augustabuzz
Helluva Engineer
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Some of these plays may look somewhat familiar.
Some of these plays may look somewhat familiar.
It was the same year General Neyland died IIRC. Dodd loved his old coach to the point that he didn't want to play UT until the General left.The last season for Tennessee head coach Bowden Wyatt(1955-1962). Tennessee went 4-6 in 1962 running the single wing offense. He decided to hang it up as well as retire as Tennessee athletic director because of a stomach ailment which I believe caused his death a few years later.
Bobby Dodd said Bowden Wyatt used to ask him before every GT-UT game "How can you take this pressure?". Bowden Wyatt couldn't handle it because of stomach problems(probably cancer) and bleeding ulcers. Bobby Dodd said he enjoyed the pressure because he considered it to be a challenge. General Robert Neyland died at his home in New Orleans in 1962.It was the same year General Neyland died IIRC. Dodd loved his old coach to the point that he didn't want to play UT until the General left.
Joe Auer was my first football "hero". Yes, he and Craig Baynham would've made a nasty set of ABs.I actually remember that game. Thanks for finding the film.
And it was good to see Joe Auer run again. He would have been one of the baddest ABs ever. As big as Orwin Smith and a step faster. Also the only Tech football player to ever keep a lion as a pet. They forced him to give the creature up as it got older and scared the neighbors, but Auer always insisted that he was just a big pussycat. True, in a way …
Chick Graning was another great player at GT until Alabama's Darwin Holt almost caved in his face with a cheap shot.Joe Auer was my first football "hero". Yes, he and Craig Baynham would've made a nasty set of ABs.
Little Joe was a great,great player who also scored the first td in Miami Dolphins history(a 93 yard kickoff return against the Oakland Raiders in 1966).Joe Auer was my first football "hero". Yes, he and Craig Baynham would've made a nasty set of ABs.
Some of these plays may look somewhat familiar.
Leon Hardeman and Billy Teas would have been great ABs. I used to know an old time GT fan who once told be that he thought Billy Teas was the greatest GT running back he had ever seen. Too bad he was thrown off the team in 1954 for never being around when Bobby Dodd called him and his wife's home for bed check.Joe Auer was my first football "hero". Yes, he and Craig Baynham would've made a nasty set of ABs.
My Dad once told me almost the same thing, except he thought Eddie Lee Ivery was the greatest after Clint Castleberry.Leon Hardeman and Billy Teas would have been great ABs. I used to know an old time GT fan who once told be that he thought Billy Teas was the greatest GT running back he had ever seen. Too bad he was thrown off the team in 1954 for never being around when Bobby Dodd called him and his wife's home for bed check.
Bobby Dodd dominated recruiting in Southeast Tennessee in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Leon Hardeman and Billy Teas were both from Chattanooga and Baylor High School I do believe.My Dad once told me almost the same thing, except he thought Eddie Lee Ivery was the greatest after Clint Castleberry.
Here's another great GT win over Tennessee. The 1982 31-21 GT win over Tennessee in BDS the week after Tennessee beat #1 Alabama. This is the Big Orange Sunday Highlight Show.
He blasted off like a rocket on that returnJack Westbrook with the punt return to the house!