With the success of Yost's "Point-a-Minute" teams, his former players were in great demand as coaches.
Dan McGugin went to
Vanderbilt,
Willie Heston to Drake,
Albert E. Herrnstein to
Purdue and
Ohio State,
Paul J. Jones to
Western Reserve,
Bruce Shorts to Nevada and
Oregon,
William Cole to Virginia,
Frank Longman to Arkansas and Notre Dame,
Joseph Maddock to Oregon and
Utah and
Fred Norcross to Oregon State. And in 1905, Redden was hired as the football coach at
Kentucky University. In November 1905, a newspaper reported on Redden's progress at Kentucky: "What Redden is doing at Kentucky is best shown by the record his moonshiners made in this Northwestern game. Undoubtedly, the close, hard game given the purple bv Redden's pupils, helped pull Northwestern down to the weakened condition in which Stagg's men found McCormick's players." In 1906, Redden, who had also been a star in baseball at Michigan, signed to play baseball with the
Indianapolis Indians in the
American Association. By 1908, Redden had opened a law practice in his home town of
Danville, Illinois, where he also became involved in politics. In October 1908, Redden agreed to take time out from his law practice to join Coach Yost's staff to whip the Michigan football team into shape. Redden was given responsibility over the linemen. For a portion of the 1911 season, Yost left Redden in charge of the team while Yost traveled to the East to watch Penn play Jim Thorpe's Carlisle Indians. Redden remained on Yost's coaching staff through the 1912 season. For several years, Redden had continued his law practice in Illinois but had "been able to spare a few weeks to return to Ann Arbor and help out" as Yost's assistant. By 1912, Yost concluded he needed a year-round, full-time staff of assistants. Redden returned to Illinois, where he worked at
Knox College in
Galesburg, Illinois, from 1915 to 1917 as an assistant physical education director, line coach for the Knox football team, and as head baseball coach. ==World War I==