"Bear Wolf" redirects here. For the soap opera character, see Bear Wolf (Emmerdale).
Raymond Wolf
Wolf pictured in Yackety Yack 1938, North Carolina yearbook
Biographical details
Born
(1904-07-15)July 15, 1904 Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Died
October 6, 1979(1979-10-06) (aged 75) Fort Worth, Texas, U.S.
Playing career
Football
1924–1926
TCU
Baseball
1925–1927
TCU
1927
Columbus Senators
1927
Cincinnati Reds
1928
Columbus Senators
Position(s)
Tackle (football) First baseman (baseball)
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
1929–1935
TCU (line)
1936–1941
North Carolina
1942
Georgia Pre-Flight
1946–1949
Florida
1950–1951
Tulane (line)
1952–1953
Tulane
Baseball
1935–1936
TCU
Administrative career (AD unless noted)
1934–1936
TCU
1946–1949
Florida
Head coaching record
Overall
64–55–7 (football) 17–21–1 (baseball)
Raymond Bernard Wolf (July 15, 1904 – October 6, 1979), nicknamed "Bear" Wolf, was an American football and baseball player and coach. Wolf was a native of Illinois and an alumnus of Texas Christian University (TCU), where he played college football and college baseball. He played professional baseball for two seasons, and appeared in one Major League Baseball game for the Cincinnati Reds in 1927. Wolf served as the head football coach at the University of North Carolina (1936–1941), the University of Florida (1946–1949) and Tulane University (1952–1953). He was also the head baseball coach at his alma mater, TCU, from 1935 to 1936 and the athletic director at Florida from 1946 to 1949.
Raymond Bernard Wolf (July 15, 1904 – October 6, 1979), nicknamed "Bear" Wolf, was an American football and baseball player and coach. Wolf was a native...
Cahoon (1919–1920) William Nance (1921–1925) Dutch Meyer (1926–1934) RaymondWolf (1935–1936) Howard Grubbs (1937–1939) Walter Roach (1940–1942) No team...
(1918) William L. Driver (1920–1922) L. C. "Pete" Wright (1922–1934) RaymondWolf (1934–1936) L. C. "Pete" Wright (1936) Howard Grubbs (1937–1950) Dutch...
Dawson (1936–1941) Claude Simons Jr. (1942–1945) Henry Frnka (1946–1951) RaymondWolf (1952–1953) Andy Pilney (1954–1961) Tommy O'Boyle (1962–1965) Jim Pittman...
Dawson (1936–1941) Claude Simons Jr. (1942–1945) Henry Frnka (1946–1951) RaymondWolf (1952–1953) Andy Pilney (1954–1961) Tommy O'Boyle (1962–1965) Jim Pittman...
(1936–1939) Tom Lieb (1940–1942) No team (1943) Tom Lieb (1944–1945) RaymondWolf (1946–1949) Bob Woodruff (1950–1959) Ray Graves (1960–1969) Doug Dickey...
Buckeyes". The Plain Dealer. November 23, 2011. Retrieved December 16, 2021. Raymond Hines III, "Denise Meyer Chat Transcript Archived February 18, 2007, at...
Mammals of North America, E. Raymond Hall & Keith R. Kelson, Ronald Press New York, 1959 Mech, L. David. 1970. The Wolf: The Ecology and Behavior of an...
Dawson (1936–1941) Claude Simons Jr. (1942–1945) Henry Frnka (1946–1951) RaymondWolf (1952–1953) Andy Pilney (1954–1961) Tommy O'Boyle (1962–1965) Jim Pittman...
(1936–1939) Tom Lieb (1940–1942) No team (1943) Tom Lieb (1944–1945) RaymondWolf (1946–1949) Bob Woodruff (1950–1959) Ray Graves (1960–1969) Doug Dickey...
ISBN 9781604690620. Pryer, Kathleen M.; Schneider, Harald; Smith, Alan R.; Cranfill, Raymond; Wolf, Paul G.; Hunt, Jeffrey S.; Sipes, Sedonia D. (2001). "Horsetails and...
Dawson (1936–1941) Claude Simons Jr. (1942–1945) Henry Frnka (1946–1951) RaymondWolf (1952–1953) Andy Pilney (1954–1961) Tommy O'Boyle (1962–1965) Jim Pittman...
Sea Wolf (1926 film), a silent film directed by Ralph Ince The Sea Wolf (1930 film), directed by Alfred Santell, starring Milton Sills, Raymond Hackett...
(1936–1939) Tom Lieb (1940–1942) No team (1943) Tom Lieb (1944–1945) RaymondWolf (1946–1949) Bob Woodruff (1950–1959) Ray Graves (1960–1969) Doug Dickey...
(1936–1939) Tom Lieb (1940–1942) No team (1943) Tom Lieb (1944–1945) RaymondWolf (1946–1949) Bob Woodruff (1950–1959) Ray Graves (1960–1969) Doug Dickey...
final polls. RaymondWolf came to Carolina from his post as TCU defensive line coach. In 1936, the Tar Heels finished with an 8–2 record. Wolf's 1937 Tar...
Fetzer (1921–1925) Chuck Collins (1926–1933) Carl Snavely (1934–1935) RaymondWolf (1936–1941) Jim Tatum (1942) Tom Young (1943) Gene McEver (1944) Carl...