Showing posts with label Georgia Football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgia Football. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

One Old Dawg Remembers the 1964 Georgia Football Coaching Staff

 


Welcome back to One Old Dawg! This week and next,  Jerry Varnado will be remembering the coaches on the 1964 University of Georgia Football team. We wish we could sit down with them and get their firsthand accounts, but sadly, they are no longer with us. But they certainly live on in memory and in legacy. And now let’s hear from One Old Dawg: 

“As I think about the success the Bulldog Nation has and is enjoying at the present time, Hebrews 12:1 comes to mind. The writer enumerated a number of great heroes in the faith from the beginning until just before the New Testament era began; those who paved the way for the coming of Jesus and the New Covenant God made for humanity. Then we find these words in Hebrews: “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.” I know the context is entirely different, but I believe there is a principle here that transcends context. As I look back at Georgia football during my lifetime there is a cloud of witnesses, including the coaches we honor today and next week, that laid the groundwork for the success I enjoyed while playing at Georgia and continue to enjoy as a fan. This is also true in virtually every dimension of our lives. There are those who have helped, encouraged and motivated us along the way. Let us be intentional about helping and encouraging others that  we may be included in their cloud of witnesses. 

“1964 was a pivotal year for Georgia football. In 1959 the Dawgs were 10-1, SEC Champions and ranked # 5 nationally . We fell to 6-4 in 1960, and long-term coach Wally Butts resigned as head coach but remained as Athletic Director. Nearly all the coaches were retained, and former player and head freshman coach Johnny Griffith was elevated to Varsity head coach.  Unfortunately, the Dawgs’ decline continued with three straight losing seasons which led to Butts retiring and Joel Eaves being hired as  Athletic Director. Eaves named Vince Dooley as head coach. Under Dooley and a mostly new coaching staff the Dawgs went 7-3-1 the first year, including a victory over Texas Tech 7-0 in the Sun Bowl.  This was the beginning of new era in Georgia football which led to a Conference Championship team in just two more years which was ranked # 4 in the nation. That era continued for twenty-five years until Vince Dooley retired as head coach in 1988. During that time Georgia claimed one  national and six Conference championships while amassing a record of 201-77-10.  Dooley became only the ninth coach in NCAA Division 1 history to win 200 games. We have interviewed a number of senior leaders on that pivotal 1964 team and have previously recognized Coach Dooley’s role in getting Georgia back to winning ways and keeping it there. But we have only mentioned the names of the coaching staff that set out with Coach Dooley to redirect the Dawgs back to winning ways. So, now, we direct our attention to members of the 1964 Staff.

 “Bill Dooley, Vince’s  brother, was the Offensive Coordinator and line coach for the first three years of Vince’s tenure. He was well loved and respected by everyone especially the offensive line. But Georgia could not keep him, he left in 1967 to take the head coaching job at North Carolina which had only three winning seasons and one bowl appearance in twenty years. In Dooley’s tenure UNC claimed three ACC Football Championships and went to bowls six of his last eight seasons. He was ACC Coach of the year in 1971, and he left with more wins than any coach in UNC history.  He then tackled rebuilding projects at Virginia Tech and Wake Forest with similar results. He held other prominent positions and received other numerous awards as well. Don Lawrence, a former UNC coach once said: “Bill Dooley turned ACC football around. He came into this league and worked around the clock to build a fine program. Everybody else started working overtime to catch up.” We are thankful for his contribution to UGA football.

“Erk Russell, Defensive Coordinator.  Coach Russell was a graduate of Auburn University where he earned ten varsity letters. He was the last four-sport letterman in the college's history—a true overachiever. He was without question a master communicator and motivator. His players loved him and would walk through fire for him.  In one of the early 1964 games, we were warming up and the defensive line was doing a circle butt drill. A player would step in the middle, break down in hitting position, and point to someone in the circle who would then charge and receive a head butt in the chest. After three times a new person would step in the middle. This helped loosen the neck and shoulder muscles. All of sudden Erk stepped into the middle, broke down and pointed one out who charge in. Erk butted him in the numbers, only he did not have on a helmet and left the circle with two bleeding wounds on his forehead from the lace gromets on the shoulder pads. Erk went the whole game with those dried blood streaks on his forehead. I’m not sure why but that fired up everyone on the team. It became an Erk trademark, he did it every game.

