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Post by CC_Varmints on Nov 25, 2023 15:58:30 GMT -6
Southlake Carrol. 45. Highland Park. 14, Highland Park had a blocked punt along with numerous fumbles. They had a bad day. I had congratulated Coach Randy Allen on breaking Coach Gordon Wood’s and Coach G.H. Moores record and he mentioned how kind Coach Gordon Wood was to him in his thank you note to me . Coach Randy Allen replaced the retiring Coach Gordon Wood. The note had 100 years across the Highland Park Logo. There is a who.s who of great players went through that school and they played against Coach Joe Golding and Wichita Falls Coyotes. Yes I was there. Coach Joe Golding was the grand father of Coach Sonny Dykes wife. Coach Darren Allman left Brownwood with Coach Randy Allen to Highland Park and then left HP to take over the Permian job where he hired Coach Matt Anastacio and Danny Servance and the coach that took the PNG HC job. Coach Randy Allen got my letter on Friday reminding him if he coaches as long as Coach Phil Danaher , he will have broken Coach Danaher’s record and that seems to be what the haters on here are worried about. History Making Coaches ***Jewel Wallace is the only UIL coach to win state championships in basketball and football. His El Paso High team nabbed the 1941 cage title and he captured grid crowns at San Angelo (1943) and SA Jefferson (1949, Big City Conference). ***The only families to collect state football titles are Chuck York (Brady, 1959); sons, Toby (Cameron, 1981) and Todd (Corrigan-Camden, 2002); and, Jimmie Keeling (Lubbock Estacado, 1968), and, son Dale (Everman, 2001and 2002). ***Gordon Wood, G.A. Moore, Jr. and Tim Buchanan each copped state football trophies in four separate decades. Wood won two at Stamford in the 1950s, four in the 1960s, two in the 1970s, and a 1981 title ---all at Brownwood. Moore picked up one at Celina in 1974, a pair with Pilot Point (1980, 1981), three more with Celina in the 1990s and another pair with the Bobcats in 2000, 2001. Buchanan picked up his first in 1998, his second in 2009, four in the 2010s and two in the 2020s. ***Pete Shotwell and Terry Cron are the only mentors to win championships at three schools. Shotwell did it at the highest level at Abilene (1923), Breckenridge (1929) and Longview (1937). Cron collected his prizes with Bartlett (1992, 1A), Mart (1999, 2A) and Commerce (2001, 3A). They don't give Coach Gordon Wood credit for a state title in Track at Seminole. When they had Coach Gordon Wood day at Brownwood they set up a separate table for each state Champ team and had one for the Seminole Track team. President Lyndon Johnson was the guest speaker. Whoopty doo!! Do you wanna cookie? Do you want a medal or a chest to pin it on??
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Post by Clemensbuff on Nov 25, 2023 16:25:49 GMT -6
History Making Coaches ***Jewel Wallace is the only UIL coach to win state championships in basketball and football. His El Paso High team nabbed the 1941 cage title and he captured grid crowns at San Angelo (1943) and SA Jefferson (1949, Big City Conference). ***The only families to collect state football titles are Chuck York (Brady, 1959); sons, Toby (Cameron, 1981) and Todd (Corrigan-Camden, 2002); and, Jimmie Keeling (Lubbock Estacado, 1968), and, son Dale (Everman, 2001and 2002). ***Gordon Wood, G.A. Moore, Jr. and Tim Buchanan each copped state football trophies in four separate decades. Wood won two at Stamford in the 1950s, four in the 1960s, two in the 1970s, and a 1981 title ---all at Brownwood. Moore picked up one at Celina in 1974, a pair with Pilot Point (1980, 1981), three more with Celina in the 1990s and another pair with the Bobcats in 2000, 2001. Buchanan picked up his first in 1998, his second in 2009, four in the 2010s and two in the 2020s. ***Pete Shotwell and Terry Cron are the only mentors to win championships at three schools. Shotwell did it at the highest level at Abilene (1923), Breckenridge (1929) and Longview (1937). Cron collected his prizes with Bartlett (1992, 1A), Mart (1999, 2A) and Commerce (2001, 3A). They don't give Coach Gordon Wood credit for a state title in Track at Seminole. When they had Coach Gordon Wood day at Brownwood they set up a separate table for each state Champ team and had one for the Seminole Track team. President Lyndon Johnson was the guest speaker. Whoopty doo!! Do you wanna cookie? Do you want a medal or a chest to pin it on?? Just more attention Look at me at how I can copy/paste all this great stuff. You read it CCV? If so, give me the short version please
