97-Year-old Warmath Plans to See His National Champs
Several weeks ago Murray Warmath
biographer Mike Wilkinson called with disturbing news. A Warmath
caregiver had notified Wilkinson, author of the The Autumn Warrior,
that the former Gophers coach was ailing and his health might soon fail
him.
Since then the health of the 97-year-old
Tennessee native has improved and plans are for him to attend Saturday’s
game against USC and watch a ceremony honoring his 1960 national
championship team at TCF Bank Stadium. Although confined to a
wheelchair for years, Warmath has regularly attended Gophers home games
at the Metrodome and now TCF Bank Stadium, but the many former players
and others who love him worried earlier this summer that the coach
wouldn’t be around to see the reunion of his most acclaimed team from
his 18 years coaching at Minnesota.
Warmath’s longevity and resiliency is no
surprise to Gophers coach Tim Brewster who recognizes how special
it is to have the boss of the 1960 team be in attendance on Saturday.
“He’s been struggling,” Brewster told Sports Headliners. “He
keeps hanging on, and there’s a reason why he’s hanging on. There’s a
reason why he’s not letting go. That maybe part of the reason that he
wants to be on the field at TCF Bank Stadium with his team.”
Warmath has been a fighter, a survivor his
whole life. His mother died when he was 10 years old and after that
Warmath lived with relatives.
Warmath used football to start a career
path after playing at the University of Tennessee. His coaching stops
included being an assistant at Army where the staff included head coach
Earl Blaik and an assistant named Vince Lombardi.
Warmath’s first head coaching job was at
Mississippi State where he had enough success to interest Minnesota
athletic director Ike Armstrong. Warmath arrived at Minnesota in
1954 and was not particularly welcome from the start. Media and fans
considered him a southern outsider, not the right choice to coach the
Gophers when there was a former Gopher named Bud Wilkinson
dominating college football as head coach at Oklahoma.
By the end of the 1959 season anti-Warmath
sentiment was at an all-time high. That year the Gophers finished last
in the Big Ten with a 1-6 record. The conference record in 1958 was
also 1-6, a ninth place finish.
The extreme critics had strewn garbage on
the lawn of Warmath’s property in Edina. On campus the coach was hung
in effigy. But Warmath had no intention of moving on.
By the late 1950’s the Gophers and other
northern schools had begun recruiting African-American players. The
Gophers landed players who would become among the greatest in school
history.
The 1958 freshman team (freshmen weren’t
eligible to play) included quarterback Sandy Stephens, a
quarterback from Uniontown, Pennsylvania who had 50 schools or more
recruiting him including Ohio State. After his career ended at
Minnesota in 1961 he was the first NCAA black All-American quarterback.
Headlining the 1959 freshman class was
quarterback Bobby Bell from Shelby, North Carolina. Bell
was so gifted he could have excelled at several positions but settled in
as a tackle for the Gophers and was a phenomenal pass rusher. He was a
two-time All-American at Minnesota and won the Outland Trophy in 1962.
Warmath knew his team and record would be
much improved in 1960 but even he couldn’t have imagined a national
championship season. The team’s best player was senior defensive
lineman Tom Brown, a rock of a man who played high school
football in Minneapolis, went into military service and then came home
to play for Warmath. Brown could be unblockable and he was honored
after the 1960 season as the Big Ten’s MVP.
Back in 1960 the national champion was
determined by the polls before the outcome of bowl games. The Gophers
were 8-2 including a Rose Bowl loss to Washington. The Gophers also
lost to Purdue to finish 6-1 in the Big Ten where they were co-champs
with Iowa. During the season the Gophers defeated No. 1 ranked Iowa at
Memorial Stadium in perhaps the greatest University of Minnesota game of
all time.
The Gophers had gone from last in the
conference to league champs and national kings. It was remarkable.
“That’s got to go down in history as one of the great accomplishments
ever in college football,” Brewster said.
On Saturday Minnesotans should cheer long
and loud for all those 1960 players who will be back in town, and
especially the old coach who made it happen and will live to see the 50th
anniversary of the school’s sixth and last national championship.