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Simpson Storm football

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Simpson Storm football
First season1893
Athletic directorMarty Bell
Head coachReed Hoskins
2nd season, 5–9 (.357)
StadiumBill Buxton Stadium
(capacity: 5,000)
Year built1949
Field surfaceFieldTurf
LocationIndianola, Iowa
NCAA divisionDivision III
ConferenceARC
All-time record498–559–36 (.472)
Bowl record0–1 (.000)
Playoff appearances6
Playoff record2–5
Conference titles12
RivalriesCentral[1]
ColorsRed and Gold[2]
   
MascotStorm
Websiteathletics.central.edu

The Simpson Storm football team represents Simpson College in college football at the NCAA Division III level. The Storm are members of the American Rivers Conference (ARC), fielding its team in the ARC since 1923 when it was named the Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (IIAC). The Storm play their home games at Bill Buxton Stadium in Indianola, Iowa.[3] Bill Buxton Stadium was previously known as Neff Field from 1949 until it was renamed in 1998.[3] Prior to 1949, the team played at Buxton Park.[3]

Their head coach is Reed Hoskins, who took over the position for the 2023 season.[4]

Conference affiliations

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Championships

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Conference championships

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Simpson claims 12 conference titles, the most recent of which came in 1997.

Year Conference Overall Record Conference Record Coach
1923 Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference 8–1 7–0 C. Noel Workman
1924 8–0–1 7–0–1
1925† 6–2–1 5–1
1931 7–3 6–0 Lloyd Dean
1933 7–2–1 6–0–1
1934 3–5–2 3–2–1
1949 8–1 6–0 R. G. Miller
1969 8–2 6–1 John Sullivan
1988 9–2 8–0 Jim Williams
1991 10–1 8–0
1996 10–1 8–0
1997 12–1 8–0

† Co-champions

Postseason games

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Division III playoff games

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The Storm have appeared in the Division III playoffs six times with an overall record of 2–6.

Season Coach Playoff Opponent Result
1988 Jim Williams First round Wisconsin–Whitewater L 27–29
1989 First round Saint John's (MN) L 35–42
1991 First round Wisconsin–La Crosse L 13–28
1996 First round Saint John's (MN) L 18–21
1997 First round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Wisconsin–Whitewater
Augsburg
Mount Union
W 34–31
W 61–21
L 7–54
2003 Jay Niemann First round St. Norbert L 20–26

Bowl games

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Simpson has participated in one bowl game, and has a record of 0–1.

Season Coach Bowl Opponent Result
1969 John Sullivan Mineral Water Bowl Saint John's (MN) L 0–21

List of head coaches

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Key

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Key to symbols in coaches list
General Overall Conference Postseason[A 1]
No. Order of coaches[A 2] GC Games coached CW Conference wins PW Postseason wins
DC Division championships OW Overall wins CL Conference losses PL Postseason losses
CC Conference championships OL Overall losses CT Conference ties PT Postseason ties
NC National championships OT Overall ties[A 3] C% Conference winning percentage
Elected to the College Football Hall of Fame O% Overall winning percentage[A 4]

