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Frantic Francis: How One Coach's Madness Changed Football by Brett Perkins — book cover

Frantic Francis: How One Coach's Madness Changed Football

by Brett Perkins
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Overview

When Francis Schmidt, a bow tie–wearing law school graduate with a bombastic personality, got started as a volunteer high school coach, football still followed Victorian tenets of caution and simplicity and often employed fewer than fifty plays. By the time “Frantic Francis” had risen through the ranks of small colleges on the plains to one of the top coaching jobs in America—head coach at Ohio State University in the 1930s—football was a wild, wide-open game, largely because of Schmidt’s own daring style. With a mind that never stopped thinking about football, he created a playbook ten times larger than those previously used during his era and filled it with daring, complex plays that broke all the decades-old golden rules of offense. This book tells the little-known story of the man who forever changed the way football is played—and whose coaching lineage can be traced to such current names as Bill Walsh, Al Davis, and Mike Holmgren. Frantic Francis offers an unforgettable portrait of an eccentric character whose paranoid, manic, brusque, and profane ways shocked and confused even his players, but whose speedy, deceptive, and imaginative plays remade the sport of football. Although Schmidt’s mania eventually sabotaged his career, his legacy was secure and the style he introduced continues to make football one of the most popular spectator sports in America.

Synopsis

When Francis Schmidt, a bow tie–wearing law school graduate with a bombastic personality, got started as a volunteer high school coach, football still followed Victorian tenets of caution and simplicity and often employed fewer than fifty plays. By the time “Frantic Francis” had risen through the ranks of small colleges on the plains to one of the top coaching jobs in America—head coach at Ohio State University in the 1930s—football was a wild, wide-open game, largely because of Schmidt’s own daring style. With a mind that never stopped thinking about football, he created a playbook ten times larger than those previously used during his era and filled it with daring, complex plays that broke all the decades-old golden rules of offense.

 

This book tells the little-known story of the man who forever changed the way football is played—and whose coaching lineage can be traced to such current names as Bill Walsh, Al Davis, and Mike Holmgren. Frantic Francis offers an unforgettable portrait of an eccentric character whose paranoid, manic, brusque, and profane ways shocked and confused even his players, but whose speedy, deceptive, and imaginative plays remade the sport of football. Although Schmidt’s mania eventually sabotaged his career, his legacy was secure and the style he introduced continues to make football one of the most popular spectator sports in America.

ForeWord

"Perkins does a fine job of explaining how Schmidt came to influence many future offensive-minded coaches and helped change the game from a plodding, low-scoring affair to the immensely popular spectator sport it is now. Schmidt is a unique character in the history of football and his story has now finally been told."

— Bryan Yurcan, ForeWord

About the Author, Brett Perkins

Brett Perkins is a full-time writer living in Bonita, California.

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Editorials

ForeWord

"Perkins does a fine job of explaining how Schmidt came to influence many future offensive-minded coaches and helped change the game from a plodding, low-scoring affair to the immensely popular spectator sport it is now. Schmidt is a unique character in the history of football and his story has now finally been told."—Bryan Yurcan, ForeWord

— Bryan Yurcan

Sports Literature Association

"An interesting and fascinating book. . . . Brett Perkins’ work convincingly shows that Schmidt’s career at TCU and OSU in the 1920s and 30s, and his approach to football tactics, hypomanical or not, deserves more serious consideration . . . Perkins has certainly made a valuable contribution to the history of football in the twentieth century."—Julian Meldon D’Arcy, Sports Literature Association

— Julian Meldon D'Arcy

ForeWord

"Perkins does a fine job of explaining how Schmidt came to influence many future offensive-minded coaches and helped change the game from a plodding, low-scoring affair to the immensely popular spectator sport it is now. Schmidt is a unique character in the history of football and his story has now finally been told."—Bryan Yurcan, ForeWord

Sports Literature Association

"An interesting and fascinating book. . . . Brett Perkins' work convincingly shows that Schmidt's career at TCU and OSU in the 1920s and 30s, and his approach to football tactics, hypomanical or not, deserves more serious consideration . . . Perkins has certainly made a valuable contribution to the history of football in the twentieth century."—Julian Meldon D'Arcy, Sports Literature Association

Library Journal

While the subject may seem a bit obscure, Francis "Shut the Gates of Mercy" Schmidt was renowned in the first half of the 20th century for his innovative approach to offensive football. He coached at Tulsa, Arkansas, Texas Christian, Ohio State and Idaho. He has been largely forgotten since his death in 1944. Although he achieved moderate success in his career, he came in for heavy criticism for the inherent weakness in his one-sided approach to the game. This wonderfully detailed biography of an innovator also fully acknowledges and explores the flaws of its subject while arguing for the significance of his contribution to football. Of interest to all who trace the evolution of the game.—J.M.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2009
Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
Pages
536
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780803218949

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