Below is an excerpt from pages 11-13, when Harris was the football coach:
In 1945, we played Cornell. Cornell still had the Navy unit. We had no business playing them. They were outstanding. They had just tremendous players. Anyway, it's a game. It doesn't make a lot of difference whether or not you win or lose, but of course you like to win. But, we played Cornell, and I thought the coach of Cornell would make it a good game. He would not run up the score. Listen. that afternoon Cornell College beat us 52-14. They walloped us. Ozzie Brahos '48 caught a pass and he ran for one touchdown, I remember.
The next game was with Beloit. Dolph Stanley saw the score in the paper. Right away he's on the telephone. He says, "Harris, are you comin'?" I says, "Why sure, Dolph. We're going to be there for the game this Saturday." "Well." he says, "I thought maybe you'd be quitting." "No," I says. "We'll be there." Well, I had Bob Tvrdik '46 and Bob Wessale '46 and, oh, a few good players. But I know we had Bud Collette '50, who was a tennis player at Franklin high school. He played one of our ends. We didn't really have an outstanding team.
So, on the telephone Dolph says, "Now, Harris, we're going to be very, very fair with your. We won't do what Cornell did. I says, "That's all right. It would be nice of you not to beat us too much."
So, when we get up there, I'm out on the field. The team's starting to warm up. It was a night game. I looked over at the Beloit team and he had 'em. Boy, he had the horses, big chunky tackles from Chicago. They looked even bigger and better than Cornell.
Dolph came over to me and he said, "Say, Harris, you know I told you on the telephone that we would take it easy, but....." he said, "I noticed in the paper tonight they've got us predicted to beat you about 35-0." He said, "I just got to let them go; I can't keep that score down less than 35."
I turned to him and this is a quote. I said, "Dolph, I told you on the phone that we would treat you fair if we had a good team. Well, I don't have a very good team, but if we should be lucky enough to ever beat you, it won't be by a big score."
Well, he left me. I went to the dressing room. I told those guys, "That dang crook! He said he was going to take it easy on us. He isn't! He's going to wallop us!"
I never had a team so keyed up in my life. I said, "Now, doggone you guys, you gotta fight and you gotta play for inches...inches...and you got to hit with all your might!"
Well, we went out there. I've never seen such a football game. That big Beloit College football team...cocky, smart...they were going to run all over us. Well, boy, our team wasn't good, but we matched them touchdown for touchdown. We did beat them one touchdown, 33-27. I couldn't believe it! Bob Tvrdik threw a pass, and Bud Collette.....I don't think he ever caught a touchdown pass in his life! He grabbed that pass in the end zone, just jumped up over that Beloit half-back, and pulled it in and we won the ball game.
After the game you usually greet the other coach. I never did see Dolph Stanley. That night before we left we didn't get our contract check. He was so disappointed, he was so mad, he was so upset, that the check, our guarantee, was mailed to me. Oh, listen, that Coe team defeated Beloit up there when we weren't supposed to even have a team on the field.
The full text of Harris Lamb's history of Coe can be found here. These are the stories the alumni tell of the 'good ol' days' sprinkled with a few wrong twin clarifications. It is all around a good time.
~Sara Pitcher, Archives Assistant
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