American football player and coach, college athletics administrator
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On today's Make A Difference Minute, Coach Gene Stallings will be sharing advice with those who have children with Down syndrome along with the legacy of his own son, John Mark Stallings. Sponsor: Bankston Motor Homes BankstonMotorHomes.com
Steve Teel interviews Super Bowl V Baltimore Colts champion Tommy Maxwell. Steve asks Tommy to share some of his NFL stories from the Colts (Johnny Unitas), the Raiders (John Madden, Gene Upshaw) and the Texas A&M Hall of Fame great also shares Aggie football stories as well (Gene Stallings, Bear Bryant). Most importantly Steve and Tommy talk about the ministry that he started: Coaches Outreach that impacts thousands of coaches every year across America and many more students each and every year. Tommy Maxwell is a kingdom of Jesus great. Visit the Website! https://verybold.com/ Be inspired every Saturday by difference-makers on Very Bold Radio & Podcast!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer talks with Greg McElroy about why he decided it was good to replace Nick Saban, the first time he knew Alabama was different and the early impact Gene Stallings had. Coach DeBoer also talks about the most improved position group he has seen and how his first coaching job got him ready for Alabama. Plus, Texas recruiting keeps rolling, Les Miles sues LSU and Ohio State picks up Grambling State in 2025. | Always College Football Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer talks with Greg McElroy about why he decided it was good to replace Nick Saban, the first time he knew Alabama was different and the early impact Gene Stallings had. Coach DeBoer also talks about the most improved position group he has seen and how his first coaching job got him ready for Alabama. Plus, Texas recruiting keeps rolling, Les Miles sues LSU and Ohio State picks up Grambling State in 2025. | Always College Football Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The College Football Experience (@TCEonSGPN) on the Sports Gambling Podcast Network previews the upcoming Alabama Crimson Tide 2024 season. Pick Dundee aka (@TheColbyD), Patty C (@PattyC831) & NC Nick (@NC__NicK) break down the upcoming Alabama Crimson Tide season and key in just how they will do in the first season without Nick Saban. Does the Kalen DeBoer hire make complete sense for the Alabama Crimson Tide? Will the Alabama Crimson Tide have a setback season before DeBoer really gets the Tide rolling?Will Jalen Milroe be a much better passer under DeBoer? Who will step up and emerge as the next great Alabama Crimson Tide running back? How many losses can the Tide have and still potentially make the 12 team college football playoff? Did the Alabama Crimson Tide win or lose the transfer portal? Will the Crimson Tide feel the effect of Caleb Downs heading out to Ohio State? Will the Tide be able to handle the road schedule of games at Wisconsin, Tennessee, LSU and Oklahoma on the road? We talk it all and more on this episode of the College Football Experience. JOIN the SGPN community #DegensOnlyExclusive Merch, Contests and Bonus Episodes ONLY on Patreon - https://sg.pn/patreonDiscuss with fellow degens on Discord - https://sg.pn/discordDownload The Free SGPN App - https://sgpn.appCheck out the Sports Gambling Podcast on YouTube - https://sg.pn/YouTubeCheck out our website - http://sportsgamblingpodcast.comSUPPORT us by supporting our partnersNYRA Racing code SGPN25 - $25 FREE BET and $200 Deposit Bonus - https://racing.nyrabets.com/sign-up-bonus/sgpn25?utm_source=sgpn&utm_medium=paid_social&utm_campaign=sgpn_25&utm_content=1080x1080Underdog Fantasy code TCESGPN - 100% Deposit Match up to $100 - https://play.underdogfantasy.com/p-sgpnGametime code SGPN - Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code SGPN for $20 off your first purchase - https://gametime.co/Football Contest Proxy - Use promo code SGP to save $50 at - https://www.footballcontestproxy.com/ADVERTISE with SGPNInterested in advertising? Contact sales@sgpn.io Follow The College Experience & SGPN On Social MediaTwitter - https://twitter.com/TCEonSGPNInstagram - http://www.instagram.com/TCEonSGPNTikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@TCEonSGPNYoutube - https://www.youtube.com/@TheCollegeExperienceFollow The Hosts On Social MediaColby Dant - http://www.twitter.com/thecolbydPatty C - https://twitter.com/PattyC831NC Nick - https://twitter.com/NC__NicK
College Football Hall of Fame coach Gene Stallings joins the show to talk Alabama, the CFP, and the state of college football. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Bryan has a conversation with Coach Gene Stallings. Listen as they talk about the Juction Boys, life lessons from Coach Bear Bryant, John Mark Stallings and the pitfalls of NIL. To join the fight and become an 1819 News Member and have access to all of our behind the scenes content, click here: https://1819news.com/membership
Bryan has a conversation with Coach Gene Stallings. Listen as they talk about the Juction Boys, life lessons from Coach Bear Bryant, John Mark Stallings and the pitfalls of NIL. To join the fight and become an 1819 News Member and have access to all of our behind the scenes content, click here: https://1819news.com/membership
Billy Fendley of Fulton, had a birthday guest on Oct. 18, when his friend, Roger Shultz, joined him for lunch at Susie Q's. The two share an Oct. 18 birthday. Billy is one of Alabama's most dedicated fans, and so is Roger, who played center for the Crimson Tide and in 1992 served as a graduate assistant coach under Gene Stallings. The last three years, Roger has joined Billy for a birthday lunch on their birthdaysArticle Link
