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  1. Time magazine (Q14159)
  2. Kentucky will never beat a football team of mine. (Q14158)
  3. and he added a guarantee. (Q14157)
  4. he burst in on the meeting and announced he was going to Alabama, (Q14156)
  5. Haggled over his terms. Wade didn't like haggling after an hour, (Q14155)
  6. He had practically decided to take the Kentucky job and was waiting in the outer office while the Kentucky Athletic Council. (Q14154)
  7. But there was a problem he was being courted by Kentucky. (Q14153)
  8. Alabama, move fast and offered Wade the job. (Q14152)
  9. a 30 year old Tennessee and named Wallace Wade, (Q14151)
  10. He declined the offer, suggesting instead his assistant, (Q14150)
  11. Vanderbilts Dan Mcgugan, whose teams at 113 Sothern Championships. (Q14149)
  12. To replace Scott President Denny confidently pursued the best coach in the South, (Q14148)
  13. Transitional segment 8 (Q14147)
  14. Alabama's first great coach would soon die of cancer. (Q14146)
  15. the team now called the Crimson Tide shocked heavily favored Pennsylvania 9 to 7 but then Scott had been ill much of the season. (Q14145)
  16. At Franklin Field in Philadelphia, (Q14144)
  17. But he is most remembered for a single game in 1922 when Alabama went north. (Q14143)
  18. His first two teams won 18 games and lost only two. (Q14142)
  19. Scott was an easygoing, brainy coach and the players loved him. (Q14141)
  20. He was a hero to cover horse racing for the Cleveland Papers. (Q14140)
  21. I said, well, the guy who got Alabama's first big intersectional victory was a sports writer. (Q14139)
  22. was portrayed so when people tell me how sportswriters don't know anything about coaching. (Q14138)
  23. Zen Scott, believe it or not, (Q14137)
  24. He hired Zen Scott, who played collegiate ball in Cleveland and had taken up a new profession. (Q14136)
  25. Yet President Denny continued to pour what resources he could into his team in 1919. (Q14135)
  26. It had never won a conference title. (Q14134)
  27. Alabama had done little to distinguish itself in the huge 22 team Southern Conference in three decades of football. (Q14133)
  28. Transitional segment 7 (Q14132)
  29. Ky. In 1921, the Center College praying colonels shocked the football world by defeating a Harvard team that hadn't lossed in three years. (Q14131)
  30. Knute Rockne E's great Notre Dame teams dominated the early 20s and even Southern football gained a ripple of respect thanks to a tiny College in Danville, (Q14130)
  31. In the Roaring 20s, college football grew up the country went sports crazy as thousands of athletes returned home from the war. (Q14129)
  32. Transitional segment 6 (Q14128)
  33. I mean it is praise for him. (Q14127)
  34. you know he was pretty much a dictator type guy and I don't mean that in a derogatory way. (Q14126)
  35. An he preceded he was, (Q14125)
  36. get donations from the alumni. (Q14124)
  37. could make people interested in your university and bring the alumni back, (Q14123)
  38. He realized that winning football teams (Q14122)
  39. Could do for a university. (Q14121)
  40. doctor George Denny was a visionary who saw what sports? (Q14120)
  41. 42 year old George Denny, (Q14119)
  42. The recruit was the school's new president. (Q14118)
  43. who, for the next 25 years would have the most influence of anyone on the development of Alabama football. (Q14117)
  44. It was also the year Alabama recruited the Virginian, (Q14116)
  45. In 1912, the first Great Alabama star Bully Vandergraph earned all American honors highly unusual for a southern athlete. (Q14115)
  46. The two teams would not play again for 40 years. (Q14114)
  47. Incredible bickering over contract issues led to the dissolution of the match up. (Q14113)
  48. but the classic turned bitter in 1908. (Q14112)
  49. Alabama and Auburn had played nearly every year in a battle for statewide bragging rights, (Q14111)
  50. The South did develop its share of intense rivalries. (Q14110)

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