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Need dates for the football head coaches unstruck below.
Reynolds • H. W. Ambruster • Pendleton • Van Dyck Jr. • Daly • Robinson • Van Hovenberg • Mann • A.E. Hitchner • F. H. Gorton • Smith • Pritchard • Gargan • Sanford • Wallace • Rockafeller • <srike>Tasker</srike> • <stike>Harman</trike> • Steigman • Bateman • Burns • Anderson • Graber • <strke>Shea</stike> • <strie>Schiano</stike>
I removed the Head Coaches section from the main article because the table was too big and unwieldy...too much blank white space. — ExplorerCDT 05:42, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
Twenty-five men have served as head coach of the Rutgers football team since 1891, when the first coach was hired. From 1869 to 1890, and 1892 to 1894, there was no coach. [1]
Coach | Dates | Record (%) | Coach | Dates | Record (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
- No Coach - | 1869–1890 | 34-59-8 (.376) | Howard Gargan | 1910–1912 | 12-10-4 (.538) |
William A. Reynolds | 1891 | 8-6-0 (.571) | George Foster Sanford | 1913–1923 | 56-32-5 (.629) |
- No Coach - | 1892–1894 | 7-15-1 (.326) | John H. Wallace | 1924–1926 | 12-14-1 (.463) |
H. W. Ambruster | 1895 | 3-4-0 (.429) | Harry J. Rockafeller | 1927–1930, 1942–1945 | 33-26-1 (.558) |
John C. B. Pendleton | 1896–1897 | 8-12-0 (.400) | Wilder Tasker | 1931–1937 | 31-27-5 (.532) |
William V. B. Van Dyke, Jr. | 1898–1899 | 3-15-1 (.184) | Harvey Harman | 1938–1941, 1946–1955 | 74-44-2 (.625) |
Michael F. Daly | 1900 | 4-4-0 (.500) | John R. Steigman | 1956–1959 | 22-15-0 (.595) |
Arthur P. Robinson | 1901 | 0-7-0 (.000) | John F. Bateman | 1960–1972 | 73-51-0 (.589) |
Harry W. Van Hovenberg | 1902 | 3-7-0 (.300) | Frank R. Burns | 1973–1983 | 78-43-1 (.643) |
Oliver D. Mann | 1903, 1905 | 7-10-1 (.417) | Dick Anderson | 1984–1989 | 27-34-4 (.446) |
A. Ellet Hitchner | 1904 | 1-6-2 (.222) | Doug Graber | 1990–1995 | 29-36-1 (.447) |
Frank H. Gorton | 1906–1907 | 8-7-3 (.528) | Terry Shea | 1996–2000 | 11-44-0 (.200) |
Joseph Smith | 1908 | 3-5-1 (.389) | Greg Schiano | 2001–present | 30-41-0 (.423) |
Herman Pritchard | 1909 | 3-5-1 (.389) | TOTAL | 580-580-43 (.500) |
— ExplorerCDT 05:48, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
The following suggestions were generated by a semi-automatic javascript program, and might not be applicable for the article in question.
You may wish to browse through User:AndyZ/Suggestions for further ideas. Thanks, Ruhrfisch 03:32, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
The result of the debate was no move. ExplorerCDT makes a very good point; he is the main contributor to the article, so his opinion gets greater weight as well. If he plans on expanding this page to non-varsity sports and there are some teams with other names at the school, Athletics at Rutgers University should be where the page should be. — Mets501 ( talk) 15:28, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
IMHO, this article should be moved to Rutgers Scarlet Knights (currently, "Rutgers Scarlet Knights" redirects to the main university article). My reasoning:
What does everyone else have to say? I was about to make the move (I'm an admin), but I realized it would be much better to get feedback before any move.— Dale Arnett 09:20, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
The result of the proposal was PAGE MOVED per discussion below. - GTBacchus( talk) 23:24, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
