Wednesday, September 28, 2016

One Old Dawg: Pressing on and Sending Old Smokey back to Rocky Top

After his beloved Bulldogs fell prey to the Ole Miss Rebels last Saturday, One Old Dawg remained positive. “In Philippians 3:13-14 the Apostle Paul told us how he dealt with past failures. ‘But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize . . . ’  Forget Ole Miss and press on! We’ve got them right where we want them,” he declared. “They have all written us off as contenders, so now we can slip up on them. All we have to do is win our next six games and we are in the Dome on December 3.”
 
 
Now, that’s the way to put a positive spin on a situation.
 
And when it comes to the Bulldogs, One Old Dawg aims to do just that.
 
Back in 1966, the Bulldogs faced Miami the fifth game of the season. Hopes were high, as the team boarded the two Southern Airways planes, a Martin 404 and a DC3 to head to Florida. In fact, the Atlanta Constitution ran an article entitled, “Bulldogs Roar into Miami.”
 
But in paragraph three, sportswriter Bill Clark wrote what turned out to be a foreshadowing of things to come, “Odds makers say it should be a fifth straight triumph for Georgia and a third loss in four games for Charlie Tate’s Hurricanes. But with that scent of oranges in Bulldogs nostrils, there is the threat that Georgia is ripe for upset.”


And that’s exactly what happened as Georgia suffered a 7-6 defeat.
 
One Old Dawg remembers, “The paper declared the temperature to be 80 degrees that night, but it felt more like 100. It was so muggy; breathing was like trying to suck a thick milk shake through a straw. We had stopped keeping oxygen on the sidelines at home games, because we hardly ever used it, but there was a tank on our bench at the Orange Bowl that night. We sucked it dry. It was one of those games where nothing seemed to go right, we just couldn’t get the ball into the end zone and had to settle for two field goals. A third field goal attempt was thwarted by a bobbled snap.

“Our defense had played well until their scoring drive late in the third quarter. They got the ball on their forty-nine and drove down to the goal.  
We held inside the five and they went for it on fourth down.

“I had nightmares about that play for weeks. A man came in motion toward me, so I had to drop off the line into pass coverage. In that situation I was to holler “off” so the tackle would know to move a step to the outside to contain any running play around the end.

“The noise was so loud the tackle didn’t hear me, so he was a sitting duck to be blocked. The runner came outside and turned the corner. As soon as I saw it was a run, I dropped pass coverage and came up along with the linebacker, Tommy Lawhorne, and we hit him hard right on the goal line but he fell into the end zone for what turned out to be the winning score. It turned out to be the only blemish on our record that year, and I felt it was my fault we didn’t go undefeated, but that’s football."
Athens Banner Herald

The players returned from Miami in a heavy rain at Ben Epps airport  to the applause of what the Athens paper called “the largest crowd assembled this year, even though it was the team’s first loss.” Some things never change, and that’s the faithfulness of Bulldog fans. 
 
"We were really encouraged to see those fans standing in the rain at the Athens Airport; they believed in us. So we all forgot about Miami and pressed on to win the prize, a great season and the SEC championship.”
 
The fiftieth anniversary celebration for the 1966 SEC Championship team is coming up this weekend with an event Friday night and during halftime on Saturday, the team will be recognized along with the 1946 and 1976 SEC championship teams. A big weekend. Nothing would be better than for Georgia to beat those Tennessee Volunteers. 
 
One Old Dawg says, “It’s all on the line this Saturday and will be for the next six games. We have six straight SEC games, and we can’t afford to lose another. Tennessee is 4-0 and flying high after a big come-from-behind win over Florida last Saturday. I mean ‘flying high’ as in they had 320 yards passing and another 178 rushing. 498 yards of offense is scary.
 
"As I mentioned last week, turnover margin is critical when playing against a high-octane offense. Turnovers stop drives and usually improve field position; we need a plus four margin this week. Come on Dawgs, we’ve got them where we want them― riding high, and that means ripe for upset, and we’ve got them between the hedges. Send Old Smokey back to Rocky Top Tennessee with his tail tucked between his legs. Gooo... Dawgs, Sic ‘em!"
 