Nick tells an embarrassing story of "loose bowels" while Mark regales the guys with a legendary Gene Stallings tale. Just a typical episode of Talk or Go Home. Lens Plus: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/channel/lens/id6443351349 Subscribe on Spotify: https://anchor.fm/lensmedia/subscribe Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/talkorgohome/ Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@talkorgohome Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ToGHPodcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/TalkorGo YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEEnQWQLqsOI6p3L7ptQqQQ Created by Nick Wilson and Brandon Farmer Produced by Nick Wilson Hosted by Nick Wilson, Clint Thompson, David Murphree, & Mark Sanders --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lensmedia/message
Hall of Fame football coach Gene Stallings joins the program to discuss his life after football and some of his favorite moments while being the head football coach of Alabama. Plus more of your phone calls. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Bryan has a conversation with Coach Gene Stallings. Listen as they talk about the Junction Boys, life lessons from Coach Bear Bryant, John Mark Stallings and the pitfalls of NIL. For any questions or comments, please email them to thepodcast@1819news.com. Be sure to subscribe to 1819 News The Podcast on iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Bryan has a conversation with Coach Gene Stallings. Listen as they talk about the Junction Boys, life lessons from Coach Bear Bryant, John Mark Stallings and the pitfalls of NIL. For any questions or comments, please email them to thepodcast@1819news.com. Be sure to subscribe to 1819 News The Podcast on iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts.
An illustrious coaching heritage is embedded in the foundation of Clemson football. At the dawn of the 20th century, the Tigers were led by future College Football Hall of Famer John Heisman. Hall of Famers Jess Neely, Frank Howard and Danny Ford followed in Heisman's winning tradition. Now entering his 15th season (and 14th full season) as Clemson's head coach, Dabo Swinney has already carved his name into that foundation, elevating himself amid a pantheon of Clemson greats by becoming the first coach in program history to lead Clemson to multiple national championships. Swinney's stratospheric start to his head coaching career placed his record not only among Clemson legends but also among the names of the winningest leaders in the more than 150 years of major college football. With his final win of the 2021 season, Swinney reached 150 career wins in his 186th game as head coach. In terms of games played, Swinney became the sixth-fastest coach in FBS history — and the fourth-fastest in the modern era — to earn 150 career wins, trailing Urban Meyer (176), Gil Dobie (180), Barry Switzer (180), Fielding Yost (184) and Joe Paterno (184). Entering 2022, only 16 coaches in FBS history including Swinney had accomplished the feat within 200 games, and 14 of the 16 had been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, with the lone exceptions being Swinney and Meyer, both of whom are not yet eligible. The 150th win came in Swinney's 13th full season and his 14th season overall including his seven-game interim stint in 2008. He moved into third place in FBS history for the most coaching wins in the first 15 seasons of a head coaching career, trailing only Meyer (165) and Bob Stoops (160). Swinney will have the opportunity to take aim at both in his 15th season as head coach in 2022. Though other seasons resulted in more hardware, analysts and observers opined that 2021 might have been Swinney's best coaching job, as the Tiger mentor guided his team through adversity and attrition to overcome a 2-2 start to finish 10-3 and extend Clemson's streak of consecutive 10-win seasons to 11. Clemson entered that October as one of 28 Power Five teams with two or more losses, yet concluded the season along as one of only two of those 28 programs to finish the season having reached 10 wins. Swinney's 2021 Tigers played seven one-possession games, one shy of the school record, and went 5-2 in those contests. The squad's success came in spite of tremendous turnover and attrition, as 48 different players earned at least one start, eight more than started in the pandemic-impacted 2020 season. Only 23 Clemson players played in all 13 games, and only four offensive or defensive players started all 13. Between injuries and transfers, Swinney held aloft the 2021 Cheez-It Bowl trophy following a game Clemson finished without the services of 30 scholarship players from its initial fall roster. A year earlier, Swinney's squad accomplished its “double-double mission” in 2020, going 10-2 in a condensed season to give Clemson 10 consecutive 10-win seasons. Clemson became only the third program in FBS history to accomplish the feat and became the first school to win 10 games in 10 straight seasons as a member of the ACC, as only the final nine of Florida State's record 14-straight 10-win seasons came during the Seminoles' tenure in the ACC. The pandemic-affected 2020 campaign was a historic one for the Tigers both as a team and individually, as quarterback Trevor Lawrence ascended to become the winningest quarterback in school history (34-2) and running back Travis Etienne added the ACC's all-time rushing crown (4,952 yards) to his arsenal of school and conference records. Etienne's versatility as a rusher and receiver earned