Edward Larkin (American Football) - Coaching Career

Coaching Career

Upon the expiration of his college athletic eligibility, Larkin coached football as an assistant at Cornell. In 1907, he served as an assistant at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School under head coach Glenn "Pop" Warner, and helped coach the line and played on the practice team at Georgetown. Bill Stern later described Larkin's coaching as "a gem of brevity and logic". One season at Carlisle, Larkin explained to his players the game: "Boys, football is like this: When white man has ball, knock down white man. When Indian has ball, knock down white man." At Carlisle, he "drilled Warner's Indians to look after Chicago's forward passes and fake plays".

He turned down the opportunity to coach at Georgetown for the 1908 season despite strong support from the school's alumni and students. He instead coached the ends at Cornell as the "head field coach". In October, he spent a week confined with blood poisoning before returning to the sidelines. That year, Larkin also managed the DuBois, Pennsylvania football club of the Inter-State League.

Larkin worked for many years as the club physician for the Washington Senators baseball team. He was also the team physician for the Georgetown football program. In 1909, while also working for the Senators, Larkin assisted Bill Lang as co-head coach at the Maryland Agricultural College (now the University of Maryland). The team finished the season with a 2–5 record.

In 1911, Larkin coached the ends at Carlisle, and then assisted Ray Van Orman in coaching the ends at Cornell. During the 1913 season, Warner, a long-time friend, lent his assistant and former Carlisle star Albert Exendine to coach the Georgetown football team in its final games as a favor to Larkin. Exendine served as head coach at Georgetown for nine more seasons. Larkin suffered a brief illness and died on August 18, 1948.

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