Career
He served as the head football coach at Yale University from 1934-1940, and at Bates College in 1941 and from 1946-1951, compiling career college football record of 52–55–3. At Bates, he led the undefeated and untied 1946 squad to the inaugural Glass Bowl. Pond was a public relations executive after his career in athletics.
Pond starred in the 1923 edition of The Game.
He was nicknamed "Ducky" by Grantland Rice for returning a fumble 63 yards that afternoon against Harvard on a field that resembled "seventeen lakes, five quagmires and a water hazard". Yale hadn"t scored a touchdown versus Harvard since the end of World War I. As an undergraduate at Yale, Pond also played on the baseball team, where he was coached by Smoky Joe Wood.
An uproar engulfed Pond"s hiring at head football coach at Yale in 1934. Kipke had coached Michigan to consecutive national championships in 1932 and 1933.
The alumni probably desired a reversal of the program"s decline versus Harvard.
Yale led The Game series 22–6–5 from 1875 to 1912. However, from 1913-1933, Harvard led the series 11–7–1. Pond, whose head coaching experience had been two seasons at Hotchkiss, was the last alumnus to be head coach of football at Yale.
Reginald Root, head coach for the 1933 season and an alumnus, had a.500 record and lost to Harvard.
Pond coached an historically significant game in 1934 versus Princeton.
The 1934 contest was the last time a group of 11 starters played the entire 60 minutes of a game. At Palmer Stadium, Yale ended Princeton"s 15-game winning streak with a 7–0 upset on November 17.
The New York Times (November 17, 1934) reported that an expected capacity crowd of 52,000 would attend the contest, the 58th in the series. The Yale starters, Larry Kelley among them, were nicknamed Iron Men by the press
Kelley scored the contest"s sole touchdown.
Fritz Crisler, considered the father of two-platoon football, was Pond"s counterpart at Princeton. The contest has been subject of two books, Yale"s Ironmen: A Story of Football & Lives in The Decade of the Depression & Beyond and Football"s Last Iron Men: 1934, Yale versus Princeton, And One Stunning Upset.
End Larry Kelley in 1936 and halfback Clint Frank in 1937 were the second and third winners of the most prestigious individual award in football.
Among the total of 21 assistants employed by Pond at Yale, future President Gerald Ford served for four seasons, 1937–1940, while attending Yale Law School, and Greasy Neale was hired as the backfield coach right after Pond"s announced elevation on February 1, 1934. Neale had coached West Virginia to a 3–5–3 record in 1933, his third year there.
Neale was clearly the chief strategist among the coaches.