Sid Smith (TV Director)
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Sid Smith (TV Director)
Sid Smith may refer to: * Sid Smith (ice hockey) (1925–2004), Canadian ice hockey player * Sid Smith (lacrosse) (born 1986), Iroquois lacrosse player * Sid Smith (author), English freelance writer on music * Sid Smith (writer) (born c. 1949), English novelist and journalist * Sid Smith (actor) (1894–1928), American actor * Sid Smith (American football) (born 1948), former American football offensive lineman * Sid Smith (Australian footballer) (1928–1985), former VFL footballer at Geelong * Sid Smith (American football coach) (1912–2006), American football coach * Sid Smith (boxer) Sid Smith (2 February 1889 – 28 April 1948) was an English professional boxer who competed from 1907 to 1919. He was the first officially recognised BBBofC British flyweight champion, holding the title from 1912 to 1913, and was also recogni ... (1889–1948), English flyweight boxer * Sid Smith Sr. (1890–1952), Australian rules footballer See also * Syd Smith (other) * Sid ...
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Sid Smith (ice Hockey)
Sidney James Smith (July 11, 1925 – April 29, 2004) was a National Hockey League left winger who played with the Toronto Maple Leafs for 12 seasons. He was the Leafs team captain from 1955 to 1956. Playing career Born in Toronto, Ontario, and attended De La Salle College, Smith began his career in minor leagues in Toronto and later with the Oshawa Generals in the Ontario Hockey League. He attended Essex School and resided at 1 Burnfield Avenue in Seaton. Having played 45 games in two championship seasons for the Maple Leafs, he spent most of the 1948–49 season in the AHL with the Pittsburgh Hornets before he was called back to Toronto. After playing just one regular season game Smith scored a hat-trick in Game 2 on the Stanley Cup finals to help Toronto to a four-games sweep of the Detroit Red Wings. Smith had six consecutive seasons with 20 or more goals, a distinction held by the great Gordie Howe. Smith retired in the 1957–1958 season and later became a player-coach ...
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Sid Smith (lacrosse)
Sid Smith (born July 24, 1986 in Six Nations, Ontario) is an Iroquois lacrosse player who plays for the Rochester Knighthawks of the National Lacrosse League. Junior career Smith played for the Six Nations Arrows of the OLA Junior A Lacrosse League. Smith would lead the Arrows to four straight league championships. Smith won the John "Gus" McCauley Memorial Trophy as the league’s Defender of the Year in both 2006 and 2007. In 2006, he also won the Jim Bishop Memorial Award as the Most Sportsmanlike Player in the Minto Cup Tournament. In 2007, Smith won the B.W. "Bill" Evans Award for the league's Top Graduating Player and the Dean McLeod Award as the league's Playoffs Most Valuable Player. Smith also captained the 2007 team to Six Nations' first Minto Cup national championship since 1992. College career Onondaga Community College Smith began his college career at Onondaga Community College. Smith played alongside fellow Six Nations players Craig Point and Cody Jamieson and led ...
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Sid Smith (author)
Sid Smith is an English freelance writer, contributing music-related articles and reviews to both national and regional press. He is the author of the biography of King Crimson, ''In The Court Of King Crimson'', and one of the co-authors of ''Northstars'', the book of Granada TV's award-winning profile of musicians from the north east of England, as well as numerous sleeve notes for both major and indie record labels. After spending the 1970s as a musician (playing bass in rock and improvised music) and performance artist, he joined local government in the 1980s, working in the arts until turning to writing full-time in 2002. In addition to providing web-based content for several music sites, he has maintained an online diary since 1999, initially on King Crimson's website, before transferring to Krimson News in 2003. In May 2005, Smith began his 'Postcards From The Yellow Room' blog, containing album reviews, domestic life (including his mother's battle with leukaemia Leukemi ...
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Sid Smith (writer)
Sid Smith (born ) is an English novelist poet and journalist. Life and career Smith was born in Preston, Lancashire. For seven years he worked in labouring jobs, including dustman, gardener, gravedigger and construction worker. Since then he has hitch-hiked 9,000 miles around the US, lived in Italy and Greece, and acquired a pilot's licence for paragliders. Smith came late to literary prominence. He had been a journalist for 17 years, including two years as a sub-editor on ''The Times'', and was already in his 50s when his debut novel ''Something Like A House'' was published in 2001. The tale of a British deserter in China at the time of the Cultural Revolution, '' Something Like a House'' won critical praise and went on to win both the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Whitbread First Novel Award. What was remarkable about the book was its meticulous evocation of time and place, especially since Smith had never been to China and had written the book entirely from his own ...
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Sid Smith (actor)
Sidney Smith (February 28, 1892 – July 4, 1928), known on-screen as Sid Smith, was an American actor and director who appeared in short comedy films. Smith entered the motion picture industry in 1911, and eventually performed in 187 releases- most of them short silent film comedies, directing six shorts in total. Smith had his own starring series, but also worked in support of such comics as Monty Banks at Warner Bros. and Billy Bevan at the Mack Sennett studio. Smith died of alcohol poisoning, attributed to his consumption of bad liquor at a Malibu beach party. Perhaps because of the Prohibition laws then in effect, one of the few trade papers covering Smith's passing gave the cause of death as “heart trouble.”Editors p.224 Filmography *'' The Awful Adventures of an Aviator'' (1915), partially survives * The Ne'er-Do-Well (1916 film) *'' Kismet'' (1920) *'' Tell Us, Ouija!'' (1920) *'' We'll Get You Yet'' (1921), reissued by Pathescope in the UK in the 1930s as ''James ...
