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・ Albert Etter
・ Albert Eugene Gallatin
・ Albert Eugene Smith
・ Albert Eugene Whitmore
・ Albert Eulenburg
・ Albert Eutropius
・ Albert Evans
・ Albert Evans (American football)
・ Albert Evans (dancer)
・ Albert Evans (footballer, born 1874)
・ Albert Evans (footballer, born 1901)
・ Albert Evans (politician)
・ Albert Evans-Jones
・ Albert Evers
・ Albert Ewing
Albert Exendine
・ Albert F. A. L. Jones
・ Albert F. Canwell
・ Albert F. Case, Jr.
・ Albert F. Dawson
・ Albert F. Gallun
・ Albert F. Huntt
・ Albert F. Jones
・ Albert F. Mummery
・ Albert F. Pannam
・ Albert F. Polk
・ Albert F. Pratt
・ Albert F. Richardson
・ Albert F. Sabo
・ Albert F. Schoepper


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Albert Exendine : ウィキペディア英語版
Albert Exendine

Albert Andrew "Al" "Ex" Exendine (January 7, 1884 – January 4, 1973) was an American football player, coach, and lawyer. He played college football at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School where he was an All-American end. Exendine served as the head football coach at Otterbein College (1909–1911), Georgetown University (1914–1922), the State College of Washington — now Washington State University (1923–1925), Occidental College (1926–1927), Northeastern State Teachers' College — now Northeastern State University (1929), and Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College — now Oklahoma State University (1934–1935). He was also the head baseball coach at Oklahoma A&M from 1932 to 1933, tallying a mark of 19–13. Exendine was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a player in 1970.
Exendine played for Pop Warner's Carlisle Indians from 1902 to 1907. Though never having played the game before arriving at the institute, Exendine was named to Walter Camp's third-team All-American team in 1906. Vanderbilt upset Carlisle 4 to 0 in 1906. Vanderbilt running back Honus Craig called this his hardest game, giving special praise to Exendine as "the fastest end I ever saw."
From 1914 to 1922, Exendine coached at Georgetown and compiled a 55–21–3 record. His tenure there included a 9–1 season in 1916 and an 8–1 season in 1921. From 1923 to 1925, he coached at Washington State, tallying a mark of 6–13–4. From 1934 to 1935, he coached at Oklahoma A&M, where he compiled a 7–12–1 record.
Exendine earned a law degree at Dickinson School of Law while he was coaching at Georgetown. He later practiced law in Oklahoma and served with the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
==Head coaching record==


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