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| Glenn “Pop” Warner compiled a 71-17-8 record at Stanford from 1924-32 and guided his team to three Rose Bowl appearances. One of football’s greatest innovators, he was the first coach to dummy-scrimmage, the first coach to use a huddle, the first to number plays, the first to provide headgear for his players, and the inventor of the double wing formation. A member of the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame, Warner coached 47 All-Americans. At Stanford, he coached legendary players Ernie Nevers, Jim Lawson, Ted Shipkey, Seraphim Post, Don Robesky, Phil Moffatt and Bill Corbus. | |||||||||||