Coaches

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List of head football coaches showing season(s) coached, overall records, conference records, postseason records, championships and selected awards
No. Name Season(s) GC OW OL OT O% CW CL CT C% PW PL PT DC CC NC Awards
1 Charles Cheney 1893 5 5 0 0 1.000
2 unknown 1894; 1897 10 4 5 1 0.450
3 Perry W. Jenkins 1895 3 1 1 1 0.500
4 J. M. Jackson 1896 5 2 3 0 0.400
5 Hal McNeil 1898–1899 13 8 5 0 0.615
6 Paul Coldren 1900 9 6 2 1 0.722
7 John Griffith 1901 9 7 1 1 0.833
8 Graham Reid 1902–1905 27 10 17 0 0.370
9 R. N. Post 1908 6 5 1 0 0.542
10 Carroll N. Kirk 1909–1910 14 9 5 0 0.643
11 Harold Iddings 1911–1913 14 5 9 0 0.357
12 Arthur Aston 1914 7 2 4 1 0.357
13 Archie Kirk 1915 8 2 6 0 0.250
14 Chester C. Dillon 1916–1917 13 2 10 1 0.192
15 Nile Graves 1918–1920 21 8 12 1 0.405
16 Cecil Cushman 1921–1922 15 6 8 1 0.433
17 C. Noel Workman 1923–1925 27 22 3 2 0.852 20 1 1 0.932 3
18 Hoge Workman 1926–1930 43 21 19 3 0.523 19 8 3 0.683
19 Lloyd Dean 1931–1934 40 22 14 4 0.600 19 3 3 0.820 3
20 Frank Casey 1935–1939; 1942–1947 87 22 60 5 0.282 14 30 2 0.326
21 Bob Waldorf 1940–1941 18 4 12 2 0.278 2 8 1 0.227
22 R. G. Miller 1948–1957 83 34 47 2 0.422 26 30 3 0.466 1
23 E.G. Booth 1958–1961 34 3 30 1 0.103 2 29 1 0.078
24 Ken Heizer 1962–1965 36 14 22 0 0.389 12 21 0 0.364
25 John Sullivan 1966–1970 44 30 11 3 0.716 24 9 2 0.714 0 1 0 1
26 Al Paone 1971–1973 27 9 15 3 0.389 6 12 3 0.357
27 Larry Johnson 1974 9 2 6 1 0.278 2 5 0 0.286
28 Maury Waugh 1975–1979 45 15 30 0 0.333 10 25 0 0.286
29 Alex Glann 1980–1984 45 17 28 0 0.378 10 25 0 0.286
30 Lloyd Krumlauf 1985–1986 18 4 14 0 0.222 4 11 0 0.267
31 Jim Williams[10] 1987–2001 155 106 48 1 0.687 93 34 0 0.732 2 5 0 4
32 Jay Niemann[11] 2002–2007 61 32 29 0 0.525 26 23 0 0.531 0 1 0
33 Jim Glogowski[12] 2008–2015 80 37 43 0 0.463 26 34 0 0.433
34 Matt Jeter[13] 2016–2022 61 22 39 0 0.361 18 31 0 0.367
35 Reed Hoskins[14] 2023–present 10 3 7 0 0.300 2 6 0 0.250

Year-by-year results

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National champions Conference champions Bowl game berth Playoff berth

[15]

