William Odlin (April 5, 1865 – May 11, 1929) was an American lawyer and college football coach. He served as the head football coach at Brown University in 1893.
The Rugby game, started and grown moderately popular under Clarence Howland, had become almost obsolete at Dartmouth by '86, when Odlin entered college, and his laborious efforts to place it on a firm footing entitle him to a foremost place in the history of athletics at Dartmouth. He labored against the general sentiment of the college, the frowns of the faculty and a lack of experienced material, but the fruition of his labors was seen in the great championship team of '89, of which he was captain."[3]
Odlin played on the football team as a fullback,[4] and served as its captain for four years, from 1886 to 1889.[5] Upon graduation, he continued on to study law, which he practiced in Boston with the firm Odlin & Ruggles.[3]
In 1893, he took over as the head coach of the Brown University football team. He served in that position for one season and amassed a 6–3 record.[6]