Hugh Gall

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Hugh Gall
Hugh Gall.jpg
Date of birth ca 1888
Date of death May 19, 1938(1938-05-19) (aged 49)
Career information
Position(s) HB/P
College University of Toronto
Career history
As administrator
1914-???? Secretary of Canadian Rugby Union
1920-1921 President of Canadian Rugby Union
As coach
1914 University of Toronto Varsity Blues
As player
1907-1910 University of Toronto Varsity Blues
1913 Toronto Parkdale Canoe Club
Records 1909: Most singles in a Grey Cup game (8)
Career stats

Hugh Gall (c. 1888 – May 19, 1938) was a Canadian football player considered to be one of the best runners and punters of his era.[1]

After playing half-back in Toronto for Parkdale Collegiate, Gall joined the University of Toronto varsity team in 1907 and played there for four seasons. He led the team to Grey Cup victories in 1909 and 1910, becoming the first team to win the new trophy presented to the Canadian Rugby Union champions. Gall set a record for most singles (single point kicks, also known as rouges) in a Grey Cup game with eight in 1909, a record that still stands[2] (though somewhat asterisked, because he accomplished the feat before end zones were invented and as such as soon as the ball crossed the goal line it was dead and could not be returned). He was team captain for the 1910 season.[3]

Gall also played in the Ontario Hockey Association for the Parkdale Canoe Club hockey team. In addition, he competed in several track meets in the Toronto area.

Gall was elected vice-commodore of the Parkdale Canoe Club in 1911 and then became a football referee. He returned to action in 1913, playing for the Parkdale team that lost in the Grey Cup final. Gall coached U of T to the intercollegiate championship in 1914 and graduated in 1915 with a degree in mechanical engineering.

He would go on to become secretary of the Canadian Rugby Union (now Football Canada) in 1914, and served a one-year term as president of the organization in 1920-1921. He died in Toronto at age 49 from pneumonia.

Gall was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1963, Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1975,[4] and the U of T Sports Hall of Fame in 1989.

References

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