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Al
Maglisceau was born May 21, 1904, in Pittsburgh, PA.
After graduating in 1923 from Parnassus High School in
New Kensington, Al played football at Geneva College
from 1924 through 1927, lettering all four years as an
offensive and defensive tackle and making the
All-Conference Team in 1925. In
the late 1920s, the Geneva Covenanters football team was
celebrated for playing some of the best teams in college
football and took pride in their challenging schedule.
In 1926, Al played with fellow Beaver County Sports Hall
of Famers Mack Flenniken
and Ernie Meyer on the
Geneva football team, along with their legendary
quarterback Cal Hubbard,
in the team's 16-7 historic upset of a powerful Harvard
team.
The next year, Al was named captain of
the Covenanters football team. The Eastern Collegiate
Football Independent Conference had twenty teams, and
Geneva was ranked first, ahead of such schools as Army,
Pittsburgh, Yale, Princeton, Villanova, and Penn State.
The 1927 Geneva Covenanters, led by Beaver County Sports
Hall of Famer Bo McMillin
in his third and final year as head coach, compiled an
overall record of 8-0-1. In conference play, the team
went 4-0 winning the Tri-State Champions title. A tie
against Bucknell University kept the Covenanters from a
perfect season that year.
Years before professional football
arrived in Philadelphia and the present-day Eagles
organization was established, a recreational team named
the Frankford Yellow Jackets, founded in 1899, was
organized out of the city's Frankford neighborhood. The
team would attract the interest of many athletes,
including Al. In 1929, Al would sign as a lineman for
the Frankford Yellow Jackets of the National Football
League, finishing third place with a record of 10-4-5.
Al would play in five games for the Yellow Jackets and
start in two games.
Following his professional football
career, Al taught history and coached at high schools in
Youngstown, PA (1931-1934) and Port Allegheny, PA
(1934-1942). Al then moved to New York, where he taught
and coached football and track at North Tonawanda High
School and, at the time of his retirement from coaching
in 1958, was the winningest track coach in North
Tonawanda High School history. Overall, Al coached for
27 years (1931-1958) and taught for 39 years
(1931-1970).
In 2021, Al received the North
Tonawanda Football Hall of Fame's Bud Henry Award for
exemplary off-the-field contributions to the North
Tonawanda football program. Al was honored in 2003 by
Geneva College as one of the top 100 football players at
Geneva from 1890-1940, and Al was inducted into the
Geneva College Athletics Hall of Fame as part of its
2020 Legacy Hall of Fame Class.
Albert "Al" Samuel Maglisceau died
November 5, 1985, at age 81, in Sun City Center, FL. |
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