Season Year Head
Coach
Association Division Conference Record Postseason Final ranking
Overall Conference
Win Loss Tie Finish Win Loss Tie
Simpson Red and Gold
1893 1893 Charles Cheney 5 0 0
1894 1894 unknown 3 3 1
1895 1895 Perry W. Jenkins 1 1 1
1896 1896 J. M. Jackson 2 3 0
1897 1897 unknown 1 2 0
1898 1898 Hal McNeil 3 3 0
1899 1899 5 2 0
1900 1900 Paul Coldren 6 2 1
1901 1901 John Griffith 7 1 1
1902 1902 Graham Reid 5 3 0
1903 1903 1 4 0
1904 1904 1 5 0
1905 1905 IAAUS 3 5 0
Sport dropped 1906–1907
1908 1908 R. N. Post IAAUS 5 1 0
1909 1909 Carroll N. Kirk 5 2 0
1910 1910 NCAA 4 3 0
1911 1911 Harold Iddings 0 5 0
1912 1912 1 2 0
1913 1913 4 2 0
1914 1914 Arthur Aston 2 4 1
1915 1915 Archie Kirk 2 6 0
1916 1916 Chester C. Dillon 2 3 0
1917 1917 0 7 1
1918 1918 Nile Graves 4 3 0
1919 1919 3 3 1
1920 1920 1 6 0
1921 1921 Cecil Cushman 2 5 0
1922 1922 4 3 1
1923 1923 C. Noel Workman IIAC 8 1 0 1st 7 0 0 IIAC champion
1924 1924 8 0 1 1st 7 0 1 IIAC champion
1925 1925 6 2 1 t–1st 6 1 0 IIAC champion
1926 1926 Hoge Workman 4 3 1 3rd 3 1 1
1927 1927 5 3 0 3rd 4 1 0
1928 1928 4 4 1 8th 4 2 1
1929 1929 5 4 0 6th 5 2 0
Simpson Redmen
1930 1930 Hoge Workman NCAA IIAC 3 5 1 7th 3 2 1
1931 1931 Lloyd Dean 7 3 0 1st 6 0 0 IIAC champion
1932 1932 5 4 1 4th 4 1 1
1933 1933 7 2 1 1st 6 0 1 IIAC champion
1934 1934 3 5 2 6th 3 2 1 IIAC champion
1935 1935 Frank Casey 1 8 0 10th 1 5 0
1936 1936 3 6 0 8th 2 4 0
1937 1937 0 9 0 13th 0 6 0
1938 1938 1 8 0 12th 1 4 0
1939 1939 1 8 0 11th 1 5 0
1940 1940 Bob Waldorf 1 7 1 11th 1 4 1
1941 1941 3 5 1 10th 1 4 0
1942 1942 Frank Casey 4 3 0 4th 4 1 0
1943 1943 1 3 0 [a]
1944 1944 3 1 2
1945 1945 2 5 0 5th 1 2 0
1946 1946 3 5 1 7th 2 2 0
1947 1947 3 4 2 6th 2 1 2
1948 1948 R. G. Miller 2 7 0 10th 2 4 0
1949 1949 8 1 0 1st 6 0 0 IIAC champion
1950 1950 3 6 0 4th (South) 1 4 0
1951 1951 2 7 0 4th (South) 1 4 0
1952 1952 3 5 0 3rd (South) 2 2 0
1953 1953 0 8 0 5th (South) 0 4 0
1954 1954 1 5 2 8th 0 4 2
1955 1955 College Division 6 2 0 3rd 5 2 0
1956 1956 5 2 1 3rd 5 2 1
1957 1957 4 4 0 4th 4 4 0
1958 1958 E.G. Booth 2 5 1 7th 2 5 1
1959 1959 0 8 0 9th 0 8 0
1960 1960 0 9 0 9th 0 8 0
1961 1961 1 8 0 9th 0 8 0
1962 1962 Ken Heizer 0 9 0 9th 0 9 0
1963 1963 5 4 0 3rd 5 4 0
1964 1964 6 3 0 3rd 5 3 0
1965 1965 3 6 0 7th 2 5 0
1966 1966 John Sullivan 3 5 0 6th 2 5 0
1967 1967 7 1 1 2nd 6 1 0
1968 1968 6 1 2 2nd 5 0 2
1969 1969 8 2 0 1st 6 1 0 L Mineral Water Bowl
1970 1970 6 2 0 3rd 5 2 0
1971 1971 Al Paone 5 4 0 5th 4 3 0
1972 1972 2 5 2 6th 1 4 2
1973 1973 Division III 2 6 1 7th 1 5 1
1974 1974 Larry Johnson 2 6 1 6th 2 5 0
1975 1975 Maury Waugh 2 7 0 8th 1 6 0
1976 1976 4 5 0 6th 3 4 0
1977 1977 2 7 0 7th 2 5 0
1978 1978 4 5 0 6th 2 5 0
1979 1979 3 6 0 6th 2 5 0
1980 1980 Alex Gann 5 4 0 5th 3 4 0
1981 1981 3 6 0 6th 2 5 0
1982 1982 4 5 0 6th 2 5 0
1983 1983 3 6 0 6th 2 5 0
1984 1984 2 7 0 t–7th 1 6 0
1985 1985 Lloyd Krumlauf 3 6 0 6th 3 4 0
1986 1986 1 8 0 7th 1 7 0
1987 1987 Jim Williams 3 6 0 6th 3 5 0
1988 1988 9 2 0 1st 8 0 0 L NCAA Division III First Round
1989 1989 8 3 0 2nd 7 1 0 L NCAA Division III First Round
1990 1990 8 2 0 3rd 6 2 0
1991 1991 10 1 0 1st 8 0 0 L NCAA Division III First Round
1992 1992 6 2 1 2nd 6 2 0
Simpson Storm
1993 1993 Jim Williams NCAA Division III IIAC 5 5 0 4th 5 3 0
1994 1994 5 5 0 4th 5 3 0
1995 1995 7 3 0 3rd 6 2 0
1996 1996 10 1 0 1st 8 0 0 L NCAA Division III First Round
1997 1997 12 1 0 1st 8 0 0 L NCAA Division III Semifinals
1998 1998 7 3 0 t–3rd 7 3 0
1999 1999 6 4 0 t–4th 6 4 0
2000 2000 6 4 0 t–4th 6 4 0
2001 2001 4 6 0 t–5th 4 5 0
2002 2002 Jay Niemann 6 4 0 4th 6 3 0
2003 2003 9 2 0 2nd 7 1 0 L NCAA Division III First Round 23
2004 2004 5 5 0 6th 4 4 0
2005 2005 5 5 0 6th 3 5 0
2006 2006 3 7 0 6th 3 5 0
2007 2007 4 6 0 t–6th 3 5 0
2008 2008 Jim Glogowski 7 3 0 t–3rd 5 3 0
2009 2009 3 7 0 t–7th 2 6 0
2010 2010 2 8 0 t–7th 2 6 0
2011 2011 5 5 0 5th 5 3 0
2012 2012 6 4 0 t–2nd 4 3 0
2013 2013 7 3 0 2nd 5 2 0
2014 2014 3 7 0 8th 0 7 0
2015 2015 4 6 0 t–4th 3 4 0
2016 2016 Matt Jeter 3 7 0 t–7th 2 6 0
2017 2017 5 5 0 t–4th 4 4 0
2018 2018 A-R-C 7 3 0 t–2nd 6 2 0
2019 2019 5 5 0 t–5th 4 4 0
2020–21 2020–21 0 1 0 [b] 0 1 0
2021 2021 1 9 0 8th 1 7 0
2022 2022 1 9 0 8th 1 7 0
2023 2023 Reed Hoskins 3 7 0 T–6th 2 6 0
2024 2024 0 0 0 0 0 0

