Address|publisher=Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune|date=1929-03-14|accessdate=2007-12-14]

Even 20 years after his graduation, Craig was "often mentioned as the last great running back at Ann Arbor." [cite news|title=Good Running Backs Are Scarce in Michigan Camp|publisher=The News-Palladium (Benton Harbor, Michigan)|date=1933-08-07|accessdate=2007-12-14]

Later life

Though not on the varsity football coaching staff, Craig was a coach at Michigan in 1914, and in 1915 he coached at Mercersburg Academy an independent, boarding school in Pennsylvania.

Yacht racing

In 1916, Craig was appointed fleet captain of the Detroit Boat Club. Craig was described as an “ardent skipper” who won several races in the “catboat” class. [cite news|title=Football Star Is a Clever Yachtsman|publisher=The Fort Wayne News|date=1916-05-20|accessdate=2007-12-14] [cite news|title=On the Sport Firing Line by Bob|publisher=Syracuse Herald|date=1916-06-24|accessdate=2007-12-14]

ervice in World War I

In March 1917, Craig was hired to succeed T.T. McConnell as the athletic director of the University of Arkansas. [cite news|title=Craig Directs Arkansas|publisher=Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette|date=1917-03-31|accessdate=2007-12-14]

However, on account of Craig’s desire to go into the Army during World War I, the University released him from the contract.cite news|title=University Director of Athletics Announced|publisher=Fayetteville Democrat|date=1919-08-15|accessdate=2007-12-14] Craig served for two years as a first lieutenant in the 315th F.A., 80th Division, of the American Expeditionary Force, including 13 months of service in Europe.

Around Thanksgiving in 1917, seven games were played between inter-service, inter-camp and Western Conference teams. The proceeds were donated to soldier funds. Craig played for the Fort Sheridan team that also included former Michigan stars Albert Benbrook and Ernest Allmendinger. The Fort Sheridan team played the Great Lakes team on Thanksgiving day on Stagg Field in Chicago. [cite news|title=Military Football Will Be Served|publisher=Racine Journal-News|date=1917-11-28|accessdate=2007-12-14] [cite news|title=College Stars To Meet At Chicago:Old-Time Football Men Will Don the Moleskin in Tilt Between the Soldiers and Sailors|publisher=The Lincoln Daily Star|date=1917-11-28|accessdate=2007-12-14]

University of Arkansas athletic director

Craig returned from France in August 1919 and was promptly re-hired by the University of Arkansas as director of athletics and coach of the football and baseball teams. The football team was 3-4 in Craig’s first season as head coach – the first losing season since 1914. [cite web|title=University of Arkansas Directory From The Sports Network|url=http://sportsnetwork.com/default.asp?c=nytimes&page=cfoot/teams/direct459.htm|publisher=The New York Times|accessdate=2007-12-14] Craig served only one year at Arkansas, announcing his resignation in March 2000, effective at the end of the college year. [cite news|title=Mr. Craig Resigns From U. of A. Faculty|publisher=Fayetteville Democrat|date-1920-03-24|accessdate=2007-12-14]

Notes

External links

* [http://www.bentley.umich.edu/athdept/football/fballam/aacraig.htm Bentley Library Profile and Photograph of James Craig, All-American]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • James Henry Craig — General Sir James Henry Craig, KB (* 1748 in Gibraltar; † 12. Januar 1812 in London) war ein britischer Offizier und Kolonialverwalter. Als 1795 die Niederlande unter d …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • James Humbert Craig — (July 12, 1877 in Belfast ndash; June 12, 1944) was an Irish painter.Craig was born in Belfast to Alexander Craig, a tea merchant, and a Swiss mother, Marie Metzenen, from a family with a painting tradition. He was raised in County Down and… …   Wikipedia

  • James Henry Craig — Pour les articles homonymes, voir James Craig (homonymie). James Henry Craig, estampe coloriée à la main, vers 1810 1811, réalisée d après un portrait de Gerritt Schipper. (Bibliothèque et Archives Canada, no d acc 1990 317 1) Sir James Henry… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • James Henry Craig — General Sir James Henry Craig KB (Gibraltar 1748 ndash; 12 January 1812 London) was a British military officer and colonial administrator.Early life and military serviceCraig came from a Scottish family who s father was a judge of the civil and… …   Wikipedia

  • James Downey Craig — James Downey „Jim“ Craig (* 31. Mai 1957 in North Easton, Massachusetts) ist ein ehemaliger Eishockeyspieler und Torwart der von 1979 bis 1984 für die Atlanta Flames, die Boston Bruins und die Minnesota North Stars in der National Hockey League… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • USS James E. Craig (DE-201) — USS James E. Craig (DE 201), a Buckley class destroyer escort of the United States Navy, was named in honor of Lieutenant Commander James Edwin Craig (1901 1941), who was killed in action aboard the USS Pennsylvania during the Japanese attack on… …   Wikipedia

  • James Craig — may refer to:* James Craig (architect) (1739 ndash;1795), Scottish architect * James Henry Craig (1748 ndash;1812), British military officer and colonial administrator of The Canadas * James Craig (Irish politician), UK MP for the Irish… …   Wikipedia

  • Craig (Name) — Craig ist ein ursprünglich ortsbezogener männlicher Vorname und Familienname, der heute im gesamten englischen Sprachraum vorkommt. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Herkunft und Bedeutung 2 Namensträger 2.1 Familienname …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • James Craig — ist der Name folgender Personen: James Craig, 1. Viscount Craigavon (1871–1940), erster Premierminister von Nordirland James Craig (Architekt) (1739–1795), schottischer Architekt und Stadtplaner der Neustadt von Edinburgh James Craig (General)… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • James craig (homonymie) — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. James Craig (1744 1795), architecte écossais Le James Craig, trois mâts barque australien James Henry Craig, gouverneur du Haut et du Bas Canada Pour les …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”