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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Greasy_NealeGreasy Neale - Wikipedia

    Neale was the starting right fielder for the championship-winning 1919 Reds. He batted .357 in the 1919 World Series and led the Reds with ten hits in their eight-game series win over the scandalous White Sox. Neale spent all but 22 games of his baseball career with the Reds.

  2. Greasy Neale. Position: Outfielder. Bats: Left • Throws: Right. 6-0 , 170lb (183cm, 77kg) Born: November 5, 1891 in Parkersburg, WV. Died: November 2, 1973 in Lake Worth, FL. Buried: Parkersburg Memorial Gardens, Parkersburg, WV. School: Debut: (Age 24-159d, 4,465th in major league history)

  3. They beat the Chicago Cardinals 7-0 and the Los Angeles Rams 14-0. Long before he became a head coach in the NFL, Neale starred as an end on Jim Thorpe’s pre-World War I Canton Bulldogs. A successful college coach, he also led his Washington and Jefferson College squad to the 1922 Rose Bowl.

  4. Mar 2, 2016 · Greasy Neale enrolled at West Virginia Wesleyan College via a football scholarship in 1912. He was noted for his speedy, slashing running style whether at his familiar end position on the gridiron or stealing bases on the diamond. But he was also a basketball star.

  5. In a 1912 football game with arch rival West Virginia, Neale caught 14 straight passes and sparked WVW to its first-ever victory over the Mountaineers, 19-14. Neale went on to combine two careers. For eight seasons he was a major league baseball player.

  6. Feb 6, 2023 · Earle "Greasy" Neale (above, 1922) coached the Philadelphia Eagles football team between 1941 and 1950 and in the words of columnist Ray Didinger writing for the Eagles' official website, "lifted the Eagles from a bumbling franchise on the verge of collapse to the best team in professional football." Didinger went on to note that Neale led the ...

  7. Greasy Neale was a football coach in the National Football League (NFL) from 1941 to 1950, finishing his career as the head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles. Over his ten years of coaching his teams compiled a cumulative win/loss record of 63-43-5.

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