Notes

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  1. ^ Although the first Rose Bowl Game was played in 1902, it has been continuously played since the 1916 game, and is recognized as the oldest bowl game by the NCAA. "—" indicates any season prior to 1916 when postseason games were not played.[7]
  2. ^ A running total of the number of head coaches, with coaches who served separate tenures being counted only once. Interim head coaches are represented with "Int" and are not counted in the running total. "—" indicates the team played but either without a coach or no coach is on record. "X" indicates an interim year without play.
  3. ^ Overtime rules in college football were introduced in 1996, making ties impossible in the period since.[8]
  4. ^ When computing the win–loss percentage, a tie counts as half a win and half a loss.[9]
  1. ^ No IIAC play due to WWII
  2. ^ Official standings unavailable due to COVID-19

References

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  1. ^ "Central renews old football rivalry with Simpson". Central College Athletics. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
  2. ^ "Simpson College Style Guidelines". March 9, 2018. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c "Bill Buxton Stadium". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ "Reed Hoskins hired as head football coach". December 12, 2022. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ "#RiversRise; Iowa Conference Now American Rivers Conference". rollrivers.com. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
  6. ^ "Central Football Tops American Rivers Conference Preseason Coaches' Poll". rollrivers.com. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
  7. ^ National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) (2011). Bowl/All-Star Game Records (PDF). Indianapolis, Indiana: NCAA. pp. 5–10. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 5, 2011. Retrieved August 21, 2011.
  8. ^ Whiteside, Kelly (August 25, 2006). "Overtime system still excites coaches". USA Today. McLean, Virginia. Archived from the original on September 6, 2010. Retrieved September 25, 2009.
  9. ^ Finder, Chuck (September 6, 1987). "Big plays help Paterno to 200th". The New York Times. New York City. Archived from the original on September 28, 2013. Retrieved October 22, 2009.
  10. ^ "Simpson College mourns loss of Jim Williams". Simpson College. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  11. ^ Borgeson, Brock. "Ex-Simpson coach lands job in the BIG 10". The Simpsonian. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  12. ^ Geelan, Bryan. "Glogowski steps down as Simpson's head football coach". The Des Moines Register. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  13. ^ Geer, Caleb. "Storm football cleans house". The Simpsonian. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  14. ^ "Reed Hoskins Named Head Football Coach at Simpson College". Illinois Wesleyan University Athletics. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  15. ^ "Football Year-by-Year Records". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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