![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||
| Bernie "The Silver Fox of the Northland" Bierman | |
![]() |
Position: Coach |
| Member Biography | |
|
It has been said Bernie Bierman,"...never lost his temper, never
raised his voice, never shed a tear, never appealed to
sentiment and never played tricks on his teams." Bierman,
himself, admitted, "I never made an emotional speech in my
life." His teams were as low key and fundamental as his own
personality, because Bierman believed in simple, common-
sense football. And it won games! Starting in 1919, his
University of Montana, Mississippi State, Tulane and
Minnesota squads compiled a 146-62-12 record. The "Silver
Fox of the Northland" gave Minnesota a 93-35-6 slate over a
16-season span which included six Big Ten Championships,
five National Championships and five undefeated campaigns.
He produced 14 Gopher All-Americans, including Hall of
Famers Pug Lund, Ed Widseth, Dick Wildung, Clayton
Tonnemaker, Bruce Smith, and Leo Nomellini. There was
nothing razzle-dazzle about Bernie Bierman's tactics. It was
straight single-wing football, and he was often chastised for
running a "dull" offense. In response to his critics, Bierman
replied, "If I found that four or five plays were doing the job,
we stuck with them. Still, we probably had more plays than
our opponents. I always figured that ball control with good
execution is the best thing you can have.”
| |