We'll be right back here next week with more of One Old Dawg's mostly true Bulldog lore on the 1966 Kentucky game as well as his thoughts on the matchup between this year's Bulldogs and South Carolina.
 
 

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

One Old Dawg on Bulldogs vs. Ole Miss, Ripping the Rebels in 1966 and 2016

One Old Dawg’s son captured in a text what most Dog fans felt Saturday night as they watched the Georgia-Missouri game. “I think I had heart palpitations.”

And then some.

One Old Dawg says,” Wheeew! I’m glad that one is behind us! We learned two things in that game: those Mizzou felines are a handful, and Jacob Eason is the real deal! Our running game really soared against North Carolina and our passing game was flying high against Mizzou. Now, if we can just put the two together in the same game, it will be a sight to behold. We’re going to need it this week”

For our fourth game, we travel to Oxford to play the Ole Miss Rebels. Back in 1966, the fourth game of the season was also against Ole Miss, only we had them between the Hedges. They had a great team that year and came to Athens with two wins and their only loss to Alabama, the defending national champion.  This was one of the biggest games Georgia had played in recent years and it was a “must win” if the Dawgs wanted to continue their climb to the place of title contender.

And speaking of heart palpitations, sports editor Jim Minter of the Atlanta Journal said the game “began and ended a cardiac case.”
 
 

One Old Dawg remembers, “A Georgia fumble early in the first quarter put the Dawgs on their heels. But our defense held, forcing a field goal from 39 yards out which put the Rebels up 3-0.”

Early in the second period, Ronnie Jenkins who Minter called “the old woodchopper from Glennville” pushed across the goal line to climax a 56-yard drive.

The Athens Banner Herald summed up the ensuing action like this, “Taking the snap from center, quarterback Kirby Moore passed to end Billy Payne who pitched out to trailing tailback Randy Wheeler for 25 yards and a first down at the ole Miss 20.”

Then there was an exchange of penalties and some good runs by Kirby Moore and Ronnie Jenkins, “setting up Jenkins’ one-yard scoring plunge on the first play of the second quarter. Place kicker Bob Etter’s (Atlanta Falcons, Memphis Southmen) conversion capped the touchdown.”

This gave the Dawgs the lead 7-3.

The Athens paper concluded, “A safety scored by defensive tackle George Patton (All SEC, All American, Atlanta Falcons) assisted by end Jerry Varnado gave the Bulldogs their six-point lead
 

Under front page headlines of the Atlanta Journal sports section that read, “Bulldogs Muzzle Old Miss, 9-3,” Minter wrote, “A University of Georgia football team which obviously fears nothing and has nothing to fear but its own mistakes, stuck its foot squarely into Ole Miss’ big middle and also in the Southeastern Conference championship door here at Sanford Stadium Saturday afternoon. “


One Old Dawg remembers, “It was another slug-fest like South Carolina the week before. Two hard-hitting teams going at it in the trenches. But this week I think it was a little different. The week before I felt like we were fighting to survive, but against Ole Miss, especially after the first quarter, I sensed a new level of confidence I had not experienced in a while. I think we believed this game was ours to take. It was still hard work, and they were hitting us as powerfully as we were hitting them, but somehow it started being fun. The fact that this was our first home game had a lot to do with it. The crowd was going wild, the atmosphere was electric and that kept our adrenaline flowing.

“I had felt this way the year before after winning our first four games, including wins over Alabama and Michigan. Then we hit a rough patch, riddled with injuries, we lost four games in the second half of the season. We had lost our mojo, but we got it back that sunny afternoon between the hedges when we took down the Ole Miss Rebels. It is also interesting to note that our win was not a fluke; Ole Miss did not lose another game that year until the Texas Longhorns gored them in the Bluebonnet Bowl.

