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・ Ken Butler
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・ Ken Cameron (footballer)
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・ Ken Campbell (American football)
・ Ken Campbell (disambiguation)
・ Ken Campbell (evangelist)
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Ken Carpenter (American football)
・ Ken Carpenter (announcer)
・ Ken Carpenter (athlete)
・ Ken Carpenter (cyclist)
・ Ken Carpenter (journalist)
・ Ken Carrington
・ Ken Carson
・ Ken Carter
・ Ken Carter (song)
・ Ken Carter (stuntman)
・ Ken Caryl, Colorado
・ Ken Casanega
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Ken Carpenter (American football) : ウィキペディア英語版
Ken Carpenter (American football)

Kenneth Leroy Carpenter (February 26, 1926 – January 28, 2011) was an American football halfback who played for the Cleveland Browns in the National Football League (NFL) and the Saskatchewan Roughriders in the Canadian Football League (CFL) in the 1950s. Following his playing career, Carpenter coached during the 1960s in the CFL, NFL and a variety of smaller leagues in the United States.
Carpenter was from Oregon and became a standout at Oregon State University, where he played between 1946 and 1949. The Browns selected him in the first round of the 1950 draft, making him their first selection since joining the league. Carpenter played with for the Browns between 1950 and 1953, a span during which the team won one NFL championship and played in three more. He was named to the Pro Bowl in 1951. Carpenter jumped to the CFL in 1954, quickly becoming a star rusher and receiver for the Roughriders. He led the Western Interprovincial Football Union in scoring in 1955 and won the division's most valuable player award. He was named a divisional all-star in 1955, 1956 and 1958.
Carpenter was named head coach of the Roughriders in 1960, but was not successful in that role. He then returned to playing, spending part of the 1960 season with the Denver Broncos of the new American Football League. A series of jobs coaching teams in the United Football League, the Continental Football League and Atlantic Coast Football League followed, interrupted by one year as an assistant for the NFL's Washington Redskins in 1968. After retiring from football, Carpenter worked as the head of recreation at the Indiana Department of Correction. He was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame in 1982 and into Oregon State's hall of fame in 1991.
==Early life and college==

Carpenter grew up in Seaside, Oregon and attended his local Seaside High School. After graduating, he enrolled at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Oregon. He played as a halfback for the Oregon State Beavers football team between 1946 and 1949.〔 Oregon State finished with a 7–1–1 win–loss–tie record in his freshman year under head coach Lon Stiner and played in the Pineapple Bowl after finishing 5–4–3 in 1948, his junior season.
Carpenter rushed for 1,003 yards in 1949. It was the third-best total in the Pacific Coast Conference and the first time an Oregon State player had eclipsed 1,000 yards of rushing.〔 Carpenter played in the annual East–West Shrine Game in January 1950 and the College All-Star Game, a now-defunct annual matchup between the National Football League (NFL) champion and a selection of the country's best college players.

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