Bill Barnes (American football)
Barnes guided his UCLA Bruins teams to a 31–34–3 (.478) record, including two seven-win seasons in 1960 and 1961 and an appearance in the 1962 Rose Bowl.Barnes played college football at the University of Tennessee under head coach Robert Neyland, and was a member of the 1939 team that went through the regular season without allowing a point to be scored.When Sanders died of a heart attack shortly before the 1958 season on August 14, fellow Bruins assistant George W. Dickerson was promoted to head coach.On the night before the Florida game, Dickerson was admitted to the UCLA Medical Center, again suffering from nervous exhaustion; Barnes was named acting head coach for the rest of the season.[5][6] After leaving UCLA, Barnes became a National Football League (NFL) scout, and later became a real estate developer.