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Post by Hounhound on Nov 25, 2023 16:42:22 GMT -6
History Making Coaches ***Jewel Wallace is the only UIL coach to win state championships in basketball and football. His El Paso High team nabbed the 1941 cage title and he captured grid crowns at San Angelo (1943) and SA Jefferson (1949, Big City Conference). ***The only families to collect state football titles are Chuck York (Brady, 1959); sons, Toby (Cameron, 1981) and Todd (Corrigan-Camden, 2002); and, Jimmie Keeling (Lubbock Estacado, 1968), and, son Dale (Everman, 2001and 2002). ***Gordon Wood, G.A. Moore, Jr. and Tim Buchanan each copped state football trophies in four separate decades. Wood won two at Stamford in the 1950s, four in the 1960s, two in the 1970s, and a 1981 title ---all at Brownwood. Moore picked up one at Celina in 1974, a pair with Pilot Point (1980, 1981), three more with Celina in the 1990s and another pair with the Bobcats in 2000, 2001. Buchanan picked up his first in 1998, his second in 2009, four in the 2010s and two in the 2020s. ***Pete Shotwell and Terry Cron are the only mentors to win championships at three schools. Shotwell did it at the highest level at Abilene (1923), Breckenridge (1929) and Longview (1937). Cron collected his prizes with Bartlett (1992, 1A), Mart (1999, 2A) and Commerce (2001, 3A). They don't give Coach Gordon Wood credit for a state title in Track at Seminole. When they had Coach Gordon Wood day at Brownwood they set up a separate table for each state Champ team and had one for the Seminole Track team. President Lyndon Johnson was the guest speaker. Whoopty doo!! Do you wanna cookie? Do you want a medal or a chest to pin it on?? Actually Varm this is a very good copy and paste job from the history link on this forum. I was just there the other day reading this very info. WORD FOR WORD.
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gp37
Varsity
Posts: 4,664
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Post by gp37 on Nov 25, 2023 21:38:06 GMT -6
[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 145 (1999), Part 21] [Extensions of Remarks] [Pages 30806-30808] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, http://www.gpo.gov]
HONORING GORDON WOOD
______
HON. CHARLES W. STENHOLM
of texas
in the house of representatives
Wednesday, November 17, 1999
Mr. STENHOLM. Mr. Speaker, I rise today with a great deal of Texas pride to recognize
[[Page 30807]]
an outstanding individual, Gordon Wood of Brownwood, Texas. In today's edition of the Dallas Morning News, the newspaper named Coach Wood, the ``Coach of the Century'' as part of its 100 Years of Texas High School Football series. I can think of no one more deserving. Coach Wood not only led and inspired many young people during his career but also brought great achievements to several Texas communities. ``Coach'' was an important figure during the formative years of my life, and he has remained so. Early in his career, he coached in my hometown of Stamford. He led our team to two State championships, and I am proud to have been part of his early success. He went on to lead the Brownwood Lions to seven State championships and won a total of 405 games in his 43-year career. Coach Wood is a legend in Texas not only for his coaching but for the way he has led his life. To me, that puts him in the Ranks of Tom Landry, Bear Bryant and Joe Paterno. I wish to include in the Record a copy of the article that ran this morning in the Dallas Morning News. This honor is a great tribute to Coach Wood and his wife, Katharine, and I know there are many folks who join me in sending them congratulations and best wishes.