Athletics at Rutgers University → Rutgers Scarlet Knights—All but 4 of ~100 pages at Category:College athletic programs are of the form: (short college name) (nickname) (for example: Louisville Cardinals or Washington Huskies). The remaining 4 should be moved. Even though this was proposed a few months ago but all the remaining schools not following the de facto standard have proposed moves and this article should too Oren0 17:36, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
Why does "nappy headed hos" redirect here?-- Mphifer254 19:30, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
I just made this, feel free to put it on your user pages. - PopePeterII
R | This user is a fan of the Rutgers Scarlet Knights. |
Any Rutgers stats guys here have access to the attendance records of Rutgers 1989 Emerald Isle Classic game. Also, any help as to explaining why in the world Rutgers/Pitt went to Ireland would be very helpful (payouts, Big East deals, etc.).-- Excaliburhorn 07:50, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
I read the following in this article:
Critics claim that the focus on Division I-A athletics lowers admissions and academic standards. However, at 980, Rutgers team had the third-highest Academic Performance Rate (APR) score of any Division I-A football team in 2005
Consider this: The "critics" are those who would want Rutgers to play football at a Division I-AA level. Rutgers having the 3rd highest APR among I-A schools is nearly irrelevant - all division I-A schools could have poor APR's. Rutgers' APR should be compared also to division I-AA schools, which would either give evidence in support or against the critics' hypothesis of lowering admissions/academic standards. Unfortunately, cbs sports, which gave a list of all I-A schools' marks in order, did not rank I-AA schools, so I went to the NCAA website and looked up eight (the ivy league). The paragraph now looks like this:
Critics claim that the focus on Division I-A athletics lowers admissions and academic standards. At 980, Rutgers team had the third-highest Academic Performance Rate (APR) score of any Division I-A football team in 2005.[46] However, when compared with Division I-AA schools Rutgers' marks are not as excellent. Rutgers would have the second lowest marks of a football team in the ivy league (including rivals Columbia and Princeton)
Now, I KNOW that the ivy league is not an accurate representation of all of Division I-AA. However, I don't have the time to painstakingly look up each I-AA school manually and find how Rutgers' APR ranks. I chose the Ivy League because it contains two of Rutgers' all-time rivals. If someone would like to amend, improve, or finish what I did, please do. Please don't delete it though, hopefully I have justified myself. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Virsingh ( talk • contribs) 10:58, 26 November 2007 (UTC)
Rutgers Scarlet Knights 2008 - 09 Mens Basketball Roster 1 CHANDLER, COREY G So. 6-2 190 East Side HS/Newark, N.J. 31 COBURN, MIKE G So. 6-0 195 Mt. Vernon HS/Mt. Vernon, N.Y. 00 ECHENIQUE, GREGORY F Fr. 6-9 260 St. Benedict’s Prep (N.J.) /Guatire, Venezuela 2 FARMER, ANTHONY G Sr. 6-1 190 St. Augustine's Prep/Millville, NJ 32 GRIFFIN, JARON G/F Sr. 6-7 210 Manchester Township/Manchester, N.J. 15 INMAN, JR F Sr. 6-9 230 St. Joseph’s Regional HS (N.J.) /Pomona, N.Y. 23 JACKSON, PATRICK F Fr. 6-6 195 Boys & Girls HS /Brooklyn, N.Y 40 KOKOSINSKI, TOMASZ F Fr. 6-7 230 Bergen County Technical HS/Bergenfield, N.J 22 KUHN, MIKE G Fr. 6-1 180 Christian Brothers Academy/Oceanport, N.J. 24 MITCHELL, JONATHAN F Jr. 6-7 225 Mt. Vernon HS/Florida/Mt. Vernon, N.Y. 5 NDIAYE, HAMADY C Jr. 6-11 235 Stoneridge Prep (CA)/Dakar, Senegal 11 PETTIS, EARL G So. 6-5 225 Patterson School (N.C.)/Philadelphia, Pa. 3 ROSARIO, MIKE G Fr. 6-3 180 Saint Anthony HS /Jersey City, N.J.
