Alex Nahigian, present head baseball coach at Providence College and an assistant football coach at Brown for the last 24 seasons, will be coming to Harvard this fall to assist head football mentor Joe Restic.
Nahigian, who led Providence to the NCAA Division I baseball finals last weekend before the Friars lost out to Harvard, will handle the Crimson linebackers. The defensive backfield will be Nahigian's secondary concern.
Nahigian, who coached with Restic when the Crimson head man was an assistant at Brown from 1956 to 1958, will also do extensive scouting for Harvard. "In addition to his coaching abilities, he's one of the finest scouts in the country," Restic said at the time of Nahigian's appointment. "We're quite pleased to have Alex on our staff."
Nahigian will not relinquish his baseball duties at Providence because of the Harvard job. He will continue as Friar head man in addition to his fall responsibilities in Cambridge.
Injury Ends Career
Nahigian graduated in 1942 from Holy Cross, where he played football until an injury ended his career. He joined the Brown football staff in 1949 and has served under four Bruin head coaches.
While Brown football hasn't reaped many benefits from Nahigian's talents--the Bruins are the perennial doormats of the Ivy League--he has been most successful at Providence. His baseball teams have complied a 140-113-2 record in his 14 years there, and six of his last Friar teams have participated in the NCAA District I championships.
Read more in Sports
The Unsung Hero of HeptagonalsRecommended Articles
-
New Football Coach NamedIt isn't every day that legends are born in Harvard sports. And few observers thought that January 4, 1971 would
-
While You Were Gone...So how was your summer? You think the Cubbies still have a shot at it, huh? Well, not too much
-
Batsmen Ground Jumbos, 4-0 As Two Combine for ShutoutIn a tune-up for Friday's big encounter against Eastern League power Pennsylvania, Larry Brown fired hitless ball at the Tufts
-
Charlie Santos-BuchWhen we were kids, our favorite books were about a guy named Chip Hilton. We took it for granted that
-
Marching in PlaceHo-hum. How else do you describe a month which steals away hockey and refuses to offer up baseball in return?
-
A New Man, New AttitudeThe baseball man. Once you forget the lines like "when you cut him, he bleeds tobacco juice," you realize that