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Strong gained widespread fame when he led NYU to a 27–13 upset victory over undefeated Carnegie Tech. He threw two long touchdown passes, rushed for two touchdowns, and kicked three extra points, leading Grantland Rice to write: This attack was led by a runaway buffalo, using the speed of a deer, and his name was Ken Strong.
Kenneth Strong (born May 9, 1963) is a Canadian-born Austrian former professional ice hockey player. He played 15 games in the National Hockey League with the Toronto Maple Leafs from 1983 to 1985. The rest of his career, which lasted from 1983 to 1997, was mainly spent in the Austrian Hockey League .
Kicker: Ken Strong Team: New York Giants Opponent: Green Bay Packers Distance: 30 yards Another triple-threat player, Strong recovered after fumbling twice earlier in the game. Up 14-0 in the ...
The team improved to a 5–5–2 record in 1930. That season the Stapes managed to defeat the rival New York Giants 7–6, after a four-yard touchdown run from Doug Wycoff and an extra point kick from Strong. In July 1931, the team's official name on the league records was changed from the Stapleton Football Club, Inc., to Staten Island Stapes.
In today's edition: The Cavs cannot be stopped, upsets galore in MLS Playoffs, the birth of pro football, the Sunshine State's gloomy weekend, and more.
Kenneth William Dobson Strong was born in Montrose, Angus, Scotland, on 9 September 1900, the only son amongst four children, to John Strong, the rector of Montrose Academy and his wife Ethel May née Dobson.
As fears of a tech bubble and stretched valuations become the talk of the town, investors are turning to Wall Street titans for guidance, namely Ken Griffin. Founding hedge fund Citadel in 1990 ...
Ken Strong is the lone Hall of Fame inductee who played during the second iteration of the American Football League from 1936. Strong is also one of two Hall of Famers (the other being Sid Luckman) to play in the American Association. Fifteen inductees spent some of their playing career in the All-America Football Conference during the late 1940s.