Football Days - Memories of the Game and of the Men behind the Ball by William Hanford Edwards
page 109 of 403 (27%)
page 109 of 403 (27%)
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was ordered by Napoleon in a crisis in the battle to beat a retreat. The
boy did not move. 'Boy, beat a retreat.' He did not stir, but at a third command, he straightened up and said: 'Sire, I know not how, but I can beat a charge that will wake the dead.' He did so and the troops moved forward and were victorious. It is this same spirit which in many cases has seemed to animate our men. [Illustration: Rhodes Woodruff Heffelfinger Gill Wallace Stagg McClung Captain Corbin Bull Wurtenberg Graves PA CORBIN'S TEAM] "But our victory is due in a great measure this year to a man who knows more about football than any man in this country, who gave much of his valuable time in continually advising and in actual coaching on the field. I refer to Walter Camp, and as long as his spirit hovers over the Yale campus and our traditions for football playing are religiously followed out there is no reason why Yale should not remain, as she always has been, at the head of American football." Those were Corbin's recollections the year of that great victory. Time has not dimmed them, nor has his memory faded. Rather the opposite. From what follows you will note that a woman now enters the camp of the Eli coaching staff, mention of whom was not made in Corbin's speech of '88. Pa Corbin prides himself in the fact that twenty-five years afterward he |
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