1. Carl Storck was the Triangles coach from 1922 to 1926.

1. Carl Storck was the Triangles coach from 1922 to 1926.
Carl Storck was born November 14,1892, in Dayton, Ohio.
Carl Storck attended the YMCA's preparatory training course at Lake Geneva before accepting a position as second assistant physical education director for the Dayton YMCA in July 1914.
On October 1,1916, Carl Storck left for Chicago to attend the YMCA Training School there.
Carl Storck was simultaneously made the physical director of the Sears and Roebuck Company YMCA club in Chicago.
Carl Storck returned to Dayton in 1919, where he took a position with the personnel department of the General Motors Corporation there.
Carl Storck remained in that professional capacity in addition to his football avocation through the first half of the 1930s.
Carl Storck would remain head of the Triangles franchise until its sale in 1928 to Bill Dwyer, who moved the team to Brooklyn and renamed them the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Carl Storck served as secretary-treasurer of the National Football League from 1921 to 1939.
League President Carl Storck was the odd man out under this restructuring.
Carl Storck was not the subject of criticism during his tenure as president.
Carl Storck worked full-time as a foreman in the Inspection and Packing Department of the National Cash Register Company.
In 1939, Carl Storck served as president of the Dayton Wings baseball franchise of the Middle Atlantic League.
At the time of his resignation, Carl Storck was seriously ill with Neurasthenia.
Carl Storck had been bedridden for seven weeks prior to his resignation and was partially paralyzed on the right side of his body.
Carl Storck retired from Delco in 1942 due to ill health.
Carl Storck died on March 13,1950, at a nursing home in Dayton.