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It is home to the Edinboro Fighting Scots of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference. The stadium is named for B. Regis "Sox" Harrison, who served as the head football coach at Edinboro from 1926 to 1938 and 1941-42 before being inducted into the university's Athletic Hall of Fame. The stadium was officially opened in 1965.
Edinboro has one of the premier NCAA Division I collegiate wrestling programs. Prior to moving to the Division I level in 1986, Edinboro was already a national power at the NAIA and NCAA Division II levels. Edinboro has been fortunate to be home of one of the greatest Olympic and amateur wrestlers in the world, Bruce Baumgartner. Baumgartner ...
2017 Edinboro Fighting Scots football team; S. Sox Harrison Stadium This page was last edited on 24 November 2024, at 00:47 (UTC). ...
Edinboro head football coach Jake Nulph has stepped down from his post to accept a job as an athletic director at Kiski School in Leechburg, PA. Nulph took over the Scots on the football field ...
Edinboro football was inexperienced in 2023. Head coach Jake Nulph hopes that, in year four, health and experience will equate to a winning season. 5 things to know about Edinboro football in 2024
Edinboro football beat Division I Robert Morris, 23-21, for its first win of 2024. Three players, including two who garnered all-PSAC honors, keyed the upset.
The 1961 Edinboro Fighting Scots football team represented Edinboro State College (now known as Edinboro University of Pennsylvania) of Edinboro, Pennsylvania. In their second year under head coach Loyal K. Park , the Fighting Scots compiled a 3–4–1 record (1–3–1 against PSCC opponents) and finished in fifth place in the West Division ...
The Scots have 16 of 22 starters back from 2022's 5-6 campaign. They'll open the season at Division I Duquesne.