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The football and basketball teams are broadcast by the Chapman Sports Broadcast Network (CSBN) to local Channel 6 in Orange and on Chapman's athletic website. CSBN is a student-run, student-produced independent sports network created by students at Chapman University's Dodge College of Film and Media Arts. [62]
1950 - Chapman College (now Chapman University) joined the SCIAC, effective in the 1950-51 academic year. 1952 - Chapman left the SCIAC, effective after the 1951-52 academic year. 1958 - Claremont combined with Harvey Mudd College for athletics to become Claremont–Mudd, effective in the 1958-59 academic year.
Bob Owens (born c. 1946) is an American football coach. He is the head football coach for Chapman University, a position he has held since 2006.Owens served as head football coach at Whittier College in Whittier, California from 1996 to 2002.
Michael Pettit and Alex Smith are leaving coaching careers in Greenville County for athletics director jobs at Chapman and Landrum, respectively.
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Georgia State, a commuter college located in a largely vacant stretch of downtown Atlanta, had long resisted a move into big-time athletics. Carl Patton, the university’s former president, says students began asking him to add football soon after he took the job, in the early 1990s. For years, he told them: “Not in my lifetime.”
Jim Saia – college basketball head coach; Eddie Soto (non-degreed) – professional soccer player; Kelli Stavast (2002) – sportscaster who formerly worked for NBC Sports as a pit reporter for both their NASCAR; Paul Swingle – professional baseball player [26] Bill Trumbo (1961) – college basketball coach and athletic director
Following graduation from Chapman in 1961, Trumbo was an assistant coach at his alma mater for a year, then became the head coach at nearby Garden Grove High School in 1962 for four years. In 1966, he became a college head coach and athletic director at Culver–Stockton College, an NAIA program in Canton, Missouri.