him consensus All-American honors as an all-purpose selection, while Lawrence became the second Heisman Trophy finalist in program history, tying Deshaun Watson (second in 2016) for the highest finish in Heisman Trophy voting in school history. The prolific backfield duo under Swinney's tutelage helped guide Clemson to its sixth consecutive outright conference title with a 34-10 win against Notre Dame in the ACC Championship Game. That day, Clemson and Oklahoma's six-year streaks of outright conference titles made the two programs the first among current Power Five programs to win at least six straight outright titles since Oklahoma (12 from 1948-59) as part of the now-dissolved Big 8 Conference. The conference title helped Clemson secure its record-tying sixth College Football Playoff berth, becoming the first program ever to reach the postseason tournament in six consecutive seasons. Clemson is 6-4 all-time in College Football Playoff games, the second-most wins of any program and twice the number of the third-place programs (three, Georgia and Ohio State). Clemson finished the 2020 season as the nation's No. 3-ranked squad, the Tigers' sixth consecutive top-four finish in the AP poll. In doing so, Swinney joined Bobby Bowden (13), Pete Carroll (7) and Bud Wilkinson (6) as the only coaches since the AP Poll's inception in 1936 to record six consecutive top-four finishes. In that stretch, Clemson appeared in the top five of 57 consecutive AP Polls, the second-longest streak in poll history. Clemson entered the third decade of the 21st century in 2020 after Swinney helped author one of the most prolific 10-year periods in the history of the sport. Clemson posted a 117-22 record under Swinney's leadership in the 2010s, and the program's 117 wins trailed only Penn (124 in the 1890s) and Alabama (124 in the 2010s) to tie for the third-most in a decade in major college football since 1890. Clemson's 117 wins in 2010s represented the first 100-win decade in Clemson history. Before a pandemic-shortened season in 2020, Clemson won at least 12 games in five straight seasons from 2015-19, tied for the longest such streak in the modern era and only two seasons shy of Penn's record seven-season streak from 1892-98. Clemson won 69 games in that five-year span, the most in a five-year stretch in the AP Poll era. In 2019, the Tigers earned their fifth consecutive College Football Playoff berth following their fifth-consecutive ACC title, becoming the first team in college football history to win five straight conference championship games since conference title games were created in 1992. Clemson posted a 14-1 record that year, earning its fourth appearance in the College Football Playoff National Championship Game in five years. Prior to the season finale, Clemson extended its school-record winning streak to 29 games, tied with Florida State (2012-14) for the longest streak in ACC history and for the 12th-longest in FBS history. Clemson dominated the vast majority of its 2019 opponents, including an eight-game streak of wins by 30 or more points to break the longest streak in the AP Poll era, surpassing the previous mark of seven games set by 2011 Houston and 1976 Michigan. At 150-36, Swinney (.806) enters the 2022 season as the winningest active coach by percentage in the FBS among coaches with at least 10 seasons of head coaching experience. With an initial hire date of Oct. 13, 2008, he is the senior member of the ACC's head coaching fraternity and enters 2022 as the ninth-longest-tenured head coach in the FBS. Clemson's success on the gridiron has been matched by its prowess in the classroom, as prior to the NCAA suspending APR reporting during the COVID-19 pandemic, Clemson was one of only three programs to earn top-10 percent APR recognition from the NCAA in at least nine of the previous 10 years, joining Duke and Northwestern. Clemson was in the top 10 of APR scores and the final top 25 of the AP and USA Today polls from 2011-15, the only FBS program that could make that claim. In 2017, Clemson became the first school to reach the College Football Playoff and finish in the top five of APR scores in the same year. Clemson also produced the 2018 William V. Campbell Trophy winner (known colloquially as the “Academic Heisman”) in Christian Wilkins and won the program's first AFCA Academic Achievement Award. Clemson repeated as AFCA Academic Achievement Award recipients in 2019, becoming the only school in the country to repeat and doing so while appearing in the national championship game in both seasons. Swinney and Clemson's 2018 season was one for which statistics and superlatives accumulated in historic fashion. The Tigers became the first major college football team in the modern era (and the first since Penn in 1897) to finish a season with a 15-0 record. The list of “firsts” was long and distinguished. Clemson became the first program to win four consecutive Atlantic Division titles, and with a 42-10 win against Pittsburgh in the ACC Championship Game, it became the first program to win four straight ACC titles outright. Clemson's 15 wins included a school-record 12 against teams who finished with winning records. Clemson won by an average margin of 31.1 points per game, the best in the nation and the second-largest in school history, trailing only a 35.3-point average margin in 1900. Among the seasons it passed was a 30.4-point average margin in 1901, a season in which Clemson won one of its five games by a score of 122-0. Clemson set school records in points (664) and total offense (7,718, also an ACC record). The defense held opponents to 13.1 points per game, leading the country in scoring