Loran Smith: Looking Back at Georgia-Clemson

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Loran Smith: Looking Back at Georgia-Clemson

Loran Smith: Looking Back at Georgia-Clemson
Loran Smith

Georgia and Clemson met for the first time on the Gridiron in 1897 in Athens, and the Bulldogs won 24-0.  The two teams have met intermittently through the years with the Bulldogs holding a 43-18-4 lead.

 

 

 

 

In Sanford Stadium, the home team has only lost twice in 23 meetings, and the Red and Black enjoys an 8-7-2 record at Memorial Stadium.  For neutral site games, Georgia has a 7-1-1 advantage, hoping that trend will continue this weekend at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.

In the old days, the Tigers’ Frank Howard and UGA’s Wallace Butts were great friends who were colorful after dinner speakers.  One night in the late fifties, the Touchdown Club of Athens was having one of its periodic meetings and, unannounced, in walked Frank Howard and Bill Murray, the head coach at Duke.

That caused the biggest stir amongst the membership.  They had come to enjoy a steak and an opportunity to show support for their friend, Wallace Butts.  But having two well-known head coaches crash the party brought about head turning excitement.  Murray later became a friend when the Coaches All-America game was held in Atlanta.  Murray retired at Duke and became the Executive Director of this ill-fated game. I had the good fortune to serve as Publicity Director for the game and a long friendship with Coach Howard came about.

 

 

 

 

Once when I was living in Atlanta, I had a magazine assignment to develop a story about the Clemson coach who had just retired.  I flew to Columbia where Coach Howard picked me up, and we drove to Dillon which is near the North Carolina border.  He was speaking to the Dillon Chamber of Commerce. The dinner was sold out.  

At the time, Jimmy Carlen had just taken over as head coach of the South Carolina Gamecocks and had struck a deal with his school that he would own the television rights to his Sunday coach’s show.  He would sell the show, produce the show and then market it.  He kept the net which was somewhat innovative for the times.

Coach Howard made note of that in his speech, saying that Carlen already had two big sponsors, Kentucky Fried Chicken and Schick Razors.  “They gonna call his show, ‘The Chicken Schick Show’” he exclaimed as the audience roared with laughter.

He was off the wall and had a classic feature to his personality.  He could dish it out, but he could take it.  He was never thin skinned although he once threatened to sue the fledgling Athens Daily News when the late Lewis Grizzard wrote an entertaining column, poking fun of Coach Howard’s tobacco chewing enhanced dialect. 

Georgia’s success in recruiting the best talent in the state of South Carolina, got under the coach’s skin, and he felt he had to defend himself.  Although the legend was that he made Phi Beta Kappa as an undergraduate at Alabama where he played for the legendary Wallace Wade, his homespun humor endeared him to audiences all over the country, particularly in the Southeast.

The Atlanta Touchdown Club was a very influential club which enthusiastically supported college football.   The club held a weekend extravaganza at a downtown Atlanta hotel in January each year.

They paid a nice fee which often attracted the national coach-of-the year, but the highlight was a Saturday luncheon when Coach Howard and his friend Peahead Walker of Wake Forest (and later the Montreal Alouettes) traded barbs that had the membership and visitors rollicking with laughter.

It was a no-holds-bared session, and one of their “victims” was often Noah Langdale who was President of Georgia State and had played in the line at Alabama.  

Coaches don’t gather in the off season socially.  They don’t poke fun at each other.  They don’t fraternize, and they don’t fish or play golf with one another.   The big reason is that they are too busy—they simply don’t have the time.   The main reason, however, is the alumni would not stand for such conduct.

You remember the story of Bear Bryant and Shug Jordan out fishing and Bryant decided to wade to shore and immediately began sinking in the water when Jordan reached out and pulled him to safety.

“Now Shug, please don’t tell Alabama fans I can’t walk on water,” Bryant said.  Shug replied, “No problem, Bear if you won’t tell the Auburn fans, I kept you from drowning.”

 

 

 

 

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Greg is closing in on 15 years writing about and photographing UGA sports. While often wrong and/or out of focus, it has been a long, strange trip full of fun and new friends.

3 responses on “Loran Smith: Looking Back at Georgia-Clemson

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    Hi, I’m Jack. Your blog is a treasure trove of valuable insights, and I’ve made it a point to visit daily. Kudos on creating such an amazing resource!