[From the Dallas Morning News, Nov. 17, 1999]
Always in the Game--Football, Gordon Wood Style, Still Absorbs Coach of Century
(Kevin Sherrington)
Brownwood, Texas.--Gordon Wood wears hearing aids in both ears. He had a triple bypass in 1990, and five years ago a stroke punched a few holes in his memory. He's working on his third artificial hip. He's diabetic. A faint white web of scars runs wild over his mottled face, the vestiges of 13 skin tumors. This is what can happen to you if you live 85 years. He can't play golf because of the bad left hip. He won't play checkers anymore because that's what he was doing when the world started spinning, and he walked into a restroom and couldn't find his way out. A stroke, the doctors told him. A woman came to get him in the restroom and asked him to step back with his right foot. He tried to comply but stepped forward instead, right into the toilet. Checkers was fun, and he was good at it, but it's not worth it if it reminds him of that. So now the only hobby he has left is football. This is what can happen to you if you coach 43 years. Or maybe this is what happens if you're Gordon Wood, the greatest coach in the history of Texas high school football. A Dallas Morning News panel of college coaches and sports writers chose Wood over a group that included Waco's Paul Tyson, who won four state championships in the 1920s, and Abilene's Chuck Moser, who won 49 consecutive games. Joe Golding got some consideration at Wichita Falls, as did Amarillo's Blair Cherry. Wood wasn't a hard choice, though. He won nine state championships, two at Stamford and seven at Brownwood, which in the 40 years before he arrived had won only a single district title. He won 405 games overall, which was more than anyone else in the nation when he retired in 1985 at 71. But, if you're looking for numbers to define Wood's greatness, you must know that he is the only coach to win 100 games in three different decades, and the only coach who won state titles in three decades, as well. Those numbers indicate that he never lost his enthusiasm for the game, never thought he knew so much that he couldn't learn more, never won so much that he got enough of it. Not when he retired 14 years ago. Not even now. The numbers say a lot about Gordon Wood. But, if you really want to know why he was so great, you only have to go to a game with him. He is better-looking in person than in photographs. Pictures can't capture his vitality or regal posture, his warmth, his habit of extending both hands to someone in greeting, or his habit of holding on to the hand of a young person while he's talking to him. In most pictures, he looks almost sad, or, at best, blank. They couldn't be less telling. Pictures can't show the balletic movement of a curious, inquisitive mind. He is sitting in the press box of the stadium named after him, talking about his offense between bites of a ham sandwich. Did you always run the Wing-T? ``I have since the war,'' Wood says. He means World War II. He put in the offense at the counsel of Clyde`` Bulldog'' Turner, once called the toughest football player ever. But it was Turner's old college coach, Warren Woodson, who invented the offense, the same one he used at Hardin-Simmons and New Mexico State and Arizona, and in the process was the only coach ever to produce the nation's top rusher four years in a row. ``Warren Woodson was one of the greatest offensive coaches that ever was,'' Wood says. ``Cocky little devil, too. He watched us one time and came up to me afterward and said, `Coach, don't tell anybody you run our offense. You did such a lousy job.' ``Yeah, he was the best offensive coach I ever saw.'' He takes a bit out of his sandwich. ``Sorriest defensive coach, too.'' Warren Woodson is dead. So is Bulldog Turner. They are great names lost to a younger generation that wouldn't know a Wing-T offense from a wingtip shoe. Wood knew Turner and Woodson, and he knows Darrell Royal, who calls Wood ``one of the all-time great football coaches, regardless of the level.'' He is a friend of Bum Phillips, who calls Wood the best coach he knows. Bear Bryant told Wood's son, Jim, that, had he stayed at Texas A&M, ``I would have given your dad a heck of a run for the best coach in Texas.'' Wood knows Bill Parcells. Maybe you remember the story that came out a couple of years ago, when Parcells took over as coach of the New York Jets after going to Super Bowls with two different organizations. Parcells told reporters about the time he coached linebackers for Texas Tech in the 1970s. They had 20 spring practices, and at more than a dozen, he saw the same leathery old man in a maroon cap with a ``B'' on it. Parcells introduced himself and asked the old man where he was from. ``A little town down the road here,'' the man said. ``Outside Lubbock?'' Parcells asked. ``No, a little further.'' ``How far is it?'' ``Well, it's 2\1/2\ hours one way.'' Wood drove five hours a day to watch Tech's linebackers. He drove every day for two weeks to learn something from a coach half his age. Parcells said Wood had as much influence on him as Halas, Lombardi, Noll or Landry, and he thinks about him every summer when training camp starts, thinks about the old man with more than 300 wins ``driving five hours