defense for the first time in school history. A critical point in the season came four games into the campaign. Following a 49-21 win at Georgia Tech in which true freshman quarterback Trevor Lawrence threw for four touchdowns in reserve, Swinney and the coaching staff elected to name Lawrence the starter, supplanting senior Kelly Bryant, who had led the Tigers to a 16-2 career record as a starter. With Lawrence leading Swinney's Tigers, Clemson took flight. After a dramatic come-from-behind 27-23 win against Syracuse in which Lawrence exited the game with an injury, Clemson rattled off 10 consecutive wins of 20 points or more to conclude the season, including blowout wins of No. 3 Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl and No. 1 Alabama in the College Football Playoff National Championship. Seven players earned first or second-team All-America honors, including a school-record three players who collected consensus honors. The 2018 Tigers produced a team-record 18 All-ACC picks and became the first team to produce the ACC Player of the Year, ACC Offensive Player of the Year, ACC Defensive Player of the Year, ACC Offensive Rookie of the Year and ACC Coach of the Year in a season since Florida State in 1997. Accolades also accumulated for Swinney, who earned his second career ACC Coach-of-the-Year honor and brought home the Woody Hayes Award as national coach of the year. Less than a week after winning the national title, he also won the Paul “Bear” Bryant Award, becoming the first three-time winner of the award. Including the 2018 Bryant and Hayes Awards, he has won national coach-of-the-year honors from at least one organization in five of the last nine years. The 2018 season was preceded by a 2017 campaign in which Clemson was on a mission to prove that it was built to last. Swinney guided the team to a 12-2 record, an ACC title and a College Football Playoff berth despite having only six scholarship seniors and losing players who accounted for 77 percent of the offense during the 2016 national championship season. While Clemson was ranked No. 5 in the preseason AP Poll, few expected the Tigers to be ranked No. 1 in both polls and the College Football Playoff ranking entering the bowl season. In fact, Clemson was not even the preseason choice to win the ACC Atlantic Division. Despite a setback in the Sugar Bowl to the eventual national champion, Alabama, Clemson finished ranked No. 4 in both polls. He was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame following the season. Clemson's school-record six wins over top-25 teams in 2017, also a national best, included a school-record four on opponents' home fields and five away from home. The defense, including three defensive linemen, featured four players who were named All-American, helping Clemson rank in the top four in the nation in scoring defense (No. 2) and total defense (No. 4). Clemson led the ACC in the four major defensive categories (scoring, total, rushing, passing), a first in history. The 2016 Tigers lived up to their hype after compiling a 14-1 record and earning a spot in the College Football Playoff for the second-straight year. Along the way, Clemson knocked off five top-25 foes. Clemson defeated the top two teams in the national polls in consecutive games in the College Football Playoff at the end of the season. The Tigers blanked Ohio State, 31-0, in the Fiesta Bowl, the first shutout suffered by head coach Urban Meyer in his career and the first for Ohio State since 1993. The Tigers then earned a rematch with No. 1 Alabama, and for the first time in school history, took down the top-ranked team in a second epic battle with the storied Crimson Tide program. Quarterback Deshaun Watson's touchdown pass to Hunter Renfrow with one second left on the clock gave Clemson a dramatic 35-31 victory in Tampa, Fla. Swinney received the Bear Bryant Award as national coach-of-the-year for the second consecutive season. Swinney coached Watson to two record-setting seasons in 2015 and 2016. The two-time Heisman Trophy finalist became the first player in FBS history to total 4,000 passing yards and 1,000 rushing yards in a season in 2015, and he followed by setting an ACC record with 41 passing touchdowns in 2016. Watson won both the Davey O'Brien Award and Manning Award in back-to-back seasons. Swinney guided Clemson to the No. 1 national ranking in every College Football Playoff poll in 2015 and led the Tigers to their first national championship game appearance under the new format after his team defeated Oklahoma, 37-17, in the 2015 Orange Bowl. The Tigers led Alabama in the fourth quarter of the championship contest, but came up just short (45-40) in an epic game in Glendale, Ariz. Following the team's 14-1 record and No. 2 final ranking, he was the recipient of 10 national and two ACC Coach-of-the-Year honors. In 2015, a then-Tiger-record 17 players were named to one of three All-ACC teams, including all five starting offensive linemen for the first time in school history. In 2016, 15 players were honored, including a school-record three first-team All-ACC offensive line selections. The 2012, 2013 and 2014 seasons were also noteworthy, with three top-15 final rankings. With a 40-6 Russell Athletic Bowl victory over Oklahoma in 2014, Swinney became the first coach in history to win three bowl games in consecutive seasons over teams whose head coaches had previously won the national title. He upped that mark to five years in a row in 2016. Clemson capped off the 2013 season with a thrilling 40-35 victory over No. 6 Ohio State in the Orange Bowl. Clemson had an 11-2 record after finishing 7-1 in ACC regular-season