LeRoy Sprankle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Beach City, Ohio
Homestead, Florida
| Biographical details | |
|---|---|
| Born | June 11, 1894 Beach City, Ohio |
| Died | September 25, 1972 Homestead, Florida |
| Playing career | |
| 1913–1917 | Mount Union College |
| Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
| 1920 | Canton Independents |
| ? | Carrollton HS (OH) |
| 1921–1943 | Kingsport HS (TN) |
| 1943–1953 | Redlands HS (FL) |
| Head coaching record | |
| Overall | 80–38–9 (football) 401–142 (basketball) 117–61 (baseball) |
LeRoy Sprankle (June 11, 1894 – September 25, 1972) was an American high school sports coach and athletics advocate in Eastern Tennessee and South Florida. Often referred to as the "Father of East Tennessee Sports", he had several notable accomplishments during his tenured career including: helping to standardize high school officiating in the state of Tennessee, pioneering interstate and international high school sports competition, and most notably, coaching several would-be prominent figures in American and sports history.[1]
Sprankle was born on June 11, 1894, in Beach City, Ohio. He was the older brother of Dale R. Sprankle, who would also become famous as a college athletics coach and athletics director in Michigan. At the age of 16, his family moved to Canton, Ohio, where he graduated from high school and first became involved in athletics. He then attended Mount Union College and competed in baseball, basketball, and football while completing a degree in mathematics. In 1918 Sprankle was drafted into the First World War, and served as a Second Lieutenant at Camp Gordon in Georgia. After Armistice, he resumed civilian life as the general manager of the Canton Independents professional basketball team. It was around this time that he became affiliated with the Canton Bulldogs professional football team and became good friends with several early football "legends", most notably Jim Thorpe.[2]