“I’m reminded of Luke 9:51: ‘As the time approached for him to be taken up to heaven, Jesus resolutely set out for Jerusalem.’ Jesus was on a mission and he was nearing its culmination, which had to be in Jerusalem. Many did not want him to go to Jerusalem because that was the seat of his opposition and it would be dangerous for him to go there. But he resolutely set out. Resolutely means firm, determined and unwavering. Our goal for 1966 was the conference championship, not sure we had the faith to believe for anything beyond that. We struggled at times, had one setback, but we were resolute in our goal and kept our focus until we achieved it as well as being ranked number four in the nation.

“We need to resolutely set out for Atlanta to end our regular season the same way we started, with a win in the Georgia Dome. We need to be firm on this, determined and unwavering refusing to listen to the naysayers, even if we experience a setback along the way.” 

Now for One Old Dawg’s prediction about this week’s Georgia game. “Another thing we learned last Saturday is that if Mizzou is a handful, Ole Miss is a double handful. Yeah, I know they have only won a single game, but their two losses were to teams ranked at first and third in the country, and both games were close. We need to be hitting on all four cylinders to win this one―running, passing, defense and special teams. In 1966, Ole Miss threw seventeen passes (which was a lot in those days). They caught six and we caught five. We need that kind of defense on Saturday. Our turnover margin against Mizzou was plus four, we only need to bump it up one notch and I know we can do it. I don’t think you can keep Chubb under 100 yards three weeks in a row, so I’m confident Eason and Mckenzie will get a lot more help from the ground game this week as the Dawgs rip the Rebels for their third loss. Gooooo! Dawgs, Sic ‘em.”

So, here’s hoping for no cardiac cases, few heart palpitations and a big win for Georgia.

Join us again next week for more mostly true Bulldog lore and the 1966 team’s matchup against Miami as this year’s Bulldogs face Tennessee.
Until then enjoy this piece about One Old Dawg written in the Atlanta Constitution about this time in the season back in 1966. It calls him the "Mighty mite from Valdosta" and the team's Holler Guy. (By the way, this article didn't account for the fact that One Old Dawg couldn't play in 1965 due to a back injury for which he had to have surgery.)
 

 

 

 

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

One Old Dawg moving on and getting the game ball


One Old Dawg’s comments last week were eerily on target. “Every year several big schools get beat by some smaller school underdog,” he observed and then said, “They have nothing to lose and everything to gain, and we’re just the opposite and that makes for a dangerous situation.” A dangerous situation, indeed. Georgia barely squeaked out the win 26-24.

One Old Dawg says, “The only good thing about last Saturday is we got a W; it wasn’t pretty but it’s still a W. I received a text from my Louisiana cousin, whose son is a Nicholls alum, and he politely abstained from gloating, but I could sense that inside, he was mighty proud. He said, ‘We Cajuns call Nicholls, Harvard on the Bayou,’ so those Thibodaux Colonels are not only tough but also smart. We found that out.

“You might try what I did― watch the replay of the North Carolina game to clear the Georgia mind of bad memories. The apostle Paul tells how he dealt with unpleasant things in the past in Philippians 3:13:  But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead’. This is not true just in spiritual matters; it has a general application as well. If we are not careful, yesterday’s miscues can contribute to tomorrow’s failure. We need to forget about last Saturday and move on to the preferred future that is ahead.”

Now to the third game in the season against South Carolina back in that 1966 SEC championship year.

“We are going to have to play our best game in order to beat them,” Coach Vince Dooley said in an interview leading up to the game. In several news reports, apprehension was expressed about the match up as in this vintage account.


 
One Old Dawg remembers, “I feel I have to remind you young’uns that the Gamecocks were in the ACC not the SEC back in those days. However, we had played them regularly since 1900, so the rivalry was intense. They had lost their first two games to LSU and Memphis State so I guess we were favored― but not by much. The game was a slugfest. Our offense moved the ball up and down field, amassing 247 yards rushing but bad breaks and mistakes kept us out of the end zone.

