Walter Meanwell - Head Coaching Record

Head Coaching Record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Wisconsin (Big Ten Conference)
1911–1912 Wisconsin 15–0 12–0 1st
1912–1913 Wisconsin 14–1 11–1 1st
1913–1914 Wisconsin 15–0 12–0 1st
1914–1915 Wisconsin 13–4 8–4 3rd
1915–1916 Wisconsin 20–1 11–1 1st
1916–1917 Wisconsin 15–3 9–3 4th
Wisconsin: 92–9 63–9
Missouri (Missouri Valley Conference)
1917–1918 Missouri 17–1 15–1 1st
1919–1920 Missouri 17–1 17–1 1st
Missouri: 34–2 32–2
Wisconsin (Big Ten Conference)
1920–1921 Wisconsin 13–4 8–4 T–1st
1921–1922 Wisconsin 14–5 8–4 2nd
1922–1923 Wisconsin 12–3 11–1 T–1st
1923–1924 Wisconsin 11–5 8–4 T–1st
1924–1925 Wisconsin 6–11 3–9 9th
1925–1926 Wisconsin 8–9 4–8 T–8th
1926–1927 Wisconsin 10–7 7–5 T–4th
1927–1928 Wisconsin 13–4 9–3 T–3rd
1928–1929 Wisconsin 15–2 10–2 T–1st
1929–1930 Wisconsin 15–2 8–2 2nd
1930–1931 Wisconsin 8–9 4–8 T–7th
1931–1932 Wisconsin 8–10 3–9 T–8th
1932–1933 Wisconsin 7–13 4–8 8th
1933–1934 Wisconsin 14–6 8–4 T–2nd
Wisconsin: 154–90 95–71
Wisconsin: 246–99 158–80
Total: 280–101


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Famous quotes containing the words head and/or record:

    She, her head back, waited
    Barbarous the stalking tide;
    Her, nor balked nor sated
    But plunged into the wide
    Area of mental ire,
    Lay at her wandering side.
    Allen Tate (1899–1979)

    Unlike Boswell, whose Journals record a long and unrewarded search for a self, Johnson possessed a formidable one. His life in London—he arrived twenty-five years earlier than Boswell—turned out to be a long defense of the values of Augustan humanism against the pressures of other possibilities. In contrast to Boswell, Johnson possesses an identity not because he has gone in search of one, but because of his allegiance to a set of assumptions that he regards as objectively true.
    Jeffrey Hart (b. 1930)