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rdfs:comment | - Moore was the son of a Baptist minister and graduated from Carson–Newman College in Jefferson City, Tennessee. In addition to two Southeastern Conference (SEC) championships in football won at LSU, his track and field teams won twelve SEC titles and the national championship in 1933. LSU's Bernie Moore Track Stadium is named in his honor.
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coach years | - 1926
- 1929
- 1930
- 1935
- Football
- Basketball
- Track & field
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polltype | - Rankings from final AP Poll
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Place of Birth | - Jonesboro, Tennessee, United States
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Place of death | - Winchester, Tennessee, United States
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Short Description | - American college football coach, College Football Hall of Fame member, Southeastern Conference commissioner
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Year | - 1926
- 1927
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- 1935
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abstract | - Moore was the son of a Baptist minister and graduated from Carson–Newman College in Jefferson City, Tennessee. In addition to two Southeastern Conference (SEC) championships in football won at LSU, his track and field teams won twelve SEC titles and the national championship in 1933. LSU's Bernie Moore Track Stadium is named in his honor. After ending his tenure at LSU, the longest of any coach at the university to that point, Moore became SEC Commissioner in 1948. In 1967, he won the inaugural James J. Corbett Memorial Award given by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. He was inducted into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame in 1966. His last residence was the Henderson Clark-Moore House in Winchester, Tennessee.
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