"We held the Gamecocks to 115 yards rushing and 80 passing but more impressively, we shut them out. Kirby Moore and our offense rose to the occasion and drove it in late in the game for a touchdown, and we won the game 7-0. It was a memorable game for me for two reasons: I was named defensive captain for the first time in my career and at a team meeting the next week, Coach Erk Russell Defensive Coordinator (later head coach at Georgia Southern) gave me the game ball; pretty dawg gone special.”

Jack Davis was the offensive captain for the game. Later, news reports highlighted Kirby Moore, Craig Elrod, Bill McWhorter, Edgar Chandler (All American, Buffalo Bills, New England Patriots ), Donald Hayes, Ronnie Jenkins, and Jack Davis on offense. On the defense, Happy Dicks, (All SEC, All American) Larry Kohn (All SEC), Dicky Phillips, Jerry Varnado, Jimmy Cooley, Bill Stanfill (All American, Miami Dolphins, Super Bowl Team) , and George Patton (All SEC, All American, Atlanta Falcons) made significant contributions to the win.

In fact, another Atlanta Journal article began, “’. . . you are a real All American football player.’ The speaker was Georgia end Jerry Varnado. The complement directed to George Patton.”

One Old Dawg has always been a big Patton fan.

The article continues with Patton’s response, “We all did it out there tonight.”

Dooley agreed when he was quoted in another Atlanta newspaper article after the game, “I want you to know that it took a fine effort to beat that South Carolina team.”

One Old Dawg offers his prognostication about this week’s upcoming game against Missouri.

“This Saturday we have to walk into the Missouri Tigers den which is a dangerous thing to do, even though we have been very successful at skinning these tigers in their own backyard. Since Mizzou joined the SEC, we are 2-0 in Columbia and 1-1 at home. This year they lost at West Virginia 26-11 but then walloped Eastern Michigan 61-21at home. At 2-0 with a win over a ranked team, I guess the Dawgs get the nod, but we all know none of that matters when you start barking in the Tigers ‘den. But I’m confident these young Dawgs are growing fast and at the end of the day their bite will prove to be as bad as their bark and Uga will have another Tiger skin to adorn his doghouse. Gooo… Dawgs! Sic ‘em.”

So that’s it for this week’s One Old Dawg, but we’re here again next week for the both the 1966 and 2016 games against Ole Miss, both the fourth game in the season.

A few pictures from this past week’s 1966 reunion events:
Happy Dicks and Jerry Varnado
Larry Kohn and One Old Dawg, Jerry Varnado

Wayne Ingle, Terry Osbolt, Jerry Varnado
 

 Go Dawgs!!

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

One Old Dawg on the 1966 VMI game, Nichols State, and meeting a UGA grad and country music legend

One Old Dawg received tickets to the Georgia Dome opening game for his birthday this year.  Though One Old Dawg’s wife is a big Dog fan, she had previously committed to the Decatur Book Festival last weekend, so he took his fabulous grandson with him. And since his son was already going, well, could there have been anything better?

 
Oh, wait. Georgia won. That’s what made the night complete.

All arthritic afflictions seem to have left One Old Dawg, as he appears to be strutting around the house in renewed vigor. Something about a Georgia win does that to him.

What a glorious night at the Dome! A typical first game, with a few mistakes and miscues, but we played tough in the face of adversity; we stayed after them and closed the deal. I was already excited about our prospects for this year but after Saturday night, I’m ecstatic. One down, eleven to go. Come on Dawgs, let’s finish the regular season like we started it, at the dome.”

 Speaking of Georgia wins, back in that 1966 championship year, the second game of the season was away against the Keydets of Virginia Military Institute, part of the Harvest Bowl series at Victory Stadium in Roanoke.

The Harvest Bowl committee awarded Ronnie Jenkins the Most Valuable Player award for his 133 rushing yards, but back at Georgia, Martin Mechanical Contractors also gave One Old Dawg a Most Valuable Player award. The plaque has a few dings after fifty years, but he still has it―the only MVP award he ever received.



