Tony Gibson (other)
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Tony Gibson (other)
Tony Gibson may refer to: * Tony Gibson (American football) College football defensive coordinator for NC State and previously West Virginia * Tony Gibson (psychologist) (1914–2001), English psychologist, anarchist, and model * Tony Gibson (auto racing) Tony Gibson (born November 3, 1964) is a retired American auto racing crew chief. He last worked for the #41 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford driven by Kurt Busch in the NASCAR Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. He was the crew chief for Busch's 2017 Da ...
(born 1964), American auto racing crew chief {{hndis, Gibson, Tony ...
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Tony Gibson (American Football)
Tony Gibson (born October 12, 1972) is an American football coach who currently serves as the defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at North Carolina State University. He was previously the defensive coordinator at West Virginia and assistant head coach at Michigan. College years Gibson attended Glenville State from 1991 to 1994 where he played as a defensive back, winning two WVIAC championships. Coaching career Gibson got his start in college coaching at his alma mater as a defensive backs coach. In 2001, he broke into the FBS ranks as the defensive backs coach at West Virginia, a job he would hold until 2007. In 2008, when West Virginia head coach Rich Rodriguez was hired to the same job at Michigan, he brought Gibson with him to serve as assistant head coach, special teams and defensive backs coach. Gibson, was fired alongside Rodriguez from Michigan following the 2010 season. He then spent one year stints at Pitt and Arizona in a variety of roles before returnin ...
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Tony Gibson (psychologist)
Hamilton Bertie Gibson (14 October 1914 – 22 March 2001), generally known as Tony Gibson, was a British psychologist, anarchist, and model. He became known for his objection to Great Britain's involvement in World War II and his subsequent imprisonment for being an unregistered conscientious objector. In 1939, while working as a life model for art students, he was selected to model for Brylcreem advertisements. During the Battle of Britain he was depicted wearing an RAF uniform, despite the fact that by then he was in prison as a conscientious objector. After serving three sentences he agreed to work as an ambulance driver and then as an agricultural labourer. In the 1950s he studied sociology at the London School of Economics and psychology at the Institute of Psychiatry, following which he undertook research at the Institute of Criminology in Cambridge. During the period at Cambridge, he developed the Spiral Maze, a psychomotor test that was able to distinguish between norm ...
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