Happy Thanksgiving!! On this last regular season week for Georgia football, Jerry Varnado is back with part two remembering the coaches from the 1964 University of Georgia football season on the sixtieth anniversary of that team. This week we’re highlighting Dick Copas, John Donaldson, Jim Pyburn, and Frank Inman, the person who was responsible for Jerry playing football at the University of Georgia. If you missed part one, which included Bill Dooley, Erk Russell, and Hootie Ingram, you may find it HERE.
And now let’s hear from One Old Dawg:
“Dick Copas was hired as the Athletic Trainer and to say he was beloved is an understatement. It is important for players to know they can trust the head trainer to look after their best interest, which was true of Dick Copas. Team morale is critical to developing a winning tradition and Copas was a great encourager to that end. After one victory over Florida the football team insisted on giving Copas the game ball, the presenting player simply said, “He never gets the credit he deserves, but I don't know of anyone who isn't a friend of Mr. Copas.” His personality and competence as a leader were shown clearly in his later role as UGA golf coach beginning in 1970. In twenty-five years as Coach, the Dawgs produced thirty-one All-Americans and sixty-one All-SEC honors. Seventeen of his golfers went on to play on the PGA Tour. He was chosen as the National Coach of the Year in 1978 and was tabbed as the SEC Coach of the Year seven times. In 1994, he was inducted into the Golf Coaches Association of America Hall of Fame and into the UGA Circle of Honor in 2006. He was a friend to all and a great contributor to Georgia athletics.
“John Donaldson Assistant Offensive Backfield coach. Coach Donaldson played at George in 1945-46-47-48 at halfback and won four straight bowl games. In the 1946 Oil Bowl game, he caught a sixty-five-yard TD pass from the legendary Charley Trippi. He went on to play for the Chicago Hornets and then coached at Jesup High School. While there, he won state AA championships in 1954 and 1959. Then, after serving on the Florida staff for three years, he came to the University of Georgia from 1964-1968 coaching the backfield winning an SEC championship in 1966. He went into business for awhile but then came back to Georgia in 1971 as the freshman coach. In 1973, he became head coach at Wayne County High and retired in 1982.
“Jim Pyburn Asst. Coach. An Alabama native, Coach Pyburn played for Auburn in 1953-1954. He set a record for most receiving yards in a season. He was also All-SEC, UPI “Player of the Year,” and an AP third team All-American. He was voted SEC Best Offensive End by coaches in 1954. Having excelled in both football and baseball, he was drafted by the Baltimore Orioles and played there from 1955-1957. During this time, the Washington Redskins also drafted him. He later came to Georgia in 1964 as a coach for the defensive line, linebackers, and defensive backfield over the course of the next sixteen years. He briefly retired and then returned to coaching to coach at Abilene Christian University from 1985-1986.
“Frank Inman was
the Head Offensive Backfield Coach. In 1960 and 1961 Valdosta, where I played, beat Richmond Academy for the South Georgia
AAA Championship. Frank Inman was the Head Coach of Richmond Academy but at the
end of the season he became an assistant coach at the University of Georgia.
His last act as a high school coach was the North-South All-Star game in which
I was a participant along with other
seniors on Valdosta’s championship team. I was unrecruited by any college,
being too small and slow for college football. Coach Inman thought differently
and somehow convinced the Georgia staff they needed to recruit me. All
available scholarships were taken so they offered me a preferred walk on
arrangement where I paid my way the first school term and the next year I was
put on scholarship. . He remained on
Dooley’s staff for 15 years in various positions and proved to be an important asset
in the rebuilding process. He left Georgia in 1979 to take the position of Athletic
Director for Glynn County School System which enjoyed much growth and success
during his tenure. In his spare time, he spent twenty-four seasons working with
Erk Russell, then Athletic Director and Head Coach of Georgia Southern as the color commentary voice on Eagle Football broadcasts. I will be forever grateful to Coach Inman for taking a
chance on me, coming to Georgia was a life changing event. One of my big
regrets in life is that I never sat down with Coach Inman and told him how much
I appreciated what he did. But as the apostle Paul said in Philippians 1:3, “I
thank my God every time I remember” him because of all he did for me. I know he
was a Christian, and is in heaven, so one day I hope to get another chance to
tell him.”
And now One Old Dawg weighs in about the upcoming game:
“Well, here we are at the end of our
regular season and Georgia Tech is coming to town to play us between the hedges
and on Friday night under the lights. I could not remember Georgia ever playing
on Friday, which shows how bad my memory is. We played Georgia Tech in Sanford Stanford
in1994, I’m sure I watched that game, and may have been there. Anyway, we have the same Yellow
Jackets this Friday at 7:30 p.m. This
swarm of Jackets is only 7-4 but they have several key wins including handing
#4 Miami their only loss making them a dangerous team. We have a lot riding on
this game, it is a must win for us, so we can’t let this bunch of bees get in
our bonnet and mess with our minds. We need to keep our focus and take care of
business, and I believe we will. This game will most likely turn out about like
that Friday night game thirty years ago, which was Dawgs 48, Jackets 10. Gooooo
Dawgs! Sic’em, woof, woof, woof!"
Well, that's it for the regular season One Old Dawg. Thank you for joining us in this sixtieth anniversary year. We hope to catch up with you in the playoffs. Until then, a big Go Dawgs!!
Who is One Old Dawg?
Jerry Varnado played defensive end at the University of Georgia on Vince Dooley’s first three teams, which included an SEC championship in 1966, placing Georgia fourth in the nation. He helped coach the UGA football team while in law school, and practiced law for over a decade. Later, after a series of tragedies, he gave his life to Jesus Christ. After much soul searching, he left his law practice and has preached the gospel for forty years. He’s still at it every Sunday.
Inducted into the Valdosta/Lowndes County Sports Hall of Fame, he is also the recipient of the Athens Athletic Hall of Fame Fosky Henderson Award for community service. He is a past president of The Athens Touchdown Club and is now the chaplain. He has been an FCA chaplain for the Athens Academy Football Team for ten years.
He is the proud father of four children, and one sweet girl now with Jesus, as well as Bapa to two of the best grandkids ever.