| WVU Sports Hall of Fame
Tony Constantine
Tony
Constantine is regarded as the most knowledgeable expert about West Virginia
University athletics ever. A Morgantown, W.Va., native and the son of
immigrants, Constantine served 37 years as sports editor of the Morgantown Post
from 1936-72, and continued to write for the Morgantown papers through the
1980s.
An avid fan of Mountaineer teams since 1919, he was adopted by those early
squads as their unofficial mascot and attended all contests. A newspaper sales
boy in his youth, Constantine, who worked at the Morgantown Glassware Guild, in
construction and in the restaurant business since age 16, helped local news
reporter and longtime friend Dave Jacobs keep statistics at the games, and that
experience led to a job at the Post.
He has been prolific in his contributions to compiling and preserving the
Mountaineer athletic tradition. He wrote two books on WVU football: "Mountaineer
Football 1891-1969" and "A Record of West Virginia University Football - The
First 100 Years," and has written numerous articles for the athletic department,
Alumni Association and other University publications, serving until recent years
on WVU's Sports Hall of Fame and all-time team selection committees.
Self-educated and a devoted reader of the classics, Constantine, now age 94,
and his wife, the former Winnie Dorrell, raised five children – Marc, Karen,
Steve, Jane and Leah – 23 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren. The
Constantines live in Westover.
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