George "The Gipper" Gipp (February 18, 1895 – December 14, 1920) was a college football player who played for the University of Notre Dame. Gipp was selected as Notre Dame's first All-American and is Notre Dame's second consensus All-American (of 79), after Gus Dorais. Gipp played multiple positions, most notably halfback, quarterback, and punter. He is still considered today to be one of the most versatile athletes to play the game of football and is the subject of Knute Rockne's famous "Win just one for the Gipper" speech. Gipp died at the age of 25 of a streptococcal throat infection, days after leading Notre Dame to a win over Northwestern in his senior season. - Source: Wikipedia
- News
- Policy
-
Commentary
- Commentary Main
- Corrections
- Editorials
- Letters
- Cheryl K. Chumley
- Kelly Sadler
- Jed Babbin
- Tom Basile
- Tim Constantine
- Joseph Curl
- Joseph R. DeTrani
- Don Feder
- Billy Hallowell
- Daniel N. Hoffman
- David Keene
- Robert Knight
- Gene Marks
- Clifford D. May
- Michael McKenna
- Stephen Moore
- Tim Murtaugh
- Peter Navarro
- Everett Piper
- Cal Thomas
- Scott Walker
- Miles Yu
- Black Voices
- Books
- Cartoons
- To the Republic
- Sports
-
Sponsored
- Corrections
- D.C. Board of Elections
- Transportation 2026
- American energy unleashed
- Infrastructure 2026
- Building the health care Americans deserve
- Revitalizing Rural America
- Unbridled Clean Energy
- Faith at Work
- Building a healthier America
- Investing in American Health
- Free Iran 2025
- Invest in Greece 2025
- Events
- Video/Podcasts
- Games
-
- Subscribe
- Sign In