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Leo Calland

American football and basketball player and coach (1901–1984)


Summary

American football and basketball player and coach (1901–1984)

FieldValue
nameLeo Calland
imageLeo Calland.jpg
captionCalland, c. 1925
birth_date
birth_placeOhio, U.S.
death_date
death_placeLa Jolla, California, U.S.
player_sport1Football
player_years21920–1922
player_team2USC
player_positionsGuard (football)
coach_sport1Football
coach_years21924
coach_team2USC (assistant)
coach_years31925–1926
coach_team3Whittier
coach_years41927–1928
coach_team4USC (assistant)
coach_years51929–1934
coach_team5Idaho
coach_years61935–1941
coach_team6San Diego State
coach_sport7Basketball
coach_years81927–1929
coach_team8USC
coach_sport9Baseball
coach_years101926
coach_team10Whittier
admin_years11929–1934
admin_team1Idaho
overall_record62–61–5 (football)
38–10 (basketball)
championshipsFootball
2 SCC (1936–1937)
Basketball
1 PCC (1928)
embedyes
allegiance
branchUnited States Navy
rank[[File:US-O5 insignia.svg15px]] Commander
battlesWorld War II
unitTraining
serviceyears1942–1945

38–10 (basketball) 2 SCC (1936–1937) Basketball 1 PCC (1928)

  • First-team All-PCC (1922) Leo Blakely Calland (February 24, 1901 – March 17, 1984) was an American college football and college basketball player and coach who later became a San Diego city parks administrator. He was the head football coach at Whittier College (1925–1926), the University of Idaho (1929–1934), and San Diego State College (1935–1941), compiling a career college football head coaching record record of 62–61–5. For two seasons, Calland was also the head basketball coach at the University of Southern California (USC), his alma mater, tallying a mark of 38–10 from 1927 to 1929.

Early years

Born in Ohio, the son of Cory Lee Calland and poet Annice Calland, Calland moved with his family as a child to western Washington, where he attended school in a log cabin on Lopez Island, in the San Juan Islands near the Strait of Juan de Fuca, where all of the other students were Native Americans. He was an outstanding athlete at Broadway High School in Seattle, where he played football under coach Gus Henderson.

Henderson became the head football coach at USC in Los Angeles in 1919, and Calland followed him south. He lettered as a guard for three seasons (19201922) and as a senior was named both team captain and most inspirational player on USC's first Rose Bowl team. Calland was named player of the game in the Trojans' 14–3 victory over Penn State on New Year's Day, the first bowl game in the current namesake stadium, and also lettered in basketball at USC.

Coaching career

After graduating from USC in 1923, Calland became an assistant coach there, leading the Trojan freshman squads in football, basketball, and baseball. He left in 1925 to lead nearby Whittier College for two seasons in multiple sports, then returned to USC as head basketball coach in 1927. Calland posted a 38–10 record over two seasons, winning the Pacific Coast Conference title in his first year with a mark. His career winning percentage remains the highest by a USC basketball coach. In these two seasons he was also an assistant football coach.

In February 1929, Calland was named head football coach and athletic director at the University of Idaho in Moscow, also in the PCC. He compiled a record in six seasons on the Palouse, but his overmatched Vandals were just in conference play, defeating only Montana. He resigned after the 1934 season, then returned to southern California at San Diego State College, where he posted a record in seven seasons. His Aztecs won consecutive SCIAC championships (1936, 1937), with players including John D. Butler, a future mayor of San Diego (1951–1955).

Military career and later life

In his early forties, Calland entered the U.S. Navy during World War II, and served as a recreation officer at the 11th Naval District in San Diego. In 1945, he became director of San Diego's Department of Parks and Recreation; during his fifteen years in the post, he oversaw the development of Mission Bay Park and Torrey Pines Golf Course. Calland became managing director of the San Diego Hall of Champions in 1960 and remained in that position until retiring in 1977, and was himself inducted into the Hall in 1974.

Death

Calland died at age 83 at the Veterans Administration Hospital in La Jolla. He was survived by his wife Sarah, two daughters and a son, and was buried in Fairhaven Cemetery in Santa Ana.

Head coaching record

Football

References

Additional sources

  • Laurence, Robert P. "Leo Calland dies; grid star, coach." The San Diego Union, March 19, 1984, pp. B1-2.

References

  1. (March 1, 1929). "Calland named to coach Idaho in Erb's stead". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  2. (March 2, 1929). "Calland to head Idaho athletics". Spokesman-Review.
  3. (March 2, 1929). "Calland undecided upon his assistant". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  4. (March 2, 1929). "Calland will have charge of sports". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  5. (December 16, 1934). "Coach Leo Calland resigns as director of athletics at University of Idaho". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  6. (1933). "1932 football season". Gem of the Mountains, University of Idaho yearbook.
  7. (December 15, 1934). "Leo Calland resigns as coach". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  8. (December 17, 1934). "Gonzaga coach looks at Idaho". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  9. (March 21, 1984). "Deaths elsewhere: Leo Calland". Toledo Blade.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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