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| Jesse Harper | |
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Position: Coach |
| Member Biography | |
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With a receding hairline and close-fitting wire-rimmed glasses,
Jesse Harper appeared more like an accountant than a football
coach, and even less like a man willing to take one of the
biggest gambles the game has ever known. He was the man
who orchestrated the Gus Dorais-to-Knute Rockne passing
combination which upset Army at West Point in 1913, and
showed the football world the greatest potential weapon of this
or any era. Although the forward pass was legalized in 1906,
few coaches used it more than a couple of times a game - until
Harper sent Dorais launching pigskins to Rockne. Harper had
learned his football while playing for Amos Alonzo Stagg as a
member of the 1905 national champion Chicago Maroons. At
Chicago, Harper became impressed with the shifting offense
that he and Rockne would later refine into the famous Notre
Dame shift- from the T-Formation to the box. A native of
Illinois, Harper coached at Alma College (1906-07), and then
at Wabash (1909-1912), until he accepted the head coaching
post at Notre Dame in 1913. He turned the coaching reins
over to Rockne in 1918, but returned to South Bend to serve
as the Irish Athletic Director after Rockne was killed in a 1931
plane crash.
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