a day to find out something.'' Wood has gone farther than that. Every year, for 43 years, he has traveled around the country to the American Football Coaches Association meeting. He has lectured at coaching clinics in 18 states, most of them more than once. He spoke in Tennessee last summer. He went to Canada three times, in the summers of 1967, '70 and '71. He was guest coach for the CFL's Winnipeg Blue Bombers, coached by a man named Jim Spavitol, who played at Oklahoma State and first met Wood in the Navy. After one of his summer trips north, Katharine, his wife of 56 years, asked him what it was like working with professional players. ``They're just overgrown boys,'' he said. He only had a few players who went on to play professional football. The best probably was Lawrence Elkins, the Baylor receiver, his career ruined by injuries in the NFL. The best set was the three Southall brothers--Si, Terry and Shae--all quarterbacks, the sons of his long-time assistant, Morris Southall. Southall helped run the offense. In the Wing-T, the Lions flipped the offensive line to double their number of plays and simplify blocking assignments. Wood told Royal about it in 1960, when Royal invited him on a trip to New York. Royal used the flip-flop in 1963, when he won his first national championship. ``We ran more formations than most teams run plays,'' Wood says. ``We'd run 36, 39, 42 plays a week in practice, and the second team got just as many reps as the first team.'' And, always, the rules were the same. ``Kid makes a mistake in practice,'' Wood says, ``we run it over again.'' Wood hates mistakes. He made a point in his career of making players believe in themselves. He won a state championship his first season at Brownwood, in 1960. He says that, if you severely criticize a player at practice, you have to make sure you do something to build him up again. But it is his obsessive perfectionism that drives him. He watches anxiously from a press box cubicle as the Lions play host to Joshua, a heavy underdog. He talks until a play starts and then stops talking until it's over. If the play is a success for Brownwood, he might say nothing, most likely picking up his speech where he left off. If the play favors Joshua, it might give him fits. Like, say, a 10-yard burst on a trap play by Joshua. ``You go back to our state championship teams,'' he says, irritated, ``and see how many zeroes it has there for what the other teams scored.'' He is up from his press box seat, talking to someone about how in the world Joshua can be moving the ball at all when he suddenly realizes that the Joshua band is playing. ``Did they score?'' he asks, incredulous. Forty-one-yard field goal, someone says. Makes it 21-3, Brownwood. ``Gaw-dang,'' Wood says. He settles down and goes back to talking about offense. He got plays everywhere. He'd see something in a college game on Saturday [[Page 30808]] afternoon and put it in the game plan Sunday night. He has spoken at so many clinics that most of what he says seems as if he were reading it off the walls of a locker room. On a coach who wouldn't leave his team for a week: ``If you can't leave for four days, you've got a poor group of assistant coaches. And if you leave for four days, the kids will listen to you more when you come back.'' On the variety of offenses available: ``It doesn't make a dang what you line up in; it's what you do after you get there.'' On his coaching philosophy: ``It's not the big things that beat you; it's a million little things.' The little things might surprise you. He watched a coach in practice one day and noticed that, on every offensive play, he put the ball down on a yard line. Wood couldn't believe it. How often does that happen in a game? Move the ball around, he told them. Make the players look to see where the ball is, and maybe they won't draw foolish penalties for lining up offsides. His assistants knew what he wanted. Southall, the only assistant over elected president of the Texas High School Coaches Association, worked for him 31 of his last 38 years in coaching. Southall left him only a couple of times, once to be head coach at Winters after Wood left from Stamford, where he won state championships in 1955 and '56. ``If I'd had him at Stamford . . .'' Wood says of Southall and stops in mid-sentence when a ball bounces off a Brownwood receiver and into the hands of a Joshua defensive back. ``That's two balls they've dropped,'' he says. He shakes his head. `If I'd had him at Stamford,'' he says again, ``I'd have won three state championships there. No doubt. He was the best quarterback coach in the state.'' He thinks about the interception again and winces. ``That kills me when they do things like that,'' he says. He sees mistakes everywhere. He watches the Cowboys every Sunday. He is a friend and ``great fan'' of Tom Landry, a reluctant admirer of the impersonal Jimmy Johnson and a defender of Barry Switzer. But he is amazed at what happens on a professional football field. He cites a play in a recent game where Emmitt Smith fumbled on a pitch. ``You know why they fumbled and lost it?'' he asks. ``Damn poor coaching, that's what.'' He says he thought about writing Cowboys coach Chan Gailey and telling him so. Wood is big on writing letters. They