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Oklahoma Junior College Conference: Red Robertson: 1960 co-champions Tyler Cameron: Tyler, Texas Lawton, Oklahoma: Texas Eastern Conference Oklahoma Junior College Conference: Floyd Wagstaff Leroy Montgomery: 1961–1963 no champion 1964: Phoenix: Phoenix, Arizona: Arizona Junior College Athletic Conference: Thomas Hogan: 1965: Ferrum: Ferrum ...
The college competes in the National Junior College Athletic Association's Region XIV with soccer, football, basketball, baseball, tennis, and golf teams (men) and softball, volleyball, soccer, basketball, tennis, and golf teams (women). Tyler Junior College athletes have won 69 national junior college championships.
This category is for American football players who played at Tyler Junior College. Pages in category "Tyler Apaches football coaches" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
As a freshman at Tyler Junior College in 2013, Reynolds accumulated a total of 782 yards on 44 catches and was named to the second-team all conference. [5] After his better than average freshman season, he managed to pick up a couple of offers. He was ranked as a three-star junior college recruit by Rivals.com. [3]
Floyd Solomon Wagstaff (January 8, 1911 – February 5, 2000) was an American football and basketball coach and athletics administrator. He coached Tyler Junior College in Tyler, Texas from 1946 to 1975 and served as athletic director until retiring in 1984.
The Southwest Junior College Football Conference (SWJCFC or SJCFC) is a football conference for National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) teams located in the Southwestern United States. The conference formed in 1963 with nine junior colleges located in Texas , and began operation in 1964. [ 1 ]
At Tyler Junior College, Page was a Little All-American in 1949 and was named the Most Valuable Player in U.S. junior college football. He led Southwest Junior College Conference in passing that year, and led the team to a co-conference championship, a 10-1 record and a trip to the Texas Rose Bowl against the Fort Lewis team, which they won 40-0.
The 1967 junior college football season was the season of intercollegiate junior college football running from September to December 1967. Northeastern Oklahoma A&M won the NJCAA National Football Championship, defeating Lees–McRae in the Shrine Bowl in Savannah, Georgia. [1] Fullerton placed in the top spot in Gridwire's final junior college ...