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・ Dean Ryan
・ Dean S. Tarbell
・ Dean Sabatino
・ Dean Sampson
・ Dean Sanpei
・ Dean Saunders
・ Dean Saunders (singer)
・ Dean Schamore
・ Dean Schifilliti
・ Dean Schofield
・ Dean Schrempp
・ Dean Schwarz
・ Dean Scofield
・ Dean Semler
・ Dean Semmens
Dean Sensanbaugher
・ Dean Sewell
・ Dean Sewell (photographer)
・ Dean Seymour
・ Dean Shek
・ Dean Shiels
・ Dean Shomshak
・ Dean Shostak
・ Dean Silvers
・ Dean Simonton
・ Dean Sinclair
・ Dean Skelos
・ Dean Skira
・ Dean Slater
・ Dean Slayton


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Dean Sensanbaugher : ウィキペディア英語版
Dean Sensanbaugher

Dean Sparks Sensanbaugher ( – ) was a professional American football halfback and defensive back who played two seasons for the Cleveland Browns and New York Bulldogs in the All-America Football Conference (AAFC) and National Football League (NFL) in the late 1940s.
Sensanbaugher grew up in Ohio and attended Ohio State University. He played football there under head coach Paul Brown in 1943, but left the following year to serve in the U.S. Army during World War II. He transferred to the United States Military Academy and played for an Army Black Knights football team that won all of its games in 1944 and finished first in the AP Poll. When the war ended, he returned to Ohio State to finish his college career.
Sensanbaugher joined the Cleveland Browns, a professional team coached by Brown, in 1948. The Browns went undefeated that year and won a third straight AAFC championship. The Browns released him the following year, however, and he played briefly for the Bulldogs and in the Canadian Football League before leaving the sport. Sensanbaugher later worked in trucking and settled in Florida, where he died in 2005.
==Early life and college==

Sensanbaugher grew up in Uhrichsville, Ohio and attended the town's Claymont High School. He enrolled at Ohio State University in 1943 and made the school's football team as a freshman halfback under coach Paul Brown.〔 Brown was forced to play 17-year-olds that year because his older players had been drafted into the United States military as World War II intensified. Sensanbaugher returned a kickoff 103 yards for a touchdown in a game against Naval Station Great Lakes in 1944, setting a school record that still stands as of 2015. The Ohio State Buckeyes finished with a 3–6 record that year.〔 After the season, he was named Ohio State's most outstanding freshman. He played in the East–West Shrine Game in California, an annual college all-star game.
Sensanbaugher himself joined the U.S. Army in 1944 and transferred to the United States Military Academy in West Point, New York.〔 He played football for Army in late 1944 and participated in that year's Army–Navy Game, which Army won 23–7. Army had a perfect 9–0 win-loss record in the 1944 season, and finished the year ranked first in the AP Poll. Early the following year, however, Sensanbaugher was deemed ineligible to continue playing because he flunked three courses.
Sensanbaugher trained in Louisiana and was moved to California in preparation for active duty, but the war ended before he was sent to fight overseas.〔 Sensanbaugher then transferred to Amherst College in Massachusetts and back to Ohio State to finish his college career in 1947.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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