Pat Trammell
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Pat Trammell (July 11, 1940 – December 10, 1968) was an All-American quarterback for the University of Alabama football team from 1958 to 1961, leading the team to the National Championship in his senior year (1961).
[edit] Biography
Trammell was born in Scottsboro, Alabama, and played high school football at Scottsboro High School where he earned All-County, All-State, All-Southern and All-American honors during his four year prep career. He was also named most valuable basketball player in Alabama as a high school senior.
His football career at Alabama began just prior to head coach Paul "Bear" Bryant's announcement that he planned to return to his alma mater to take over as head coach of the ailing football program. Trammell's family recalls a personal visit at the time and an embellished 'pep talk' from Coach Bryant saying that, "if you'll commit to Alabama, then I'll come back to Alabama." Trammell had planned to attend Georgia Tech, but at this point, made a career altering decision that would change the rest of his life.
Bryant's influence would once again bring the program into the national spotlight and Trammell was his first star player. Coach Bryant had promised the team that they would win a national championship within four years[citation needed]. After winning a SEC championship in 1960, his prediction became mysteriously true, with Trammell leading the team to a National Championship in 1961. At a reception in Washington, D.C. with President John F. Kennedy, Coach Bryant and Pat Trammell together proudly accepted the MacArthur Trophy on (black & white) national television for the team's amazing accomplishment. (Of interest, this scene was digitally reproduced in Winston Groom's movie, Forrest Gump, in 1994)
Trammell is most widely known for his untimely tragic death in 1968, falling victim to metastatic testicular cancer at the age of 28 - just two years after earning his M.D.degree from the Medical College of Alabama, now known as the University of Alabama School of Medicine. He was just completing a residency in Dermatology and left behind a beautiful wife and two young children.
At his funeral, thousands attended the services, all ranging from dignitaries to those who had never met him, but whose lives were touched and inspired by him. Condolences were sent in from around the state and the country, including Governor George Wallace, Governor Albert Brewer, Congressman Robert E. Jones, Jr. and President Richard Nixon. A Resolution from the Alabama State House of Representatives was written into law acknowledging the tragic loss. The reigning president of the University of Alabama, Dr. Frank Rose, gave an eloquent eulogy at his funeral. With tears streaming down his face, tough, tenatious Paul "Bear" Bryant escorted Pat's mother down the aisle of the standing room only church in Scottsboro.
In Bryant's autobiography The Bear, he stated that the day Pat died was "the saddest day of my life."
After Coach Bryant celebrated his 300th college football victory, in 1980, he was interviewed by The Birmingham News reflecting on his success as a football coach, leader and mentor. He was quoted in the October 6th edition that 'Pat Trammell was the favorite person in my entire life.'
Pat Trammell was posthumously inducted into Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.