Bear Bryant

Coach

Birthday September 11, 1913

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Moro Bottom, Arkansas, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1983, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, U.S. (70 years old)

Nationality United States

#20679 Most Popular

1913

Paul William "Bear" Bryant (September 11, 1913 – January 26, 1983) was an American college football player and coach.

1930

During his senior season, Bryant played offensive line and defensive end, and the team won the 1930 Arkansas state football championship.

1931

Bryant accepted a scholarship to play for the University of Alabama in 1931.

Since he elected to leave high school before completing his diploma, Bryant had to enroll in a Tuscaloosa high school to finish his education during the fall semester while he practiced with the college team.

1934

Bryant played end for the Crimson Tide and was a participant on the school's 1934 national championship team.

Bryant was the self-described "other end" during his playing years with the team, playing opposite the big star, Don Hutson, who later became a star in the National Football League and a Pro Football Hall of Famer.

Bryant himself was second team All-Southeastern Conference in 1934, and was third team all conference in both 1933 and 1935.

1935

Bryant played with a partially broken leg in a 1935 game against Tennessee.

Bryant was a member of Sigma Nu fraternity, and as a senior, he married Mary Harmon, which he kept a secret since Alabama did not allow active players to be married.

1936

Bryant was selected in the fourth round by the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1936 NFL Draft, but he never played professional football.

After graduating from the University of Alabama in 1936, Bryant took a coaching job under A. B. Hollingsworth at Union University in Jackson, Tennessee, but he left that position when offered an assistant coaching position under Frank Thomas at the University of Alabama.

Over the next four years, the team compiled a 29–5–3 record.

1940

In 1940, he left Alabama to become an assistant at Vanderbilt University under Henry Russell Sanders.

During their 1940 season, Bryant served as head coach of the Commodores for their 7–7 tie against Kentucky as Sanders was recovering from an appendectomy.

1941

After the 1941 season, Bryant was offered the head coaching job at the University of Arkansas.

However, Pearl Harbor was bombed soon thereafter, and Bryant declined the position to join the United States Navy.

1942

In 1942 he served as an assistant coach with the Georgia Pre-Flight Skycrackers.

Bryant then served off North Africa, on the United States Army Transport SS Uruguay, seeing no combat action.

1943

On February 12, 1943, in the North Atlantic the oil tanker USS Salamonie suffered a steering fault and accidentally rammed the SS Uruguay amidships.

The tanker's bow made a 70-foot (21m) hole in Uruguay's hull and penetrated her, killing 13 soldiers and injuring 50.

The Uruguay's crew contained the damage by building a temporary bulkhead and three days later she reached Bermuda.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt decorated Uruguay's Captain, Albert Spaulding, with the Merchant Marine Distinguished Service Medal for saving many lives, his ship and her cargo.

Bryant was later granted an honorable discharge to train recruits and coach the North Carolina Navy Pre-Flight football team.

One of the players he coached for the Navy was the future Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Otto Graham.

While in the navy, Bryant attained the rank of lieutenant commander.

1945

In 1945, 32-year-old Bryant met Washington Redskins owner George Marshall at a cocktail party hosted by the Chicago Tribune, and mentioned that he had turned down offers to be an assistant coach at Alabama and Georgia Tech because he was intent on becoming a head coach.

Marshall put him in contact with Harry Clifton "Curley" Byrd, the president and former football coach of the University of Maryland.

After meeting with Byrd the next day, Bryant received the job as head coach of the Maryland Terrapins.

In his only season at Maryland, Bryant led the team to a 6–2–1 record.

However, Bryant and Byrd came into conflict.

1958

He is considered by many to be one of the greatest college football coaches of all time, and best known as the head coach of the University of Alabama football team from 1958 to 1982.

During his 25-year tenure as Alabama's head coach, he amassed six national championships and 13 conference championships.

1982

Upon his retirement in 1982, he held the record for the most wins (323) as a head coach in collegiate football history.

The Paul W. Bryant Museum, Paul W. Bryant Hall, Paul W. Bryant Drive, and Bryant–Denny Stadium are all named in his honor at the University of Alabama.

He was also known for his trademark black and white houndstooth hat, even though he normally wore a plaid one, deep voice, casually leaning up against the goal post during pre-game warmups, and holding his rolled-up game plan while on the sidelines.

Before arriving at Alabama, Bryant was head football coach at the University of Maryland, the University of Kentucky, and Texas A&M University.

2011

Bryant was the 11th of 12 children who were born to Wilson Monroe Bryant and Ida Kilgore Bryant in Moro Bottom, Cleveland County, Arkansas.

His nickname stemmed from his having agreed to wrestle a captive bear during a carnival promotion when he was 13 years old.

His mother wanted him to be a minister, but Bryant told her "Coaching is a lot like preaching."

He attended Fordyce High School, where the 6ft 1in tall Bryant, who as an adult would eventually stand 6ft 4in, began playing on the school's football team as an eighth grader.