He was a good cowman.
One sentence statement that was on the bulletin for Sam Baugh’s funeral.
Before 1990 and the return of football to the Hardin-Simmons campus, there were three names always mentioned with Cowboy football. Clyde “Bulldog” Turner who played at HSU and later had a Hall of Fame career with the Chicago Bears. Ed Sprinkle who also played at HSU and for the Chicago Bears, and was known as ‘the meanest man in professional football”. The third was Sam Baugh who passed away last week at the age of 94. Baugh played his collegiate football at Texas Christian University and was the head football coach at HSU from 1954-1959. After he retired from pro football and a phenomenal career with the Washington Redskins, he brought national attention to HSU when he became the head coach.
About 10 of his former players from HSU attended his funeral on Monday in the community of Rotan. Several of them mentioned how he always said that the HSU job was the best job he ever had. Baugh ran his practices as if he was back home in Rotan at his ranch tending to his cattle. Most days he was on the practice field in blue jeans, western shirt and a well-worn Cowboy hat, which was similar to his attire that he would wear on game day. Baugh coached the Cowboys when they were a member of the Border Conference and in 1958 he led the Cowboys in a brutal non-conference schedule for a small Division I school. The Cowboys played Baylor, Ole Miss, Arkansas and defending national champion LSU all on the road and all for guarantees, which probably helped keep the athletic department in budget for the year. One year during practices a group of high school coaches from the area came to watch Baugh and the Cowboys work out. One of the coaches was current Cowboy football coach Jimmie Keeling.
Many of the speakers at the funeral talked about Baugh and his colorful language. Which he would use at any time and any place. Whether it was the ranch, church, golf course, banquet, Baugh was going to talk like the rancher he was. He was always the same, regardless of the circumstance. I remember a local television reporter asking Sam if he could watch his language during an interview. Sam smiled and said if he had to watch what he was going to say, then there would be no need to interview him. The interview went on with the reporter having to edit the conversation before it went on air.
Sam also had a great sense of humor. When he left HSU to take the job as the first head coach of the New York Titans in the American Football League, the team struggled. They were not very competitive and Baugh quit after two seasons of what everyone would agree was bad football. Toward the end of the second year, a reporter asked Coach Baugh if he was concerned with how the fans might act at the games because of the performance of the team. With perfect timing, Coach Baugh said he was okay with dealing with the fans. After all there were probably more players and coaches on the Titans staff, than there would be fans at the game.
While there might have been a limited number of Titans fans that day in New York, there will always been a huge number of Sam Baugh fans. And the fact that he had numerous fans that never saw him play, speaks to what kind of person he was away from the football field.
Monday, December 29, 2008
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