Pollard coached
Lincoln University's football team in
Oxford, Pennsylvania during the 1918 to 1920 seasons and served as athletic director of the school's World War I era
Students' Army Training Corps. During 1918–1919, he led the team to a victorious season defeating
Howard University's Bisons 13–0 in the annual Thanksgiving classic as well as
Hampton University (7–0) on November 9, 1918, and teams of military recruits at
Camp Dix (19–0) on November 2, 1918, and
Camp Upton (41–0). By the fall of 1920, he had begun to play for Akron, missing key Lincoln losses to Hampton (0–14) and Howard (0–42), much to the consternation of the alumni and administration.
Paul Robeson was enlisted by Lincoln's alumni to coach the Thanksgiving 1920 game against Howard. in a photo from the March 1918 issue of
The Crisis He played professional football with the
Akron Pros, the team he would lead to the
APFA championship in 1920. In 1921, he became the co-head coach of the Akron Pros, while still maintaining his roster position as
running back. He also played for the
Milwaukee Badgers,
Hammond Pros,
Gilberton Cadamounts,
Union Club of Phoenixville and
Providence Steam Roller. An article in the October 1, 1921 issue of
the Chicago Whip newspaper stated that Pollard served as "assistant coach of the backfield men" of
Northwestern University's football team. Some sources indicate that Pollard also served as co-coach of the Milwaukee Badgers with
Budge Garrett for part of the 1922 season. On November 19, 1922, Pollard and
Paul Robeson led the Badgers to victory over the great
Jim Thorpe and his
Oorang Indians. The final was 13–0 with Robeson scoring both touchdowns in his finest pro football performance. Fritz also coached the Gilberton Cadamounts, a non-NFL team. In 1923 and 1924, he served as head coach for the Hammond Pros. Pollard, along with all nine of the African American players in the NFL at the time, were removed from the league at the end of the 1926 season, never to return again. He spent some time organizing all-African American barnstorming teams, including the
Chicago Black Hawks in 1928 and the
Harlem Brown Bombers in the 1930s. ==Later life==