Rutgers Mens Basketball 2008 - 09 Schedule November 14 Marist W 63-61 1-0 November 16 at Delaware W 85-77 2-0 November 21 Robert Morris W 69-55 3-0 November 23 St. Bonaventure L 64-63 3-1 November 26 Lehigh L 76-71 3-2 November 30 St. Peter's W 68-47 4-2 December 3 at Rider W 66-62 5-2 December 6 Binghamton L 66-56 5-3 December 10 at Princeton W 49-44 6-3 December 14 Delaware State W 60-55 7-3 December 20 Bryant University W 67-37 8-3 December 23 N.J.I.T. W 78-52 9-3 December 28 at No. 1 North Carolina L 97-75 9-4 December 31 No. 3 Pittsburgh L 78-72 9-5 (0-1) January 3 at No. 2 Connecticut L 80-49 9-6 (0-2) January 7 No. 15 Marquette L 81-76 9-7 (0-3) January 10 No. 9 Syracuse L 82-66 9-8 (0-4) January 14 at Cincinnati L 71-59 9-9 (0-5) January 21 No. 12 Louisville L 78-59 9-10 (0-6) January 24 at St. John's L 70-59 9-11 (0-7) January 29 at Seton Hall L 70-67 9-12 (0-8) January 31 DePaul W 75-56 10-12 (1-8) February 3 at Georgetown L 57-47 10-13 (1-9) February 8 Seton Hall L 65-60 10-14 (1-10) February 14 at Providence 7:00 PM ET February 19 at No. 13 Villanova 9:00 PM ET February 22 West Virginia 3:00 PM ET February 25 at Notre Dame 7:00 PM ET March 1 Providence 2:00 PM ET March 3 at No. 22 Syracuse 9:00 PM ET March 7 South Florida 2:00 PM ET —Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.19.23.10 ( talk) 00:57, 11 February 2009 (UTC)
Rutgers was listed as the 2012 Big East Football champion, which is not correct. The official big east standings list them 3rd, as proven here: http://espn.go.com/college-football/conferences/standings/_/id/10/big-east-conference At the very least, it can be said they were part of a 4 way tie for first, which was later broken by BCS rankings, which again, places them 3rd. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 192.200.5.41 ( talk) 15:59, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
Hello fellow Wikipedians,
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Cheers.— cyberbot II Talk to my owner:Online 22:22, 18 January 2016 (UTC)
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The first two paragraphs seem to maintain some sense of neutrality, but the third paragraph begins to follow a concern -> rebuttal pattern. Additionally, such statements as "An increase in enrollment applications of 12% upon joining the Big 10 Conference, and applicants who score 20 points higher on the SAT would tend to bear that out" with no source cited and no evidence supporting the idea that joining the Big 10 conference caused this increase (I'm not saying this isn't the case, just that there is no evidence of this cited) lead me to question the neutrality of this section. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 96.38.114.88 ( talk) 10:31, 5 July 2016 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated B-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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![]() | This article links to one or more target anchors that no longer exist.
Please help fix the broken anchors. You can remove this template after fixing the problems. |
Reporting errors |
Need dates for the football head coaches unstruck below.
Reynolds • H. W. Ambruster • Pendleton • Van Dyck Jr. • Daly • Robinson • Van Hovenberg • Mann • A.E. Hitchner • F. H. Gorton • Smith • Pritchard • Gargan • Sanford • Wallace • Rockafeller • <srike>Tasker</srike> • <stike>Harman</trike> • Steigman • Bateman • Burns • Anderson • Graber • <strke>Shea</stike> • <strie>Schiano</stike>
I removed the Head Coaches section from the main article because the table was too big and unwieldy...too much blank white space. — ExplorerCDT 05:42, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
Twenty-five men have served as head coach of the Rutgers football team since 1891, when the first coach was hired. From 1869 to 1890, and 1892 to 1894, there was no coach. [1]
Coach | Dates | Record (%) | Coach | Dates | Record (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
- No Coach - | 1869–1890 | 34-59-8 (.376) | Howard Gargan | 1910–1912 | 12-10-4 (.538) |
William A. Reynolds | 1891 | 8-6-0 (.571) | George Foster Sanford | 1913–1923 | 56-32-5 (.629) |
- No Coach - | 1892–1894 | 7-15-1 (.326) | John H. Wallace | 1924–1926 | 12-14-1 (.463) |
H. W. Ambruster | 1895 | 3-4-0 (.429) | Harry J. Rockafeller | 1927–1930, 1942–1945 | 33-26-1 (.558) |
John C. B. Pendleton | 1896–1897 | 8-12-0 (.400) | Wilder Tasker | 1931–1937 | 31-27-5 (.532) |
William V. B. Van Dyke, Jr. | 1898–1899 | 3-15-1 (.184) | Harvey Harman | 1938–1941, 1946–1955 | 74-44-2 (.625) |
Michael F. Daly | 1900 | 4-4-0 (.500) | John R. Steigman | 1956–1959 | 22-15-0 (.595) |
Arthur P. Robinson | 1901 | 0-7-0 (.000) | John F. Bateman | 1960–1972 | 73-51-0 (.589) |
Harry W. Van Hovenberg | 1902 | 3-7-0 (.300) | Frank R. Burns | 1973–1983 | 78-43-1 (.643) |
Oliver D. Mann | 1903, 1905 | 7-10-1 (.417) | Dick Anderson | 1984–1989 | 27-34-4 (.446) |
A. Ellet Hitchner | 1904 | 1-6-2 (.222) | Doug Graber | 1990–1995 | 29-36-1 (.447) |
Frank H. Gorton | 1906–1907 | 8-7-3 (.528) | Terry Shea | 1996–2000 | 11-44-0 (.200) |
Joseph Smith | 1908 | 3-5-1 (.389) | Greg Schiano | 2001–present | 30-41-0 (.423) |
Herman Pritchard | 1909 | 3-5-1 (.389) | TOTAL | 580-580-43 (.500) |
— ExplorerCDT 05:48, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
The following suggestions were generated by a semi-automatic javascript program, and might not be applicable for the article in question.