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Sid Smith (American Football)
Sidney Ercil Smith (born July 6, 1948) is a former American football offensive lineman who played for the Kansas City Chiefs and the Houston Oilers of the National Football League (NFL). Smith was drafted by the Chiefs in the first round of the 1970 NFL Draft, the team's first pick since their alignment to the NFL. He is an alumnus of the University of Southern California , mottoeng = "Let whoever earns the palm bear it" , religious_affiliation = Nonsectarian—historically Methodist , established = , accreditation = WSCUC , type = Private research university , academic_affiliations = , endowment = $8.1 ....Sid Smith
at Database Football He was assistant head football coach and defensive coordinator of Cornelius Thompson at St. Thomas High School in Houston, Texas.


References


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Sid Smith (Australian Footballer)
Sid Smith (12 September 1928 – 12 May 1985) was an Australian rules footballer who played for Geelong in the Victorian Football League during the early 1950s. Nicknamed 'Boots', Smith arrived at Geelong from Horsham and played in a premiership as a reserve in his debut season. The following year he played in another Grand Final Primarily in Australian sports, a grand final (sometimes colloquially abbreviated to "grannie") is a game that decides a sports league's premiership (or championship) winning team, i.e. the conclusive game of a finals (or play-off) series. Sy ..., on a half back flank, but this time finished on the losing team. Such was the strength of the Geelong side during his time at the club that out of the 23 games that he played he was involved in only two losses. Sid was not related to the Sid Smith who played for Geelong in 1911. References *Holmesby, Russell and Main, Jim (2007). ''The Encyclopedia of AFL Footballers''. 7th ed. Melbourne: Bas Publ ...
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Sid Smith (American Football Coach)
Sidney Lawson Smith (August 3, 1912 – February 14, 2006) was an American football coach. Smith was the head football coach at McPherson College in McPherson, Kansas for 16 seasons, from 1953 to 1966 and again from 1971 to 1972, compiling a record of 62–82–1. Head coaching record See also * List of college football head coaches with non-consecutive tenure This is a list of college football head coaches with non-consecutive tenure, meaning that an individual was a head coach at a college or university for a period, departed, and then returned to the same college or university in the same capacity. ... References External links * 1912 births 2006 deaths McPherson Bulldogs football coaches People from Delta, Colorado {{1950s-collegefootball-coach-stub ...
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Sid Smith (boxer)
Sid Smith (2 February 1889 – 28 April 1948) was an English professional boxer who competed from 1907 to 1919. He was the first officially recognised BBBofC British flyweight champion, holding the title from 1912 to 1913, and was also recognized by the International Boxing Union as the world flyweight champion in 1913. Professional career Born in Bermondsey, London, of Jewish heritage, Smith learned to box as a boy at the Oxford Medical Mission in Bermondsey. He had his first professional fight on 1 February 1907, a day before his eighteenth birthday, beating Jack Brooks on points over six rounds. He was not a hard hitter but was a fast mover, who always displayed outstanding footwork. Smith held an early claim to the championship of England, beating Stoker Bill Hoskyne over 20 2-minute rounds in September 1911, at The Ring, Blackfriars, London on points, and beating Louis Ruddick on points in October 1911 at Liverpool Stadium. Taking the British Empire flyweight title, D ...
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Syd Smith (other)
Syd Smith may refer to: * Syd Smith (association footballer) (1895–?), played for Derby County, Norwich City and Gillingham in the 1920s * Syd Smith (Australian rules footballer) (1888–1954), played for Fitzroy in 1919 * Syd Smith (baseball) (1883–1961), American baseball player * Sydney Ure Smith (1887–1949), Australian artist and publisher See also * Sid Smith (other) * Sidney Smith (other) * Sydney Smith (other) * {{hndis, Smith, Syd ...
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Sidney Smith (other)
Sidney Smith may refer to: People * Sydney Smith (1771–1845), English writer and clergyman * Sidney Smith (Royal Navy officer) (1764–1840) British naval officer * Syd Smith (baseball) (1883–1961), American baseball player and college football coach * Sidney Smith (Assyriologist) (1889–1979), institute director and academic * Sidney Smith (cartoonist) (1877–1935), American cartoonist * Sidney Smith (cricketer) (1929–1985), English cricketer * Sidney Smith (lawyer) (1823–1889), lawyer and politician in Upper Canada * Sidney Smith (rugby league), rugby league footballer of 1920s and 1930s * Sidney Smith (snooker player) (1908–1990), English billiards and snooker player * Sidney Earle Smith (1897–1959), Canadian university president and Secretary of State for External Affairs * Sidney Irving Smith (1843–1926), American zoologist * Sidney Lawton Smith (1845–1929), American designer, illustrator and bookplate artist * Sidney Maynard Smith (1875–1928), British s ...
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