games. It marked Clemson's first back-to-back 11-win seasons in school history. For the fourth time in his first five full seasons as head coach, Swinney was a finalist for the Liberty Mutual National Coach of the Year in 2013. The 2012 season (11-2) was a groundbreaking year for Swinney's Tigers when looking at the overall consistency of the program. The seven conference wins in the regular season were then a school record, while Clemson was co-champion of the ACC Atlantic Division. With Clemson's thrilling 25-24 win over No. 7 LSU in the 2012 Chick-fil-A Bowl, the Tigers finished the season ranked No. 9 in the USA Today poll. It was Clemson's first top-10 finish in one of the two major polls since 1990. Clemson also reached the 11-win mark for the first time since its 1981 national championship season. Swinney's 2011 squad, which ended the season ranked No. 22 in the nation, captured Clemson's first ACC title since 1991 when it beat No. 3 Virginia Tech, 38-10, in the ACC Championship Game in Charlotte, N.C. It gave Clemson its first 10-win season since 1990. For his efforts, Swinney was named Bobby Dodd National Coach of the Year in 2011 to become the first Tiger head coach to win a national coach-of-the-year award since Ford in 1981. In 2010, Swinney became just the second Tiger coach to lead Clemson to a bowl game in his first two full years as head coach, joining his predecessor, Tommy Bowden. The 2010 schedule was one of the most challenging in school history, as nine bowl teams were on the regular-season slate and two of the four non-conference opponents were ranked in the top 25. In 2009, Swinney's first full season as head coach at Clemson, he led the Tigers to their first title of the ACC Atlantic Division. The Tigers came just six points short of winning their first ACC title in 18 years. Swinney was named ACC Coach of the Year by Sporting News and was a finalist for the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year. In October 2008, Swinney was named Clemson's interim head coach, replacing Bowden, who had been his position coach as a player at Alabama and was Clemson's head coach since 1999. He led the Tigers to a 4-2 record during the rest of the 2008 regular season, including a win over South Carolina in the regular-season finale to earn a Gator Bowl bid against Nebraska. On Dec. 1, 2008, his interim tag was removed and he was named the program's head coach. At the time, there had been 28 interim head coaches at the FBS level since 1970, and those coaches had combined for a 26-86-2 record. Only one of those 28 interim coaches posted a winning record, and that was Swinney. When he was hired as head coach, he became just the second interim coach to be elevated to the head coach position at the same school during that time period. Swinney hit the ground running in his first week as interim head coach, as he prepared for a 5-1 Georgia Tech team. He had to reorganize his staff and regroup his team and the fanbase in just five days. While the Tigers lost by four points, he accomplished many goals in that first week through his outstanding leadership. One of the most impressive demonstrations of unity came during the team's “Tiger Walk,” which has since become a staple of Clemson's game day routine for both the team and fans. Swinney has demonstrated his dedication to the community through Dabo's All In Team Foundation. Since 2009, the Swinney family and Dabo's All In Team Foundation have given more than $7.8 million back to communities and programs in the state. In its inaugural year, the foundation made the first contribution to the cancer fund established for former Boston College linebacker Mark Herzlich, and many schools followed its lead during the remainder of the season. In 2021, the foundation distributed roughly $1.2 million in financial support to their core focus areas, with $800,000 of that being distributed to more than 200 deserving organizations and non-profits through the foundation's grant program. In 2019, the foundation awarded a record $1,082,000 in grant funding to more than 165 and raised $400,000 for breast cancer research and prevention during the organization's annual Ladies Clinic. The foundation's efforts went virtual in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, as the organization's ALL IN Virtual Fundraising Event alone raised nearly $1 million for organizations and efforts in South Carolina. Swinney was named as the honorary coach for the 2019 Allstate AFCA Good Works Team, an honor for which Watson, a former Good Works Team selection, returned to Clemson to surprise Swinney during a team meeting. In the spring of 2021, Swinney accepted the Uncommon Award from Pro Football Hall of Fame Coach Tony Dungy, who presents the honor annually to figures in football who “take the tough road, follow a higher calling and set a higher standard.” The 1993 Alabama graduate joined the Clemson staff prior to the 2003 season. In his first 19 years as an assistant or head coach, the Tigers finished in the top 25 of the polls 15 times and totaled 42 wins over top-25 teams. Swinney coached his wide receiver position to a level of consistency that had not been seen previously at Clemson. He had a wide receiver finish first or second in the ACC in catches in five of his six seasons as an assistant coach. In his first season, he had three of the top-10 receivers in the conference, a first in Tiger history. In his 19 seasons at Clemson, a Tiger wide receiver has earned All-ACC status in 17 of those campaigns, including a first- or second-team All-ACC selection (Derrick Hamilton, Airese Currie, Chansi Stuckey, Aaron Kelly, Jacoby Ford, Sammy Watkins, DeAndre