You may wish to browse through User:AndyZ/Suggestions for further ideas. Thanks, Ruhrfisch 03:32, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
The result of the debate was no move. ExplorerCDT makes a very good point; he is the main contributor to the article, so his opinion gets greater weight as well. If he plans on expanding this page to non-varsity sports and there are some teams with other names at the school, Athletics at Rutgers University should be where the page should be. — Mets501 ( talk) 15:28, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
IMHO, this article should be moved to Rutgers Scarlet Knights (currently, "Rutgers Scarlet Knights" redirects to the main university article). My reasoning:
What does everyone else have to say? I was about to make the move (I'm an admin), but I realized it would be much better to get feedback before any move.— Dale Arnett 09:20, 13 January 2007 (UTC)
The result of the proposal was PAGE MOVED per discussion below. - GTBacchus( talk) 23:24, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
Athletics at Rutgers University → Rutgers Scarlet Knights—All but 4 of ~100 pages at Category:College athletic programs are of the form: (short college name) (nickname) (for example: Louisville Cardinals or Washington Huskies). The remaining 4 should be moved. Even though this was proposed a few months ago but all the remaining schools not following the de facto standard have proposed moves and this article should too Oren0 17:36, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
Why does "nappy headed hos" redirect here?-- Mphifer254 19:30, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
I just made this, feel free to put it on your user pages. - PopePeterII
R | This user is a fan of the Rutgers Scarlet Knights. |
Any Rutgers stats guys here have access to the attendance records of Rutgers 1989 Emerald Isle Classic game. Also, any help as to explaining why in the world Rutgers/Pitt went to Ireland would be very helpful (payouts, Big East deals, etc.).-- Excaliburhorn 07:50, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
I read the following in this article:
Critics claim that the focus on Division I-A athletics lowers admissions and academic standards. However, at 980, Rutgers team had the third-highest Academic Performance Rate (APR) score of any Division I-A football team in 2005
Consider this: The "critics" are those who would want Rutgers to play football at a Division I-AA level. Rutgers having the 3rd highest APR among I-A schools is nearly irrelevant - all division I-A schools could have poor APR's. Rutgers' APR should be compared also to division I-AA schools, which would either give evidence in support or against the critics' hypothesis of lowering admissions/academic standards. Unfortunately, cbs sports, which gave a list of all I-A schools' marks in order, did not rank I-AA schools, so I went to the NCAA website and looked up eight (the ivy league). The paragraph now looks like this:
Critics claim that the focus on Division I-A athletics lowers admissions and academic standards. At 980, Rutgers team had the third-highest Academic Performance Rate (APR) score of any Division I-A football team in 2005.[46] However, when compared with Division I-AA schools Rutgers' marks are not as excellent. Rutgers would have the second lowest marks of a football team in the ivy league (including rivals Columbia and Princeton)
Now, I KNOW that the ivy league is not an accurate representation of all of Division I-AA. However, I don't have the time to painstakingly look up each I-AA school manually and find how Rutgers' APR ranks. I chose the Ivy League because it contains two of Rutgers' all-time rivals. If someone would like to amend, improve, or finish what I did, please do. Please don't delete it though, hopefully I have justified myself. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Virsingh ( talk • contribs) 10:58, 26 November 2007 (UTC)
