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Christopher Brown

Mike Tomlin just did it AGAIN: 19 straight seasons without going under .500

At this point it’s not a streak — it’s a law of physics. With the Steelers’ win over the Lions, Mike Tomlin officially locked in his 19th straight season finishing .500 or better. Nineteen. No losing years. Ever. And that win was also career win #200 for Tomlin (including playoffs) — putting him in ridiculously rare company. Meanwhile the Steelers as a franchise just keep doing Steelers things: it extended their NFL-record 22 consecutive non-losing seasons… and Tomlin owns basically all of the modern part of that run. No matter the QB, injuries, roster flips, “down years,” whatever — Tomlin just refuses to fall off. Is Mike Tomlin underrated, properly rated, or somehow still not rated high enough? #NFL #Steelers #MikeTomlin #NFLHistory #Coaching #NFLDiscussion

Mike Tomlin just did it AGAIN: 19 straight seasons without going under .500
LataraSpeaksTruth

Some names get remembered because they were loud. Coach Carlyle Whitelow should be remembered because he stayed steady. Born Sept. 6, 1932, Whitelow grew up around Bridgewater College. His parents worked in campus dining, and as a kid he spent time on those grounds while they worked. In 1955, he enrolled at Bridgewater and became the first Black student to complete four years of study there. He was also the first Black student-athlete to compete in intercollegiate athletics at the college, and is recognized as the first Black athlete in Virginia to compete at a predominantly white college. That took more than talent. That took nerve, dignity, and a backbone that did not bend. After earning his physical education degree in 1959, he taught in public schools, including in Staunton, then returned to Bridgewater in 1969 as the college’s first Black faculty member. For 28 years, he coached and taught, including football, basketball, and tennis. In 1979, he was named ODAC men’s tennis coach of the year. He coached Bridgewater’s first ODAC men’s tennis player of the year and helped guide the program’s first NCAA men’s tennis tournament participant. Bridgewater inducted him into its Athletics Hall of Fame in 2001. People who knew him did not just talk about wins. They talked about character. The kind of coach who showed up, stayed consistent, and made you better without needing credit for it. Whitelow passed away Oct. 15, 2021. In 2025, he was inducted into the inaugural ODAC Hall of Fame, a fitting honor for a man who opened doors others could walk through. Thank you to my follower and friend I.R. Bama for putting his name on my radar. This legacy deserves more light. #BridgewaterCollege #ODAC #CollegeSports #Tennis #Coaching #SportsHistory #VirginiaHistory #BlackHistory #HiddenFigures #Legacy #HallOfFame

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Tag: Coaching | LocalAll