- Joe Morrison
NFL player
DateOfBirth=August 21 ,1937
Birthplace=Lima, Ohio
DateOfDeath=February 5 ,1989
Deathplace=Columbia, South Carolina
College=Cincinnati
Position=Running back Wide Receiver
DraftedYear=1959
DraftedRound=3 / Pick 34
Stats=y
DatabaseFootball=MORRIJOE01
PFR=MorrJo01
years=1959-1972
teams=New York Giants
ProBowls=
CollegeHOF=College coach infobox
Name = Joe Morrison
Caption =
DateOfBirth =August 21 ,1937
Birthplace =Lima, Ohio
Sport = Football
College =
Title =
CurrentRecord =
OverallRecord =
Awards = National Coach of the Year (1984)
Championships =
CFbDWID = 1672
Player =
Years =
Team =
Position =Running back
Coach = Trigger
CoachYears = 1973-1979
1980-1982
1983-1988
CoachTeams = Tennessee-Chattanooga
New Mexico
South Carolina
FootballHOF =Joe Morrison (
August 21 ,1937 –February 5 ,1989 ) was aNational Football League football player who played for theNew York Giants and anAmerican football coach best known as the head coach at theUniversity of South Carolina .Giants' career
Joe Morrison was born in
Lima, Ohio . After attending theUniversity of Cincinnati , he was drafted by the Giants, where he played at the positions ofrunning back andwide receiver . He had a long career with the Giants, playing from 1959 to 1972. He holds the Giants' team record for receptions, with 395 catches, from seven differentquarterback s; over his career his plays gained 4,993 yards. Morrison was known as "Old Dependable" because of his willingness and ability to play any position he was asked to play. Hisjersey number (#40) has been retired by the Giants.Morrison's best individual season as a receiver came in 1966 when the Giants won only one game. He caught 46 passes for 724 yards and scored six touchdowns. While the Giants fell on hard times, Morrison was one of the bright stars on the team. He also had five seasons of forty receptions or more between 1964 and 1971.
Life After The Giants
Joe Morrison was a head coach at the
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga ,University of New Mexico , andUniversity of South Carolina . He is one of the few major college head coaches to never work as an assistant coach.Other than his NFL years, he is best remembered as the head coach at South Carolina, and is still often regarded as the greatest coach in the program's history, despite only serving six years in that position before his death. Morrison came to USC after three seasons with the Lobos of the University of New Mexico. He was a hot prospect, having gone 10-1 in 1982. Morrison took the Gamecocks to three postseason games (1984 and 1987
Gator Bowl and the 1988Liberty Bowl ) during his tenure. It was under Morrison in 1983 that South Carolina began the tradition ofAlso sprach Zarathustra (Richard Strauss) (theme from "") as its pre-game anthem and team entrance. This entrance is now regarded by sport networks, commentators, and college football fans as one of the great traditions in college football.
"Also Sprach Zarathustra"The 1984 season was affectionately dubbed the "Black Magic" year by USC fans because of the team's success and because of Morrison's famous all-black attire (cap, shirt, pants, shoes). The team ran a streak of nine consecutive wins (longest single season streak in school history) and was ranked #2 in the nation before being upset by Navy and later falling to Oklahoma State in the Gator Bowl. Gaining victories against storied programs such as Georgia, Pittsburgh, Notre Dame, Florida State, as well as a regular season win against arch-rival Clemson, the Gamecocks finished that season with a school best 10-2 record. Morrison was named by the Walter Camp Foundation as the 1984 National College Football Coach of the Year. Morrison would also be named the Southern Independent Coach of the year in 1987. The 1984 squad also heralded two first team All-American players in James Seawright (linebacker) and
Del Wilkes (offensive lineman), as well as future NFL playersSterling Sharpe (1984-1987), andBrad Edwards (1984-1987).Other notable players coached by Morrison included
Harold Green , who spent several years with theCincinnati Bengals in the NFL, current Gamecock football radio broadcaster Todd Ellis, who is the all-time passing leader at South Carolina, andRobert Brooks , who was part of theGreen Bay Packers 1997 Super Bowl Championship team. During the time,Charlie Weis , current Notre Dame head football coach, was an assistant coach under Morrison, his first coaching job in the college ranks. Also serving as an assistant during Morrison's tenure wasAl Groh , who went on to be head coach of theNew York Jets and currently is the head coach at theUniversity of Virginia .After back-to-back 8-4 season in 1987 and 1988, expectations were high in Columbia for the 1989 campaign. Tragically, it would not come to pass as Morrison collapsed after playing racquetball at
Williams-Brice Stadium , and died on February 5, 1989, at age 51 fromcongestive heart failure .Morrison won his 100th game as a coach in 1988, when he beat N.C. State 23-7.
Morrison's Traditions at South Carolina
Morrison's legacy still is in place at the University of South Carolina in various ways: the football team still has black jerseys as part of their uniform options (Morrison began the use of black jerseys as a uniform option and used them as the team's primary home jerseys during the 1987 * 1988 seasons); pre-game "2001: A Space Odyssey" anthem, which has also spread to other athletic events and other university functions such as graduations; his 1984 recognition as national coach of the year is posted in South Carolina's Williams-Brice Stadium; one outstanding football player from spring practice on both offense and defense are awarded the "Joe Morrison Award" each year.
ources
* [http://www.nndb.com/people/310/000165812/ NNDb]
References
* [http://www.sportingnews.com/archives/sports2000/players/gridiron/giants1.html New York Giants: Skill Positions] at
The Sporting News
* [http://www.sportsecyclopedia.com/nfl/nyg/nygiants.html New York Giants] at Sports Encyclopedia
* [http://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/MorrJo01.htm] at Pro Football Reference
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