Paul Tyson

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Paul Tyson
Born October 25, 1886(1886-10-25)
Place of birth Flag of Arkansas Hope, AR
Died September 9, 1950 (aged 63)
Place of death Brownwood, Texas
Career highlights
Overall 209-57-16
Championships
1922, '25-'27 Texas State Championships
1927 Mythical National Championship
Playing career
1904-1907 Addison-Randolph College
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1913-1942 Waco High School

Paul Leighton Tyson (October 25, 1886September 9, 1950) was an American football coach. He is one of the most successful high school football coaches of all time, winning four Texas state championships and one mythical national championship in the 1920s. Knute Rockne called Tyson “one of the finest coaches I ever met, college or high school.”[1]

[edit] Career

A native of Arkansas, Tyson enrolled at Addison-Randolph College in Waco, Texas (later re-founded as Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas) in 1904, intending to become a doctor. Then he went to a football game, tried out for the team the next week and made the starting lineup. He also lettered in baseball. In 1908 Tyson graduated from Add-Ran, then went to the University of Chicago to study medicine. While playing baseball there, he reportedly was offered a contract to pitch for a major league team, but turned down the offer.[1]

Returning to Texas, Tyson taught biology in Tyler to supplement his income while studying medicine. While at Tyler, the kids recruited him to be their “football supervisor.”[2] After teaching two more terms at Denison High School, Tyson finally decided to give up medicine for athletics, when he became biology teacher and football coach at Waco High School.

Though starting his career with a 1–3–2 season in 1913, Tyson's Waco teams would not have a losing season the following 27 years under his guidance. There dominance, however, truly began in the 1920s. Waco played six straight championship games between 1922 and 1927, losing only two of them. In 1927, after beating Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin High School of Chardon, Ohio 44-12 in a post-season game, Waco was recognized mythical national champion.[2]

In a time when most teams relied on a basic offense run out of a short punt formation, Tyson revolutionized offensive tactics, developing a series of plays out of the single-wing formation, where one or both of the two backs receiving the snap would spin and cross paths with the remaining backs and ends. The so-called “spinner” was so effective, that Waco scored over a hundred points on nine occasions during 1922-27.[2] In 1927, the Tigers scored an average of 56 points per game – a record that would stand until 1975, when Big Sandy High School scored 824 points for the season.

Tyson's teams were also known for their defense. Playing only a regular-season schedule, the 1921 team was the first of three squads to allow no points in a season. From 1921-27, Waco had 58 shutouts. The 3-0 state title loss to Abilene in 1923 was Waco's only scoring blemish. Led by Boody Johnson, Tommy Glover, Jack Sisco and Sam Coates, Waco's defense gave up just 156 points in seven seasons.

Despite receiving several offers to coach collegiate football teams, Tyson had no interest in leaving Waco.[1] He attended and spoke at football clinics all over the country. Knute Rockne and Pop Warner routinely sought his opinions on offensive philosophy, and he was a favorite of reporters, who found him charismatic and humble and openly campaigned for major universities to hire him.

In the spring of 1942, the Waco school board suddenly and unanimously voted to fire Tyson after an 8-2 season, two removed from a year he took the Tigers to the state finals. Tyson, a lifelong bachelor who never dated, was rumored to be "too intimate" with his players.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Sherrington, Kevin. "Waco coach heard cheers, then whispers", Dallas Morning News, 1999-09-01. Retrieved on 2008-02-13. 
  2. ^ a b c Cashion, Ty (1998). Pigskin Pulpit: A Social History of Texas High School Football Coaches. Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 69–73. ISBN 0876111681. 

[edit] External links