"In seventeen years as UGA defensive coordinator, he coached 192 games; our opponents  scored seventeen or fewer points in 135 of them. In seventy-four games, the other team scores were single digits including twenty-seven shutouts. Under his leadership the  Georgia defense allowed more than twenty-eight points just eighteen times in seventeen seasons. He left Georgia after the 1980 season to restart the football program at Georgia Southern University in Statesboro Georgia which had been discontinued forty years earlier. After three years as a club team the Eagles moved to Division I-AA in 1984 and won the national title in 1985, 1986, and1989. Russell entered the 1989 season as America's winningest coach, sixty-eight wins and fourteen All-America selections—all during a seven-year period. In 1989 Georgia Southern eclipsed Division I's longest home win streak from twenty-six to thirty-seven games, won a third national title and became the only 15–0 college team of the twentieth century. Russell retired after that season with a record of 83–22–1 (.788). Thank you Coach Russell for your great contribution to Georgia and College football. 

“Hootie Ingram, Defensive Backfield Coach. He was born in Tuscaloosa and of course played for Alabama where he was an outstanding running back, and particularly known for his play at defensive safety where he earned the title, the “Tide’s Honorable Thief” as he led the SEC in pass interceptions in 1952. He spent several years coaching high school football and then after short stents at several colleges, Coach Dooley hired him as Georgia’s defensive backs coach. He coached  at Georgia until 1967 when he took a job as an assistant at Arkansas and then landed a head coaching job at Clemson. After three years he left coaching and joined the administrative staff at the Southeastern Conference for eight years. He then served as  Athletic Director at FSU for three years and finally back to his Alma Mater, Alabama as Athletic Director until retirement in 1995. 

“It is easy to  see from the accomplishments of these men on Dooley’ s first staff, that among his many other gifts he was a master at recognizing talent and placing people in positions where they could prosper. It was a unique group that did a tremendous job in pulling Georgia football out of a downward spiral back into a place of national prominence. The purpose of this writing is to acknowledge the contribution of the original coaching staff under Vince Dooley that turned Georgia’s program around. Buit it would be a tragedy not to mention Joel Eaves who was hired as Georgia’s Athletic Director when Wally Butts retired in 1963. It was he who recognized the capabilities of the young man named Vince Dooley who was Auburn’s Head Freshman football  coach. It was a bold move to hire Vince instead of some established person with head coaching experience, but Coach Eaves thought Vince Dooley was the man for the job, and he was right. He gave sound, effective leadership to the Athletic Department from 1963 to 1979.

“It has been hard to give much thought to the next game, I’m having too much fun relishing that great win over Tennessee. But it is time to look ahead for a moment to the game this Saturday. UMass has had a rough go of it this year, they are presently 2-8 with the Dawgs and UConn left to play, and it has been pretty much the same for a number of years. I know something about what those players are going through.  In my first two years at Georgia, we were 3-4-3 in 1962 and 4-5-1 in 1963. It was hard to be excited about football, but I was having a great time being a student at Georgia and football is what afforded me that opportunity. I feel for the UMass players and staff and hope better for them in the years ahead. In our only meeting in 2018 we won 66-27 and considering all factors, this Saturday most likely will be more of the same, the Dawgs winning by a large margin.”

Thanks, One Old Dawg. We’ll be back next week with more on the coaches of the 1964 Georgia Bulldogs, so until then 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.


Wednesday, October 16, 2024

One Old Dawg's Tailgate with Joel Darden

Welcome back to One Old Dawg’s tailgate. We know everyone is still cheering that win over Mississippi State. This week Jerry Varnado is interviewing Joel Darden, another senior on the 1964 team who is celebrating their sixtieth anniversary this year. 

So, lean in for more mostly true Bulldog lore as One Old Dawg interviews Joel Darden. 

Joel, tell us how you got started in football and your high school career?