One Old Dawg recalls:

This was a special game for me as it was the first action I had seen since an injury sidelined me in the middle of the 1965 season. The game did not start out quite as expected. We got the ball first and drove to the VMI 30 but turned it over on downs. They took over on their 29 and failed to get a first down but Kent Lawrence (Philadelphia Eagles, Atlanta Falcons) fumbled on the punt return and they recovered on our 18. Eight plays later, they were leading 7-0. I sure dreaded going to the sidelines. The coaches were hot! I don’t remember what was said, but it seems I do remember some mention of holding a practice at half-time to get us motivated. Whatever the coaches said,  it worked: Kent Lawrence redeemed himself by taking the kickoff 87 yards for a touchdown. They got one first down on their next possession and then punted to our 26. Eight plays later, we were ahead 14-7 and for all practical purposes, the game was over. We continued to romp for a 43-7 victory.

"We learned an important Biblical truth that night, though I doubt any of us realized it was in the Bible.  The lesson is repeated over and over, but two verses stand out to me: Proverbs 16:18: Pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall. Proverbs 18:12: Before his downfall a man's heart is proud, but humility comes before honor. Every year several big schools get beat by some smaller school underdog. You can warn players about pride and failing to take every opponent seriously, but they still do it. Most of the time game events and the coaches can shake it out of them, but every now and then pride leads us to that terrible embarrassment of losing to the underdog. Thankfully that didn’t happen in Roanoke in 1966.”

This weekend as the 2016 Bulldogs face off against Nicholls State University from Thibodaux, Louisiana, One Old Dawg has this to say:

“Not only can I pronounce it, I know right where it is, 115 miles southwest of Bogalusa, where I was born. Did I mention I have Cajun roots? My last name used to be spelled Varnadeaux. The Colonels haven’t had a winning season since 2007 with a 3-8 record last year. In case you are getting over-confident, let me remind you that in 1961-1963 the Dawgs had three straight losing seasons. But we turned it around in 1964 finishing 7-3-1, including a win over Texas Tech in the Sun Bowl.

“Nicholls should not present a real challenge to the Dawgs, but that doesn’t mean we can look ahead to Missouri. They have nothing to lose and everything to gain, and we’re just the opposite and that makes for a dangerous situation. So stay focused Dawgs, buckle up those chin straps, get ready, think of nothing but winning this game. Don’t worry about running up the score; the Colonels will have a big check to salve their bruised egos on the long trip back to Thibodaux. Geaux… Dawgs! Sic ‘em.

“By the way, let’s pray and do what we can for our neighbors in Louisiana, they are still reeling from the record floods last month. During the game my cousin from Baton Rouge texted that his brother-in-law lost his house, furniture, everything but the clothes on his back, and he is certainly not the only one.”

Next week One Old Dawg will be right here talking about the 1966 South Carolina game, and as usual, he’ll be holding court on this year's Georgia matchup against Missouri.

In the mean time, here’s a One Old Dawg moment:

One Old Dawg’s wife invited him over to the Decatur Book Festival to hear legendary country music singer, Bill Anderson, speak. One Old Dawg had just been talking about him the day before remembering when he performed at a UGA game, but couldn’t remember the date. Almost first in line at the book table, One Old Dawg’s wife told Anderson he played on the ’66 SEC championship team, and One Old Dawg asked Anderson if he remembered the year when he sang at the game.

Anderson flipped open Bill Anderson, an Unprecedented Life in Country Music from the University of Georgia Press. He pointed to  a picture of himself singing at a Georgia game with the date―November 4, 1972.
 
Then the inevitable happened. Anderson, a UGA graduate, asked One Old Dawg what he thought about the Dogs this year. Of course, he offered an opinion. Then the man next in line chimed in. Much to the dismay of the fifty people still waiting to get their books signed, these three proceeded to have a lengthy discussion on the matter.
 
 
When Old Dawg left, it was Bill Anderson who stuck out his hand and shook One Old Dawg’s paw. “Very glad to meet you,” he said.

Those Old Dawgs just love getting together.


 Til next time, again we say it, Go Dogs!!!
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