Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The most notable college football win for Cleveland was the city’s only college football bowl game victory—the 1941 Sun Bowl—where the Western Reserve Red Cats, now known as Case Western Reserve University, defeated the Arizona State Bulldogs, now nicknamed Sun Devils, 26–13.
Cleveland Pipers, American Basketball League (1961–1962) Women's basketball. Defunct ... Cleveland Browns, All-America Football Conference (1946–1949) ...
The Cleveland Pipers were an American industrial basketball team based in Cleveland, Ohio in the 1950s and early 1960s. The Pipers are mostly known for having played in the short-lived American Basketball League from 1961–62. They were also a power in the day's Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) basketball and the National Industrial Basketball ...
The foundation was formed under the directorship of Mike Cleary, who hired McLendon as head coach of the Cleveland Pipers in 1962 as the first African American head coach in professional sports. Beginning in 2016, a first-round game in the CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament involving an HBCU team would be known as the Coach John Mclendon ...
The National Industrial Basketball League was founded in 1947 to enable U.S. mill workers a chance to compete in basketball. The league was founded by the industrial teams (teams sponsored by the large companies and made up of their employees) belonging to the National Basketball League (NBL) that did not join the National Basketball Association when the NBL merged with the Basketball ...
It sounds simple, but turnovers very well could be the deciding factor in Friday's matchup. Despite falling into an early 22-8 hole to Cleveland in Week 1, Hoggard battled back to make it 22-20 ...
Get more Ohio State football news by listening to our podcasts. This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Cleveland drafts Mike Hall Jr. in 2024 NFL draft: Pros, cons of pick Show ...
Cincinnati Red Stockings were the first professional baseball club founded in 1866 and disbanded following the 1870 season. During the offseason, core members such as brothers Harry & George Wright moved to Boston to help start a newly formed baseball club called the Boston Red Stockings, eventually becoming known as the Boston Braves; the team moved to Milwaukee and became the Milwaukee ...