- Milburn Smith
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Milburn Smith Sport(s) Football & Basketball Biographical details Born c. 1912 Died November 29, 1994 Place of death Waco, Texas Coaching career (HC unless noted) 1936-1942
1943-1950
1951-1953
1954-1958Carey HS
Mount Vernon HS
East Texas State
Longview HSHead coaching record Overall 30–2–1 (College) Bowls 1–0–1 Milburn A. “Catfish” Smith was a famous football and basketball coach in the state of Texas.
“Catfish” Smith began his coaching career in rural East Texas, where in 1936 he led Carey High, a school with less than one hundred enrollment and no basketball court, to a fourth place finish in the Texas Schoolboy state basketball tournament, including a twenty-six-game winning streak. He followed that with a 50-2 season and the state championship, back when the smallest schools competed against the largest for the coveted title.
In 1943 he was called to Mount Vernon, Texas to temporarily fill a coaching vacancy. Seven years later, with two hundred fourteen victories and over twenty titles, including district, bi-district, regional, and state crowns, he was one of the most recognized high school coaches in the state of Texas. His football teams won four regional titles, a state finalist, a state championship, and ten district crowns in seven years with a record of 60-5-1. In 1948 he became the only Texas high school coach to ever go undefeated in football and basketball in the same academic year, as Mt. Vernon won the 1-A state basketball championship at 30-0 and won the regional (as far as 1-A went in 1948) in football at 11-0.
In 1951, East Texas State (now Texas A&M University–Commerce) named Smith their new head football coach. He guided the Lions to a 30-2-1 record, including a 30-game winning streak starting in October 1951 and ending in 1953 that brought them invitations to the 1953 and 1954 Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, Fla.
Despite his success in the collegiate ranks, Smith chose to return to high school coaching, as he became head coach at Longview High School in 1954. Smith guided the Longview Lobos to a 27-16-6 record in four seasons.
Smith has been inducted into four halls of fame, including the Texas Sports Hall of Fame. He was a member of the inaugal class of the Texas A&M–Commerce/East Texas State Athletic Hall of Fame in 1978.
Head coaching record
Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP° East Texas State Lions (Lone Star Conference) (1951–1953) 1951 East Texas State 9–2 5–0 1st 1952 East Texas State 11–0 5–0 1st W Tangerine Bowl 1953 East Texas State 10–0–1 5–0 1st T Tangerine Bowl East Texas State: 30–2–1 15–0 Total: 30–2–1 National Championship Conference Title Conference Division Title †Indicates BCS bowl game. #Rankings from final Coaches' Poll.
°Rankings from final AP Poll.Further reading
- Onley, Glenn (2004). Coach "Catfish" Smith and His Boys. Santa Fe: Sunstone Press. ISBN 0865344248.
Texas A&M–Commerce Lions head football coaches Marion Mayo (1914) • B. H. Miller (1915) • Johnnie Garitty (1916–1917) • No team (1918) • E. M. Tipton (1919–1920) • Cecil A. Cushman (1920) • Russell Jernigan (1921–1923) • Joe Murphy (1924–1928) • Will Hill Acker (1929–1930) • J. W. Rollins (1931–1934) • Bob Berry (1935–1941) • No team (1942–1945) • Bob Berry (1946–1950) • Milburn Smith (1951–1953) • Jules V. Sikes (1954–1963) • Ernest Hawkins (1964–1985) • Eddie Vowell (1986–1998) • Eddie Brister (1999–2003) • Scott Conley (2004–2008) • Guy Morriss (2009– )
Categories:- 1994 deaths
- Texas A&M–Commerce Lions football coaches
- High school football coaches in the United States
- High school basketball coaches in the United States
- People from Texas
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