Rutgers Scarlet Knights 2008 - 09 Mens Basketball Roster 1 CHANDLER, COREY G So. 6-2 190 East Side HS/Newark, N.J. 31 COBURN, MIKE G So. 6-0 195 Mt. Vernon HS/Mt. Vernon, N.Y. 00 ECHENIQUE, GREGORY F Fr. 6-9 260 St. Benedict’s Prep (N.J.) /Guatire, Venezuela 2 FARMER, ANTHONY G Sr. 6-1 190 St. Augustine's Prep/Millville, NJ 32 GRIFFIN, JARON G/F Sr. 6-7 210 Manchester Township/Manchester, N.J. 15 INMAN, JR F Sr. 6-9 230 St. Joseph’s Regional HS (N.J.) /Pomona, N.Y. 23 JACKSON, PATRICK F Fr. 6-6 195 Boys & Girls HS /Brooklyn, N.Y 40 KOKOSINSKI, TOMASZ F Fr. 6-7 230 Bergen County Technical HS/Bergenfield, N.J 22 KUHN, MIKE G Fr. 6-1 180 Christian Brothers Academy/Oceanport, N.J. 24 MITCHELL, JONATHAN F Jr. 6-7 225 Mt. Vernon HS/Florida/Mt. Vernon, N.Y. 5 NDIAYE, HAMADY C Jr. 6-11 235 Stoneridge Prep (CA)/Dakar, Senegal 11 PETTIS, EARL G So. 6-5 225 Patterson School (N.C.)/Philadelphia, Pa. 3 ROSARIO, MIKE G Fr. 6-3 180 Saint Anthony HS /Jersey City, N.J.
Rutgers Mens Basketball 2008 - 09 Schedule November 14 Marist W 63-61 1-0 November 16 at Delaware W 85-77 2-0 November 21 Robert Morris W 69-55 3-0 November 23 St. Bonaventure L 64-63 3-1 November 26 Lehigh L 76-71 3-2 November 30 St. Peter's W 68-47 4-2 December 3 at Rider W 66-62 5-2 December 6 Binghamton L 66-56 5-3 December 10 at Princeton W 49-44 6-3 December 14 Delaware State W 60-55 7-3 December 20 Bryant University W 67-37 8-3 December 23 N.J.I.T. W 78-52 9-3 December 28 at No. 1 North Carolina L 97-75 9-4 December 31 No. 3 Pittsburgh L 78-72 9-5 (0-1) January 3 at No. 2 Connecticut L 80-49 9-6 (0-2) January 7 No. 15 Marquette L 81-76 9-7 (0-3) January 10 No. 9 Syracuse L 82-66 9-8 (0-4) January 14 at Cincinnati L 71-59 9-9 (0-5) January 21 No. 12 Louisville L 78-59 9-10 (0-6) January 24 at St. John's L 70-59 9-11 (0-7) January 29 at Seton Hall L 70-67 9-12 (0-8) January 31 DePaul W 75-56 10-12 (1-8) February 3 at Georgetown L 57-47 10-13 (1-9) February 8 Seton Hall L 65-60 10-14 (1-10) February 14 at Providence 7:00 PM ET February 19 at No. 13 Villanova 9:00 PM ET February 22 West Virginia 3:00 PM ET February 25 at Notre Dame 7:00 PM ET March 1 Providence 2:00 PM ET March 3 at No. 22 Syracuse 9:00 PM ET March 7 South Florida 2:00 PM ET —Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.19.23.10 ( talk) 00:57, 11 February 2009 (UTC)
Rutgers was listed as the 2012 Big East Football champion, which is not correct. The official big east standings list them 3rd, as proven here: http://espn.go.com/college-football/conferences/standings/_/id/10/big-east-conference At the very least, it can be said they were part of a 4 way tie for first, which was later broken by BCS rankings, which again, places them 3rd. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 192.200.5.41 ( talk) 15:59, 28 May 2013 (UTC)
Hello fellow Wikipedians,
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Cheers.— cyberbot II Talk to my owner:Online 22:22, 18 January 2016 (UTC)
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Cheers.— cyberbot II Talk to my owner:Online 00:47, 21 February 2016 (UTC)
The first two paragraphs seem to maintain some sense of neutrality, but the third paragraph begins to follow a concern -> rebuttal pattern. Additionally, such statements as "An increase in enrollment applications of 12% upon joining the Big 10 Conference, and applicants who score 20 points higher on the SAT would tend to bear that out" with no source cited and no evidence supporting the idea that joining the Big 10 conference caused this increase (I'm not saying this isn't the case, just that there is no evidence of this cited) lead me to question the neutrality of this section. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 96.38.114.88 ( talk) 10:31, 5 July 2016 (UTC)