Hopkins, Artavis Scott, Mike Williams, Tee Higgins, Amari Rodgers) in 16 of those 19 seasons. In 2021, three of his protégés (Williams, Higgins and Hunter Renfrow) recorded 1,000-yard seasons in the NFL, while another (Chansi Stuckey) served as wide receivers coach at Big 12 champion Baylor before accepting the wide receivers coach job at Notre Dame for 2022. The Alabama native has a reputation as one of the top recruiters in the nation. In 2006, he was listed as the No. 5 recruiter in the nation by Rivals. He signed 38 players in his five recruiting seasons as an assistant coach and was a major reason Clemson's 2008 recruiting class was rated No. 2 in the nation by ESPN when he signed 11 players. Clemson's 2020 class finished as a consensus Top 3 class, earning the top ranking from ESPN, a No. 2 rank by Rivals and a No. 3 ranking in the 247 Composite. When Swinney accepted the interim head coaching position at Clemson on Oct. 13, 2008, he described his feelings as “bittersweet,” because he was taking over for Bowden, who had been his first position coach at Alabama in the 1989 season. He had also brought Swinney back to the coaching profession in 2003 and has had a profound effect on his life. Both had followed similar paths as players, as Bowden was a walk-on at West Virginia and Swinney was a walk-on at Alabama. Swinney received a commerce & business administration degree from Alabama in 1993 after lettering three times (1990-92). A walk-on who went on to earn a scholarship, Swinney was a wide receiver on Alabama's 1992 national championship team. He was also named Academic All-SEC along with being an SEC Scholar-Athlete Honor Roll member in 1990 and 1992. Along with his appearance in the 1993 Sugar Bowl, his Alabama teams played in the 1990 Sugar Bowl, 1991 Fiesta Bowl and 1991 Blockbuster Bowl. Both Sugar Bowl appearances came after winning the SEC title game. After his playing career, he was a graduate assistant at Alabama from 1993-95. He received a master's degree in business administration from Alabama in 1995. He became a full-time assistant coach at Alabama in February 1996 under head coach Gene Stallings and coached a total of five seasons there on a full-time basis. Swinney was assigned to coach the Crimson Tide's wide receivers and tight ends in 1996, a season that saw Alabama win the SEC West Division title. The following year, he solely coached the tight ends. In 1998, he coached Alabama's wide receivers, a position he held for three years. At the end of 1999, Swinney coached the Crimson Tide in the 2000 Orange Bowl after winning the SEC Championship Game. During his time at Alabama, Swinney was a part of six teams with double-digit wins, five top-10 finishes, one national title (1992), three SEC championships (1989,92,99) and five SEC West Division titles (1992,93,94,96,99) as a player and coach. Swinney married the former Kathleen Bassett in 1994. They have three sons, Will, Drew and Clay. Will played for Clemson from 2017-21, appearing in 69 games and holding for 558 career kicking points while also scoring two touchdowns of his own. Drew and Clay are both members of the 2022 Tiger football team.
Gene Stallings joins Nuno and OB, they discussed his time as a coach and his thoughts on NIL deals. Texas A&M Soccer Coach G. Guerrieri stops by to preview the season.
Jon kicks off hour two of this Friyay edition of The Jon Chuckery Show with a Falcons Flyover. On this edition of the Falcons Flyover, Jon lets you hear from Arthur Smith, Kyle Pitts, Damien Williams, and Ade Ogundeji. Next, Jon also lets you hear from Atlanta Falcons rookie tight end John Fitzpatrick as Chuck caught up with Fitzpatrick during practice today. Finally, Jon end this edition of the Falcons Flyover by telling you what the Falcoholic roster projection looks like for the Falcons, and telling you what Felipe Franks can contribute. Next, Jon continues hour two of this Friyay edition of The Jon Chuckery Show by talking about all things Atlanta Braves with Managing editor for Battery Power, Kris Willis! Jon and Kris discuss how big this Mets series is for the Braves, Ronald Acuña Jr not being 100% confident in his knee, and more! Finally, Jon closes out hour two of this Friyay edition of The Jon Chuckery Show with a fan favorite segment in What's Buggin Chuckery. On this edition of What's Buggin' Chuckery, Chuck talks about Gene Stallings not being a fan of NIL.
Gene Stallings, Coaching Legend joins the show. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Claibs joins the show to talk about the legendary Gene Stallings and the weakness in water, the Cardinals struggles over the weekend, his thoughts on the first foray of Herrera in the MLB, how the catcher position might require help from outside the organization, Hudson having anther inefficient start, the role for a rejuvenated Hicks and why that might be changing the Cardinals trade deadline plans.
Mark and Lee interview Gene about the recent feud between Saban and Jimbo. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wnsp/support
Mark and Lee talk with Gene Stallings and Dale Osbourne. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wnsp/support
Chuck begins hour 2 with new measures that were approved by the NCAA before turning to Anwar Richardson from Orangebloods.com to talk some Texas. We then finish off the show by talking QB's with David Morris from QBCountry. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Great Southern Wood presents Coach Gene Stallings On the Mark
Coaches Rick Cleveland, and Mark Lassiter joined by James Dennis talked with legendary Alabama coach Gene Stallings and discussed end of year and new year sports.
