Garland Morrow

Garland Morrow
Sport(s) Football, basketball
Biographical details
Born February 14, 1899
Nashville, Tennessee
Died November 4, 1987 (aged 88)
Mineola, Texas
Playing career
Football
19191920
1922

Basketball
19191922

Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt


Vanderbilt
Position(s) Guard (football)
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
Football
19271932
19321935

Basketball
19291931
19321935
19441946

Vanderbilt (assistant)
Cumberland (TN)


Vanderbilt
Cumberland (TN)
Vanderbilt
Accomplishments and honors

Championships

Football:
1 SoCon (as player) (1922)
1 Smoky Mountain Athletic Conference (1935)
Basketball:
1 SIAA (1920)

Awards

Cumberland Sports Hall of Fame

Garland Augustus "Gus" Morrow (February 14, 1899 November 4, 1987) was an American football and basketball player and coach.

Vanderbilt

"Gus" played both sports for Vanderbilt University, including football under Dan McGugin. He played basketball at Vanderbilt under later Alabama Crimson Tide football coach Wallace Wade.

Football

1922

Morrow was a starter for the scoreless tie with Michigan at the inauguration at Dudley Field.[1] "Thousands of cheering Vanderbilt fans inspired the surge of center Alf Sharp, guard Gus Morrow, tackle Tex Bradford, and end Lynn Bomar, who stopped Michigan cold in four attempts."[2]

Basketball

1922-23

The 1922-23 team went 168, beating the LSU Tigers but losing to the Virginia Tech Hokies in the SIAA tournament.[3] An account of the LSU game reads: "Either Vanderbilt was in rare form or L.S.U. has a good fighting team with no shooting ability. Fans were treated to the most one-sided contest of opening day when these two clubs met, the Commodores scoring 13 points before the Louisianans had counted once, winning 36 to 10."[4] Morrow scored 4 points.[5]

Coaching

He was then an assistant for McGugin from 1927 to 1932. He served as the head basketball coach at Vanderbilt from the 1929 until 1931. He again coached the Vanderbilt basketball team from 1944 to 1946.

Cumberland

Morrow was hired at Cumberland as a coach in 1932,[6][7] and was elected to the Cumberland Sports Hall of Fame in 1978.[8]

Head coaching record

Basketball

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Vanderbilt Commodores (Southern Conference) (1929–1931)
192930 Vanderbilt 616
193031 Vanderbilt 168
Vanderbilt Commodores (Southeastern Conference) (1944–1946)
194445 Vanderbilt 66
194546 Vanderbilt 310
Vanderbilt: 3140
Total: 3140

[9]

References

  1. "Powerful Wolverine Eleven Held To Scoreless Tie By Commodores." Augusta Chronicle 1922 Oct. 15
  2. Tom Perrin (1987). Football: a college history. p. 113.
  3. "Vanderbilt Basketball 2011-12" (PDF).
  4. Danforth, Ed (February 28, 1923). "Vandy Shows Class in Beating L.S.U.". Atlanta Georgian.
  5. "History of the Early S.I.A.A. Atlanta Basketball Tournament - 1923". Retrieved February 1, 2015.
  6. Winstead Paine Bone. A Histoy of Cumberland University.
  7. "History - Cumberland University Athletics".
  8. "Cumberland Sports Hall of Fame".
  9. "Gus Morrow Coaching Record".

External links