appear occasionally in The News and the Abilene Reporter- News, mostly defending teachers of U.S. Rep. Charles Stenholm, a former all-state end for Wood at Stamford. Sometimes he just writes to correct mistakes of any nature. He'd write Gailey, he says, but he's not sure it would do any good. He pulls out a sheet of paper and diagrams his trademark play, the power pitch. Any team that wanted to beat his, he says, first had to stop the power pitch. They'd run it 20 times a game and never fumble. Here's why the Cowboys fumble, he says, whether it's Tony Dorsett or Emmitt Smith: Coaches teach the running back to run at an angle toward the line of scrimmage before taking the pitch. Wood says they should have backs run parallel with the line, which would better allow them to catch the pitch, then square their shoulders before they hit the hole. But wouldn't the Cowboys argue that a back gets to the hole faster if he runs at an angle? ``Might be quicker to the hole,'' Wood says tersely, his eyes returning to the field, ``but you aren't gonna get to the hole with the ball.'' He stares straight ahead. ``Just a fundamental mistake,'' he mutters. ``S'all there is to it.'' Asked his favorite college coaches, he immediately cites Texas Tech's Spike Dykes and Texas' Mack Brown. He is intrigued by Oklahoma's comeback under Bob Stoops, he's impressed by Kansas State Bill Snyder, and he's a great friend of Florida State's Bobby Bowden. In his 1992 book, ``Gordon Wood's Game Plan to Winning Football'', he lists 36 coaches who have contributed to his beliefs, ranging from former assistants to Bo Schembechler, W.T. Staple, Gene Stallings and a high school coach from Ohio named Bron Bacevich. Wood's education in football seems funny, considering how he started. His father was a farmer outside Abilene who didn't believe a man needed much in the way of schooling. ``If you get to third grade and can read and write,'' A.V. Wood told his eight children, ``you're wasting your time going to college. You'll just be a teacher or preacher, and you'll starve.'' Gordon Wood was the only one of A.V.s four sons to earn a high school diploma. He went on to Hardin-Simmons and never starved. But he didn't get rich, either. The most he ever made coaching and teaching, he says, was $42,000. He had an offer in the '50s to be an assistant coach at Texas Tech, but he didn't like the travel required in recruiting. He and Katharine, who reared a son and daughter, live in a little three-bedroom house just two blocks from the high school, the same place they've lived since the early '60s, two doors down from Southhall. The day that Wood retired, he fulfilled a promise to himself when he bought a luxury car and the best golf cart he could find. He drove the car into the garage, and Katharine told him it was nice. She also told him she'd never ride in it. ``There are too many hungry people in this town,'' she told her husband. So he took the car back. He listens to Katharine, as long as she's not trying to send in a couple of new plays. He says he probably would have coached one more year, but she insisted that he retire, and he reluctantly agreed. ``It was time for me to quit,'' he says. He sounds sincere. But he still has a radio program on Thursday evenings to talk about high school football, still has coffee with friends to talk about it. He watches it on television, reads about it in newspapers, visits coaches and players. And, nearly every week, he goes to a game. ``I enjoy watching,'' he says. ``I really do.'' Most of the time, anyway. With five minutes left in the Joshua game, he gets up to leave the press box and beat the rush. Brownwood is up, 35-6, and sitting on Joshua's goal line. At one of the exits, he says to hold up a second. ``Let's see if they score,'' he says. As if on cue, a Brownwood player is flagged for illegal motion. ``Aw, crap,'' Wood says, and turns for the parking lot. Mistakes kill him, and always did. ``I'd die if we had two or three penalties a game,'' he says. Mistakes kill him, but he says he didn't make one by staying at Brownwood all those years. Katharine had put it in perspective earlier. ``You take Tom Landry and Spike Dykes and Grant Teaff and Hayden Fry,'' she said. ``They're all great coaches, but they were all just kids who played high school football in Texas.'' And Gordon Wood was a Texas high school football coach, the best ever, his peers say. Even an old perfectionist couldn't beat that.``I wouldn't change anything,'' he says softly, sitting in his driveway in his sensible sedan. ``No.'
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gp37
Varsity
Posts: 4,664
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Post by gp37 on Nov 25, 2023 21:46:46 GMT -6
May 15, 1971, was declared “Gordon Wood Day” in Brownwood, with Lieutenant Governor Ben Barnes, University of Texas coach Darrell Royal, and 2,000 fans joining President Lyndon Johnson to honor a man with a record in athletic leadership without a parallel. www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRclyL9Ls7UAnd exactly what in the hell does this have to do with Highland Park or Randy Allen? Coach Randy Allen is in the video. What difference does it make. Learn stuff.
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