For one season, Fogg played professional football as quarterback for the Akron East Ends in 1904. In a Thanksgiving Day game between the Massillon Tigers and Akron East Ends was scheduled to determine the champion of the "Ohio League", which was the direct predecessor to the modern National Football League. During the game Massillon score the first touchdown of the game and made the extra point to make the score 6–0. In the last moments of the game though, Akron scored a touchdown to make the score 6–5. Fogg, who was Akron's quarterback, had to make the extra point in order for East Ends to get a share of the title. Under the rules of the time, an extra point came on a free kick straight out from where the touchdown was scored. This made for a very difficult kick by Fogg since the touchdown was scored on a difficult angle from the goal posts and he had to deal with a crosswind blowing. Fogg missed the extra point as Massillon won the title.
Coaching career
Fogg began coaching football at East High School in Cleveland. While at Case Tech, Fogg continued the program success created by his predecessor, Joseph Wentworth, who had won the first four football titles of the Ohio Athletic Conference. From 1907 to 1910, Fogg coached for a combined winning of 26–8–4. Against the Ohio State Buckeyes, Fogg earned a perfect 4–0 record, where the Ohio State Championship Award was retired to the Case trophy case. Against rival Western Reserve, Fogg struggled against the teams coached by William B. Seaman, going 0–2–1. After Seaman's death, Fogg finally defeated Western Reserve, coached by Xen C. Scott, in 1910.
Head coaching record
Legacy
In 1909, Fogg partnered with Robert M. Calfee, renaming the firm Calfee & Fogg. He remained a longtime partner and leader at the firm until his death on December 2, 1946 from a cerebral hemorrhage. Today, the Cleveland-based law firm is known as Calfee, Halter & Griswold LLP. Fogg founded and served as the first president of the Cleveland Touchdown Club from 1938–1942. In his honor every year, the Cleveland Touchdown Club's Joe Fogg Memorial Award is presented to the national collegiate player of the year in the Midwest. His son, Joe G. Fogg, Jr., was a 1941 graduate from Princeton University and served in the American Field Service during World War II. His unit, on active duty through Sicily, Italy, France, and Germany, ultimately evacuated the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. He died on April 2, 1992. Fogg is buried alongside his wife Mary at Knollwood Cemetery in Mayfield Heights, Ohio, inside the main mausoleum.