Bobby Dobbs

Bobby Dobbs

College coach infobox


Name = Bobby Dobbs
| ImageWidth =
Caption =
Title =
College =
Sport = Football
Conference =
CurrentRecord =
DateOfBirth = birth date|1922|10|13
Birthplace = Munday, Texas
DateOfDeath = death date and age|1986|4|2|1922|10|13
Deathplace = Altus, Oklahoma
OverallRecord = 71–63–4
Contract =
BowlRecord = 2–0
TournamentRecord =
CFbDWID = 597
Championships = 1944 Associated Press National Championship (Player),
Awards =
CoachingRecords =
Player = Y
Years = 1942-1943
1944-1945
Team = Tulsa
Army
Position = Fullback
Coach = Y
CoachYears = 1949-1951
1952-1954
1955-1960
1961-1964
1965-1972
CoachTeams = Carswell Air Force Base
Army (AC)
Tulsa
Calgary Stampeders
UTEP
FootballHOF =
CollegeHOFID =
BBallHOF =

Robert Lee “Bobby” Dobbs (born October 13, 1922 in Munday, Texas, died April 2, 1986 in Altus, Oklahoma) is a former American football player and coach.

After graduating from high school in Frederick, Oklahoma in 1941, Bobby entered Tulsa University to play football for coach Henry Frnka. A fullback, Dobbs played in Tulsa's first ever bowl game; The 1943 Sugar Bowl. With the US involved in World War II, Bobby's patriotism, along with his desire to become a pilot and play football, led him to West Point. In early 1943, he joined the United States Army Air Corps. His athletic ability resulted in letters in football and basketball. Bobby was the starting fullback on the 1944 Army team. The '44 Army team had a 9-0 record, two future Heisman Trophy winners (Doc Blanchard & Glenn Davis), and defeated their opponents by a combined score of 504-35 en route to winning the Associated Press National Championship.

Following graduation, Dobbs took transition training at Enid Air Force Base and was then assigned to Davis-Monthan Air Force Base. In 1949 Dobbs moved to Carswell Air Force Base, where he coached the Carswell Football Team to the Armed Forces Championship. In 1952, Earl Blaik brought Dobbs back to West Point to serve as an assistant football coach. Future Green Bay Packers head coach Vince Lombardi was also on the same Army coaching staff.

In 1955, Tulsa offered Dobbs the head football coaching job. Bobby accepted and left the Air Force. At Tulsa, he took over a team that had gone 0-11 the previous season. In 1956, Tulsa posted a 7-2-1 record, and in 1958, the team 7-3. These successes prompted Army to consider Bobby as a replacement for Red Blaik, but Dale Hall was given the job instead. Dobbs most significant wins at Tulsa were a 24-16 victory over the undefeated Oklahoma State Cowboys in 1958 and a 17-6 victory over tenth ranked North Texas State in 1959. Dobbs compiled a 30–28–2 overall record at Tulsa.

In 1961, Dobbs left Tulsa to become head coach of the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League. He was replaced at Tulsa by his brother Glenn. After four highly successful years in Canada, Bobby resigned at the end of the 1964 CFL season. He felt that he had been slighted by Calgary's decision to elevate his former assistant, Rogers Lehew to general manager. With the Stampeders, Dobbs had a 38-23-1 record and made the playoffs every year.

He served as head coach at University of Texas at El Paso (known as Texas Western until 1967) from 1965-72. In his first season as the Miners head coach, Dobbs turned a 0-8-2 team into a 8-3 that defeated powerhouse North Texas State 61-15 and beat Texas Christian University 13-12 in the Sun Bowl. He compiled a 41–35–2 overall, including two Sun Bowl wins. His 1967 UTEP team led the nation in passing and scoring that season, losing its two games by a total of three points. He resigned as UTEP Miners coach midway through the 1972 season, following a 56-7 loss to New Mexico on October 21, 1972. In April 1966, Dobbs turned down an offer to succeed Paul Dietzel as Army Black Knights coach due to his wife, Joanne's illness that required her to stay in the warm climate in El Paso. While at Texas Western, he sent many players into the pro ranks, with quite a few going, including Fred Carr, Billy Stevens, Ron Jones, and Leon Harden to Green Bay to play for Vince Lombardi. At one point Bobby ranked second among college coaches in number of players going in the National Football League. In 1972, Bobby said that if his 1-5 team didn't beat the University of New Mexico, he would resign. The team lost and Bobby resigned. He went into the construction business in El Paso until his health started to fail in 1978. Bobby's failing health turned out to be Alzheimer's disease, and he died on April 2, 1986 in a nursing home in Altus, Oklahoma.

Head coaching record

CFB Yearly Record Subhead
name = Tulsa Golden Hurricane
startyear = 1955
conf = Missouri Valley Conference
endyear = 1960
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1955
name = Tulsa
overall = 2–7–1
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1956
name = Tulsa
overall = 7–2–1
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1957
name = Tulsa
overall = 4–6
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1958
name = Tulsa
overall = 7–3
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1959
name = Tulsa
overall = 5–5
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1960
name = Tulsa
overall = 5–5
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = Tulsa
overall = 30–28–2
confrecord =
CFB Yearly Record Subhead
name = UTEP Miners
startyear = 1965
conf = Independent
endyear = 1967
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1965
name = UTEP
overall = 8–3
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname = Sun
bowloutcome = W
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1966
name = UTEP
overall = 6–4
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1967
name = UTEP
overall = 7–2–1
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname = Sun
bowloutcome = W
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = UTEP
overall = 21–9–1
confrecord =
CFB Yearly Record Subhead
name = UTEP Miners
startyear = 1968
conf = Western Athletic Conference
endyear = 1972
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1968
name = UTEP
overall = 4–5–1
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1969
name = UTEP
overall = 4–6
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1970
name = UTEP
overall = 6–4
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1971
name = UTEP
overall = 5–6
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Entry
championship =
year = 1972
name = UTEP
overall = 1–5*
conference =
confstanding =
bowlname =
bowloutcome =
bcsbowl =
ranking = no
ranking2 = no
CFB Yearly Record Subtotal
name = UTEP
overall = 20–26–1
confrecord =
*Hudspeth coached the remainder of the seasonCFB Yearly Record End
overall = 71–63–4
bcs = no


poll = no
polltype =

References

* [http://www.west-point.org/users/usma1946/15926/]


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