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Murray Warmath
American football player and coach

Murray Warmath

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American football player and coach
Work field
Gender
Male
Birth
26 December 1912, Humboldt, Tennessee, U.S.A.
Death
16 March 2011, Bloomington, Hennepin County, Minnesota, U.S.A. (aged 98 years)
Age
98 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Murray Warmath (December 26, 1912 – March 16, 2011) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Mississippi State University from 1952 to 1953 and at the University of Minnesota from 1954 to 1971, compiling a career college football record of 97–84–10. In 1960, Warmath led the Minnesota Golden Gophers to a share of the Big Ten Conference title, an appearance in the Rose Bowl, and a national championship, the program's most recent to date. The following season, Minnesota placed second in the Big Ten Conference and returned to the Rose Bowl. Warmath's 1967 squad captured a share of a second Big Ten championship.

Playing and coaching career

Warmath played college football for the Tennessee Volunteers under legendary coach Robert Neyland. After graduation from college, Warmath was the line coach for one season and end coach for three seasons at Tennessee before entering military service during World War II. After the service, he was named head line coach at Tennessee, and then served in the same capacity at the United States Military Academy under Red Blaik; Vince Lombardi was the backfield coach at Army during those years. Warmath then spent two seasons (1952–1953) as head coach at Mississippi State University before resigning at the end of the 1953 season to take the Minnesota job.

After coming to Minnesota, Warmath had immediate success, leading the Gophers to a 7–2 record in his first season and a 6–1–2 record in 1956. However, Warmath came under fire after three straight losing seasons in which the Gophers finished a combined 6–20, including the 1958 campaign in which the Gophers won only one game and the 1959 campaign in which the Gophers finished last in the Big Ten and won two games. Despite fans throwing garbage on his lawn and talk from Gopher boosters that the University should buy out the last two years of his contract, Warmath would survive the storm and the following season the Gophers won the Big Ten title, with an 8–1 record, and were declared national champions.

While at Minnesota, Warmath became one of the most successful coaches in Gophers' history, leading the team to two Big Ten titles and two Rose Bowls. His 1961 team was awarded a Rose Bowl berth by default after Ohio State, the conference champion, declined the invitation. The Big Ten Conference, at the time, did not allow the conference champion to go to the Rose Bowl back-to-back. Warmath is the last Gophers coach to win a national championship, a Big Ten title, or a Rose Bowl and he had the second longest tenure at the school (18 yrs) behind only Henry L. Williams. While coach, Warmath became known as a catalyst for social change, as he was one of the first major college coaches to take multiple black athletes in a single recruiting class. Quarterback Sandy Stephens, who was installed as the starting quarterback as a sophomore in 1959, was the first black All-American quarterback. With the national exposure of his bowl appearances, Warmath was able to recruit other top black athletes including future NFL stars Bobby Bell, Carl Eller, and Aaron Brown.

Following the 1971 season, Cal Stoll was hired as coach of the Gophers and Warmath was made an assistant to the athletic director. Warmath stayed in that role until 1978 when he took a job with the Minnesota Vikings as an assistant coach, a position he held for two seasons before becoming a regional scout for the team.

In 18 seasons at Minnesota, Warmath's teams amassed an 87–78–7 (.526) record and won eight games in a season three times. He compiled a career record of 97–84–10.

Later life

In 1992, Warmath worked with author Mike Wilkinson to publish a biography entitled The Autumn Warrior in which he recounts his 65-year association with football. Warmath remained in Minnesota after he retired from coaching and made public appearances well into his 90s and gave extended an interview as recently as 2007. The Gophers locker room at Minnesota's TCF Bank Stadium, which opened in 2009, is named after Warmath. Warmath died on March 16, 2011 at the retirement community in Bloomington, Minnesota where he resided. Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton declared March 21, 2011, the date of his funeral at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Edina, Minnesota, "Murray Warmath Day".

Head coaching record

YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffsCoaches#AP°
Mississippi State Maroons (Southeastern Conference) (1952–1953)
1952Mississippi State5–43–47th
1953Mississippi State5–2–33–1–35th
Mississippi State:10–6–36–5–3
Minnesota Golden Gophers (Big Ten Conference) (1954–1971)
1954Minnesota7–24–24th20
1955Minnesota3–62–58th
1956Minnesota6–1–24–1–2T–2nd912
1957Minnesota4–53–58th
1958Minnesota1–81–69th
1959Minnesota2–71–610th
1960Minnesota8–25–1T–1stL Rose11
1961Minnesota8–26–12ndW Rose66
1962Minnesota6–2–15–22nd1010
1963Minnesota3–62–59th
1964Minnesota5–44–3T–4th
1965Minnesota5–4–15–2T–3rd
1966Minnesota4–5–13–3–15th
1967Minnesota8–26–1T–1st14
1968Minnesota6–45–2T–3rd18
1969Minnesota4–5–14–34th
1970Minnesota3–6–12–4–17th
1971Minnesota4–73–5T–6th
Minnesota:87–78–765–57–4
Total:97–84–10
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title
  • #Rankings from final Coaches Poll.
  • °Rankings from final AP Poll.
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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