I’m from Lagrange, Georgia and started as a Little League football player at fullback for my brother Charles. We won the Little League City Championship one year. I played for Coach Oliver Hunnicutt and Al Mariotti in high school. Coach Hunnicutt wouldn’t let us play as sophomores and made us wait until we were juniors to play. I played right tackle on offense and left tackle on defense. We had a good football team and lost one football game to Valdosta in 1960. Rob Hunnicutt who played left guard got hurt, and we had to send in someone else who got called for holding. We were backed up to our one-yard line. We could have taken a safety and won the game. But we punted and the ball wound up going out of bounds on the seventeen-yard line. Coach Bazemore lined everybody up on the lefthand side of the ball and ran a screen pass back to the left. They scored and beat us 14-13. (While researching this article we found Lagrange beat Valdosta 7-0 the year before in 1959. And One Old Dawg realized he’d played for Valdosta when Joel Darden played for Lagrange).

What is your most memorable experience from the 1964 season?

Our defense against Kentucky. Rodger Byrd (who later played for the Oakland Raiders) played for them, and they ran the ball up and down the field on us, but couldn’t score. One time they got it to the four-yard line, but we stopped them. When our defense came off the field, everybody in the stands gave us a standing ovation. I thought that was amazing.

Can you remember anything amusing that happened in 1964?

During Coach Dooley’s first year, we were practicing one day and were on the goal line. One of our seniors hit a freshman with an illegal blow. Coach Dooley lined up the seniors on the concrete wall around the practice field. Coach Dooley said, "People at Georgia don’t expect much of me because this is my first year. All of you seniors have a chance to play, but you must earn your position. But if I ever see another dirty blow like the one we’ve just seen, I’m kicking you off the team." That was pretty plain. (One Old Dawg interjects that he knew a player who was debating whether he would stay on as a UGA football player and this experience with Coach Dooley convinced him to do so, because he was so impressed with Dooley’s leadership).

What is one important lesson you learned from your time as a college athlete?

You never give up, do the best you can and play the game as fair and as hard as you can.

In life as in football, you must be a team player and can’t do it on your own. You do your job every play, the best you can.

Who were your inspirations or role models in your college career?

Lynn Hauss was my inspiration. (Lynn Hauss went on to be a center for the Washington Redskins for thirteen years, a five- time Pro Bowl selection). My sophomore year, Brooks Boynton got hurt, and I was moved to center during spring practice. I’d never snapped the ball before in my life and played behind Lynn Hauss. Lynn and I shared the position because we had to play both ways. He was the toughest guy I ever played with.

What advice would you give to someone just beginning their college football career?

You have to give it your all and do what the coaches say. Be yourself but in a controlled position. Hustle, do your schoolwork, and get your degree.

What are your thoughts on the Dawgs this season?

I think they’re going to be okay. Kirby’s a smart guy and knows how to motivate the players. They practice hard (I don’t know if they practice harder than we did, though. LOL).

Jerry Varnado and Joel Darden at a recent letterman's event.


Thank you so much, Joel for joining us today. Now, One Old Dawg has a few words about this weeks game with Texas. 

"Well, the Big Game has arrived. We travel to Austin this week to face the undefeated Texas Longhorns, the number one team in the nation. We haven’t fared very well with Texas, we’ve only played them five times and got horned in all but one, the 1984 Cotton Bowl which we won 10-9. In our latest meeting, the 2019 Sugar Bowl, we got horned again 28-21.

"For the last two weeks we have been so busy bemoaning the Alabama loss, I’m not sure we fully enjoyed beating Auburn and Mississippi State. Again, I say forget Alabama. Pay attention to Psalm 30: 5, “. . . weeping may remain for a night, but rejoicing comes in the morning.”  I’ve often heard Coach Smart say, “Humility is never more than one game away.” But it is also true that joy is just one game away.

"Now back to those Longhorns, I say enough is enough, it’s time to reintroduce these moo cows to the Bulldawg Bite. So, hunker down Dawg Nation, whether you are on the field, in the stands or at home watching on the tube, give it all you’ve got and just a little bit more, so we can bring home some Longhorn T-Bones and fire up the grill. Take a deep breath, I can smell ‘em cooking now. May it be that joy comes to the Bulldawg Nation next Sunday morning. Gooooo Dawgs! Sic ‘em! Woof, woof, woof!"

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.

Check in every Wednesday through football season or better yet sign up to receive these posts in your inbox HERE. You don’t want to miss any of his mostly true Bulldog lore. 


 

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