Players share memories of playing in the Cotton Bowl in the 1960s and 1970s and the seasons leading up to the big game. Featuring Edd Hargett of Texas A&M, Jerry LeVias of SMU, and Alois Blackwell of Houston. Also included are humorous stories from sportswriter Mickey Herskowitz about coaches Bear Bryant and Gene Stallings in the 1968 Cotton Bowl Classic between Alabama and Texas A&M. Groundskeeper George Toma also shares about changing the field over from the Cotton Bowl Classic to the 1966 NFL Championship Game overnight. The Texas Sports Hall of Fame Podcast is presented by the Hampton Inn Waco. The show is hosted and produced by author and oral historian Jackson Michael (of The Game Before the Money). #CottonBowl #CottonBowlClassic
Former Alabama & Texas A&M head coach Gene Stallings joins Roger Hoover for the "Alabama Legends" segment on Crimson Drive, presented by Coca-Cola, on Tuesday October 5, 2021. Crimson Drive is live each Tuesday and Thursday on the CTSN Facebook page at 2 p.m. central.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
“The Kilcoyne Conversation” with Gene Stallings. Playing for Bear Bryant, national title at Alabama, fired by Bill Bidwell, his love of St. Louis, and a Jack Buck story.
“The Kilcoyne Conversation” with Gene Stallings. Playing for Bear Bryant, national title at Alabama, fired by Bill Bidwell, his love of St. Louis, and a Jack Buck story.
St. Louis Legends: Gene Stallings by
On this edition of The Mary Faye Headrick Good Deed Segment, I am talking with Stephanie Langford, who is the marketing and communications director with Ronald McDonald House Charities of Alabama. In addition to the Day of Change and the efforts of Ronald McDonald House Charities, during our conversation Stephanie mentioned about her son, Zack, who has Down syndrome. At that point, the conversation went into the amazing people I have recognized in the Down syndrome community! I was able to mention John's Crazy Socks, Blake's Snow Shack, Gabi's Grounds Coffee Shop, RubysRainbow.org, Gene Stallings' son, Johnny Mark, as well as my buddies, Corban Sullivan and Jase Bassham! At the same time, Stephanie shared about Hunter Norwood of A Little Something Extra Ice Cream, who has an ice cream truck here in Alabama. She also shared about Down Syndrome Alabama, Collettey's Cookies in Boston, & the Jake Pratt Scholarship Fund. Some of you have heard about Jake Pratt who now works for UPS. I hope you will listen and share!
Gene Stallings joins the show to talk his time coaching football on the college and pro levels.
Black, Gold, and a Crimson Tide...Leon Fuller, a Nederland 1950s legend, talks about his career, including: growing up in Nederland;playing sports for the Bulldogs, including football under legendary coach Bum Phillips;his All American seasons at Tyler Junior College;playing at Alabama--as captain and two-way starter--for Coach Bear Bryant;his career journey as a coach, including his stints at Wyoming, Colorado State, the University of Texas, and the Denver Broncos, among others;and other topics!The podcast brings up a wide range of names from Southeast Texas, including Ollie Ray Fuller, Jerry McNeill, Benny McNeill, Dorothy Fuller, Byron Rienstra, Bum Phillips, Wade Phillips, Vernon Ramke, Emmett McKenzie, Chief Wilson, Gene McCollum, Larry Minaldi, George Eisenmann, D. D. Perkins, Riley Burnett, Wanda Carole Wrinkle Ford, Jimmy Wrinkle, Don Clayton, Vance Bedford, Brandon Faircloth, and more! Other well-known names included in the podcast are Bear Bryant, Gene Stallings, Billy Neighbors, Lee Roy Jordan, Walt Garrison, Earl Campbell, Pam Fuller...and more!!It's a keeper--this Bulldog WILL HUNT!!!Right here on Down Trails of Victory podcast!
Paul talks to legendary CFB and NFL coach Gene Stallings.
Chuck opens Thursday's show by talking about the comparisons between what Southern Miss used to do and what Mississippi State has done. We also hear from Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley about a transfer who is already making a difference. Bill Gunter of 107.5 The Game in Columbia, South Carolina joins us to talk some Gamecocks. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Chuck opens Thursday's show by talking about the comparisons between what Southern Miss used to do and what Mississippi State has done. We also hear from Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley about a transfer who is already making a difference. Bill Gunter of 107.5 The Game in Columbia, South Carolina joins us to talk some Gamecocks. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Listen to former Alabama coach Gene Stallings take a trip down memory lane.
Today's guest is the head coach at one of the most distinguished programs in the country -- Hoover High School in Alabama. Josh Niblett took over for legendary coach Rush Propst in 2008 and has since led Hoover to a record of 159-25 including six state championships. Niblett's football resume includes a playing career that peaked at the University of Alabama under Gene Stallings. He's also served as the Director of Strength and Conditioning at Jacksonville State University. At Hoover, he's produced arguably the top program in the Southeast.Niblett shares his vision for culture building and gives the inside scoop on his team's strength and conditioning program. Stay tuned for that interview.
