Bill Mohn
Notre Dame Fighting Irish | |
---|---|
Position | Quarterback |
Career history | |
College | Notre Dame (1918) |
William Kirk Mohn (April 22, 1899 – 1952) was an American football player for the University of Notre Dame. He was born in South Bend, Indiana.
In Knute Rockne's first year as the head football coach at Notre Dame in 1918, Mohn was the quarterback for a very thin squad that had been decimated due to the military enrollment for World War I. The team went 3-1-2 in a shortened season that was declared "unofficial" by the university. Among Mohn's career highlights were scoring the lone touchdown for the Irish in a 7–7 tie against Great Lakes Navy and a 73-yard punt return for a touchdown in a 26–6 win at Purdue.
References
- Schoor, Gene. 100 Years of Notre Dame Football. New York: Morrow and Co. (1987). p. 56-58
- Steele, Michael R. The Fighting Irish Football Encyclopedia. Champaign, IL: Sports Publishing LLC (2002). p. 42
- v
- t
- e
- George Cartier (1887)
- Joe Cusack (1888)
- Ed Coady (1888–1889)
- Pat Coady (1892)
- Charles Zeitler (1893)
- Nicholas Dinkel (1894)
- William Walsh (1895)
- Frank Hering (1896)
- Fred Waters (1897)
- Charles Fleming (1898)
- Angus McDonald (1899)
- Clarence Diebold (1900)
- Henry McGlew (1901–1902)
- Nate Silver (1903–1905)
- Dick Coad (1904)
- Bob Bracken (1906)
- Billy Ryan (1907)
- Don Hamilton (1908–1909)
- Gus Dorais (1910–1913)
- Alfred Bergman (1914)
- James Phelan (1915–1917)
- Tex Allison (1917)
- Bill Mohn (1918)
- Leonard Bahan (1919)
- Joe Brandy (1920)
- Chet Grant (1921)
- Frank Thomas (1922)
- Harry Stuhldreher (1922–1924)
- Red Edwards (1924–1926)
- Albert Cullen (1925)
- Chuck Riley (1926–1927)
- Jim Brady (1927–1928)
- Frank Carideo (1928–1930)
- Chuck Jaskwhich (1931–1932)
- Bud Bonar (1933–1934)
- Wally Fromhart (1934–1935)
- Andy Puplis (1936–1937)
- Steve Sitko (1938–1939)
- Bob Hargrave (1940)
- Harry Wright (1941)
- Angelo Bertelli (1941–1943)
- Johnny Lujack (1943, 1946–1947)
- Frank Dancewicz (1944–1945)
- Frank Tripucka (1948)
- Bob Williams (1949–1950)
- John Mazur (1950–1951)
- Ralph Guglielmi (1951–1954)
- Tom Carey (1952, 1954)
- Paul Hornung (1955–1956)
- Robert Williams (1956–1958)
- George Izo (1958–1959)
- Don White (1959)
- George Haffner (1960)
- Daryle Lamonica (1960–1962)
- Frank Budka (1961, 1963)
- Denis Szot (1962–1963)
- John Huarte (1963–1964)
- Sandy Bonvechio (1963)
- William Zloch (1965)
- Tom Schoen (1965)
- Terry Hanratty (1966–1968)
- Coley O'Brien (1966)
- Joe Theismann (1968–1970)
- Pat Steenberge (1971)
- Bill Etter (1971)
- Cliff Brown (1971)
- Tom Clements (1972–1974)
- Rick Slager (1975–1976)
- Joe Montana (1975, 1977–1978)
- Rusty Lisch (1976–1977, 1979)
- Tim Koegel (1979, 1981)
- Mike Courey (1979–1980)
- Blair Kiel (1980–1983)
- Ken Karcher (1982)
- Jim O'Hara (1982)
- Steve Beuerlein (1983–1986)
- Scott Grooms (1984)
- Terry Andrysiak (1985–1987)
- Tony Rice (1987–1989)
- Kent Graham (1987)
- Rick Mirer (1990–1992)
- Paul Failla (1991, 1993)
- Kevin McDougal (1993)
- Ron Powlus (1994–1997)
- Tom Krug (1995)
- Jarious Jackson (1998–1999)
- Eric Chappell (1998)
- Arnaz Battle (2000)
- Gary Godsey (2000)
- Matt LoVecchio (2000–2001)
- Carlyle Holiday (2001–2003)
- Pat Dillingham (2002)
- Brady Quinn (2003–2006)
- Demetrius Jones (2007)
- Jimmy Clausen (2007–2009)
- Evan Sharpley (2007)
- Dayne Crist (2010–2011)
- Tommy Rees (2010–2013)
- Everett Golson (2012, 2014)
- Malik Zaire (2014–2015)
- DeShone Kizer (2015–2016)
- Brandon Wimbush (2017–2018)
- Ian Book (2017–2020)
- Jack Coan (2021)
- Tyler Buchner (2022)
- Drew Pyne (2022)
- Sam Hartman (2023)
- Steve Angeli (2023)
- Riley Leonard (2024)
This biographical article relating to an American football quarterback is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e