Andrew Kerr
FameRank: 5

"Andrew "Andy" Kerr, IV " was an American football, basketball, and track and field coach. He served as the head football coach at Stanford University (1922–1923), Washington & Jefferson Presidents football/Washington & Jefferson College (1926–1928), Colgate University (1929–1946), and Lebanon Valley College (1947–1949), compiling a career college football record of 137–71–14. His 1932 Colgate Red Raiders football team/1932 Colgate team went a perfect 9–0, was not scored upon, and was named a College football national championships in NCAA Division I FBS/national champion by Parke H. Davis. Kerr was also the head basketball coach at the University of Pittsburgh for one season (1921–1922) and at Stanford for four seasons (1922–1926), tallying a career college basketball mark of 54–26. In addition, he coached track and field at Pittsburgh from 1913 to 1921. Kerr was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1951. Colgate's home football stadium, Andy Kerr Stadium, was dedicated in his honor in 1966.

More Andrew Kerr on Wikipedia.

I think they made a very wise choice to get to a safe area.

Anything is possible and all avenues will be looked at by the police in relation to this investigation.

We played pretty well together as a team. We had four different (players) scoring, so they played pretty solid as a team.

They played really well tonight.

Obviously it was something that caused them concern and a bit of distress, and obviously they feared for their safety at that point and felt that it was best to get away.

We started out really good and were just pounding them, going straight down and having some quality passing, and intensity was high, and then we started to slack off, but then the last 15 to 20 minutes of the second half we started checking and working together.

I can't tell you what the nature of the investigations are. People contacted us as a result of the media coverage last night (and) we're working through how that impacts the investigation.

It's hard to explain. We needed (win) No. 1. It was rough. All week, we talked how we needed No. 1. We were so close the other times. This is a good win for us.