He's coached legendary players such as Troy Polamalu, Darrelle Revis, Antonio Cromartie and even Deion Sanders. He's served as Defensive Coordinator for the New York Jets and the Buffalo Bills. He played under legendary coaches such as John McKay, John Robinson, Gene Stallings, and Tom Landry. And now this legend in his own right is leading the defense at 1400 Lynch Street. Jackson State Defensive Coordinator, Dennis Thurman, returns for part 2 of our exclusive interview! https://open.spotify.com/episode/0SOUsl6bq6CB9wXKcPhmtR?si=EGU2uYybSymYDO7-rncWMw Be sure to subscribe to the podcast to be notified of each new episode. Apple users, rate & review the show. Everyone go follow Tiger Talk With the 1400 Klub on Facebook, and @TigerTalk1400 on Instagram and Twitter. http://www.facebook.com/tigertalk1400 https://www.instagram.com/tigertalk1400/ http://www.twitter.com/tigertalk1400 Join the JSU National Alumni Association today by texting “IBELIEVE” to 71777. Purchase your Spring 2021 football tickets at https://t.co/U0WOgnJHL4 Basketball season tickets are on sale: https://t.co/jA9CrW3pkl Donate to the COVID-19 Athletic Relief Fund at www.gojsutigers.com/give Donate to the Building Champions Fund at https://bit.ly/38cZyt8 Baseball season tickets are on sale: https://bit.ly/3euPMU7
He's coached legendary players such as Troy Polamalu, Darrelle Revis, Antonio Cromartie and even Deion Sanders. He's served as Defensive Coordinator for the New York Jets and the Buffalo Bills. He played under legendary coaches such as John McKay, John Robinson, Gene Stallings, and Tom Landry. And now this legend in his own right is leading the defense at 1400 Lynch Street. In part 1 of a 2-part interview, Tiger Talk dives deep into the defensive philosophy and coaching style of Dennis Thurman. He also discusses game-planning for opposing offenses, his plans for the JSU defense, what it's like working with Coach Prime, and leveling the playing field. Be sure to subscribe to the podcast to be notified of each new episode. Apple users, rate & review the show. Everyone go follow Tiger Talk With the 1400 Klub on Facebook, and @TigerTalk1400 on Instagram and Twitter. http://www.facebook.com/tigertalk1400 https://www.instagram.com/tigertalk1400/ http://www.twitter.com/tigertalk1400 Join the JSU National Alumni Association today by texting “IBELIEVE” to 71777. Purchase your Spring 2021 football tickets at https://t.co/U0WOgnJHL4 Basketball season tickets are on sale: https://t.co/jA9CrW3pkl Donate to the COVID-19 Athletic Relief Fund at www.gojsutigers.com/give Donate to the Building Champions Fund at https://bit.ly/38cZyt8 Baseball season tickets are on sale: https://bit.ly/3euPMU7
On Tuesday, I was at McClary Tire in Athens, Alabama, when Kasey Harbin pointed me in the direction of Shannon Brown. I thought it was interesting getting to talk to him face to face the day after Alabama Football won the College Football Playoff National Championship, given that Shannon was part of the national championship team led by Coach Gene Stallings in 1992. I invited Shannon, who is now the principal at Liberty Middle School (Madison City Schools) in Madison, Alabama, to join me on the show. With that said, Shannon Brown is on today's edition of the show. We're going to talk about some of his experiences as a member of the Crimson Tide, including his friendship with John Mark Stallings, as well as his career as an educator and scholarships that are available at The University of Alabama in honor of his daughter, Loryn, who lost her life 10 years ago this April in the tornado that went through Tuscaloosa, Alabama, on April 27th, 2011. You can also subscribe to TMWS via Apple iTunes, SoundCloud, Audioboom, YouTube, Spotify, Stitcher, & Blubrry. All shows are archived at TheMarkWhiteShow.com.
Gene Stallings joins Bernie to catch up and discuss his excitement for the game tonight
ESPN's Matt Stinchcomb joins the show to preview Ole Miss and LSU to see if LSU can build off their big win last week. Hall of Fame coach, Gene Stallings joins the show to talk about his career, his life, and this upcoming weekend in SEC Championship.
Antonio joins us to talk about his days at Alabama and in the NFL, and has some great Gene Stallings stories for us!
3:15 pm -Ekpe Udoh, Former Baylor Basketball Star3:30 pm -Grant Teaff, Former Baylor Head Football Coach4:00 pm -Phillip Tanner, Former Cowboys RB on Dallas ISD's Shutdown4:15 pm -Grayson Grundhoefer, SicEm365.com4:45 pm -Terry Crawford, Abbott Football Coach5:00 pm -Craig Ludwig, Former Stars Defenceman5:20 pm -Gene Stallings, Hall of Fame Football Coach (Replay)
3:45pm-Cliff Watkins, Glen Rose High School Football Coach4:00pm-Max Olson, TheAthletic.com4:30pm-Mickey Spagnola, DallasCowboys.com4:45pm-Kyle Hardee, Centerville High School Football Coach5:00pm-Gene Stallings, College Football HOF Coach5:20pm-Frank Bonner, Tulsa World
Former @dallascowboys, @AggieFootball, and @AlabamaFTBL coach Gene Stallings joins @SicEm365Radio to reflect on memories of his coaching career, talk about the recent induction of Drew Pearson into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and give his insight on what coaching would be like in 2020.
Hour 1: Legendary coach Gene Stallings joins the show and discusses working with coach Tom Landry, Coach Bear Bryant, and coaching in the NFL. Hour 2: Charlie Tuna, Matt Berger, Joe Fresta, and Joe Davis kick around everything from sports to politics