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・ Earl Bolyard
・ Earl Bostic
・ Earl Boykins
・ Earl Bradley
・ Earl Bramblett
・ Earl Brand
・ Earl Brassey
・ Earl Brewster
・ Earl Brian
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・ Earl Broady
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・ Earl Browder
・ Earl Brown
・ Earl Brown (basketball, born 1952)
Earl Brown (coach)
・ Earl Brown (general)
・ Earl Browne
・ Earl Brutus
・ Earl Brydges
・ Earl Buford
・ Earl Bumpus
・ Earl Burns Miller Japanese Garden
・ Earl Burtnett
・ Earl Butz
・ Earl C. Crockett
・ Earl C. Gay
・ Earl C. Latourette
・ Earl C. Michener
・ Earl C. Slipher


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Earl Brown (coach) : ウィキペディア英語版
Earl Brown (coach)

Earl M. Brown, Jr. (October 23, 1915 – September 23, 2003) was an American football and basketball player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Dartmouth College (1943–1944), the United States Merchant Marine Academy (1945), Canisius College (1946–1947), and Auburn University (1948–1950), compiling a career college football record of 27–36–6. Brown was also the head basketball coach at Harvard University (1941–1943), Dartmouth (1943–1944), the United States Merchant Marine Academy (1945–1946), and Canisius (1946–1948), tallying a career college basketball mark of 72–70. He led Dartmouth to the finals of the 1944 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.
Brown is notorious for his stretch at as football coach at Auburn, where he went 3–22–4, including a record of 0–10 in his final season, when the Tigers were outscored 285–31. Brown's first season as the head coach at Auburn was also the first season Auburn and the Alabama met on the gridiron since 1907; Auburn lost, 55–0. The next season, though, he coached Auburn to one of the greatest upsets in its history, when the Tigers, who entered the game with a record of 1–4–3, stunned heavily favored Alabama, who entered the game with a 6–2–1 record, 14–13.
Brown played football and basketball at the University of Notre Dame. He was an assistant coach at Harvard, Brown, and the head coach at Dartmouth from 1943 to 1944, where he compiled a record of 8–6–1. In 1945, he posted a 5–3 record in his only season as the head coach at the United States Merchant Marine Academy. After leaving Auburn, Brown later served as an assistant coach for the Detroit Lions.
Brown died on September 23, 2003 in Leesburg, Florida.
==Head coaching record==


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