Happy 81st birthday to Mississippi Sports Hall of Famer P.W. "Bear" Underwood of Hattiesburg. What follows is a piece I wrote a while back for a 100th anniversary USM football program. . .
The date was Oct. 17, 1970. It was a
muggy day, unseasonably warm. I was an 18-year-old USM freshman
writing sports for the Hattiesburg American, and
I had just seen a miracle.
Southern Miss,
coached by second-year Golden Eagle coach P. W. “Bear” Underwood,
had just stunned mighty Ole Miss 30-14 on the new artificial turf at
then-Hemingway Stadium. USM fans were flooding onto the field, as I
hurried to midfield to be the first to interview Underwood.
Two USM players,
obviously tired and sweaty and with help from others, lifted
Underwood on their shoulders and headed to midfield for the
traditional coaches handshake. The USM players began to wobble and
then they dropped the then-rotund Underwood to the ground almost at
Ole Miss coach Johnny Vaught's feet.
“Hell Bear,”
Vaught drawled, “you couldn't expect two miracles in one day.”
They parted ways
and I asked Underwood about the upset.
“This wasn't an
upset,” he boomed back. “We took it to their butts and we whipped
their butts.”
The
Golden Eagles did do that. But it was
an upset, the biggest of that season and still the biggest I have
ever witnessed. Ole Miss had defeated USM 69-7 the year before.
Archie Manning, a senior Ole Miss quarterback, was the leading
candidate for the Heisman Trophy and a recent Sports
Illustrated cover boy.
The Rebels had just
defeated both Alabama and Georgia on back to back Saturdays. USM had
just been pummeled 41-14 by San Diego State. One newspaper ran a
dressing room photo of Manning taking off his socks and the caption
read: “Archie, is today's game even worth suiting up for?”
Twenty-five years
later, Underwood laughed when I asked him about his “no upset”
quote.
“What I mean is
that it wasn't a fluke,” Underwood said. “I meant we were the
best team on the field that day and we deserved to win. I meant we
took the fight to them and that the best team on the field that day
won the game.”
Underwood had been
a fantastic lineman for USM under Coach Thad “Pie” Vann, whom he
succeeded as head coach. He had been a defensive coach under Vann and
produced some of the best defenses in history of the school. In those
days, the best athletes went on defense because Vann figured the
other team couldn't win if they couldn't score.
I particularly
remember one season in which USM played three straight 3-0 games,
beating VMI and Auburn 3-0 before losing to William & Mary 3-0.
Underwood's defense allowed only one touchdown in the team's last
five games. His defenses swarmed to the football and hit viciously.
As a player,
Underwood had teammed with fellow Mississippi Sports Hall of Famer
Don Owens to form no doubt the best defensive tackle tandem in school
history — or in the history of most schools for that matter.
My dad Ace
Cleveland, the long-time USM sports information director, described
them as “immovable.”
Sad Ace, “Nobody
could block them. You couldn't double-team one because the other
would kill you.”
I was too young to
remember Underwood's playing days, but I well remember him as a
coach, both as a defensive coordinator and then as a head coach.
He left USM for a
short period to become a defensive assistant at the University of
Tennessee but returned in 1969 to become USM's head coach.
Most people called
him Bear or P.W. My dad called him Percy, and Underwood called Dad
“Dub.” In fact, Underwood called most everybody Dub in that deep
gravelly voice of his. I can't tell you how many times he playfully
grabbed me around the neck and almost brought me to my knees. He
wasn't trying to be mean, mind you. He was just brutally strong and
sometimes didn't know his own strength. He once ripped the locked
door off a burning car to rescue the driver.
His head coaching
record over six seasons at USM was average at best. His teams won 31
games, lost 32 and tied two. But he should be remembered for much
more than that.
Borrowing on his
experience at Tennessee in “Big Orange” country, he brought a
big-time approach to Southern Miss football. He created the term Big
Gold Country and began the Big Gold Club. USM began to schedule more
ambitiously and claimed some huge victories under Underwood.
The Ole Miss
victory in 1970 was certainly the biggest and led, in this writer's
opinion, to the expansion of then-Faulkner Field into M.M. Roberts
Stadium and what is now known as The Rock. He recruited the first
African American players to USM and also recruited some of the
greatest players in USM history, players such as Ray Guy, Ben Garry
and Fred Cook.
He left the program
far better than he found it and set the stage for what it has become.
More than that, following his coaching career he returned to USM and
has been one of the school's biggest boosters.
Little known fact:
P.W. Underwood recruited current athletic director Jeff Hammond to
USM.
“I'm at Southern
Mississippi because of P.W. Underwood,” Hammond said recently. “I
was going to play baseball at Ole Miss but then P.W. Underwood
offered me a football scholarship. USM was the only school that
offered me.
“He was a tough
coach but I have never seen a group of former players more loyal to a
coach than P.W.'s players are loyal to him. They loved him because he
taught them that character does matter and it's not for sale.”
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