I wrote about my favorite Bill Hartman story a few months back. Here's the blurb from the blog article:
-- My favorite story so far from the book is about Bill Hartman, the pan-ultimate bulldog. Hartman was an All-American fullback for Georgia in 1937. He was also our kicker. After two years of pro ball, he returned to Georgia in 1939 under head coach Wally Butts as backfield coach and served in that capacity until 1956. Dooley brought Hartman back in 1970 as the volunteer kicking coach.Best wishes to a Damn Good Dawg.That part of the story most everyone knows. What I didn't know is that the NCAA did away with the volunteer coach in the early 1990s. So Hartman went back to grad school at UGA so that he could serve as a Graduate Assistant coach for 3 more years. He was near 80 at the time. To keep the kickers focused, he would run them through their kicking drills each practice. However, that never took the entire practice. So Hartman would teach the kickers the "Notre Dame Box" offense that he ran at Georgia under Harry Mehre, a former ND assistant under Rockne. They would run plays from this offense just to keep them focused and engaged.
Photo: Hartman in Action
The Notre Dame box was the contemporary to the Single Wing. The sight of kickers, punters, snappers and holders all running a 40-50 year old outdated offense while an 80 year old man coaches them up is comedy to me. It must have worked as our best kickers all played for Hartman. Butler, Robinson, Kasey, etc. Every elite kicker except Billy Bennett was trained by the legend who taught kickers based on the golf principals of consistent swings.
(hat tip to dawgbone.net)
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2 comments:
I went to school with Bill's grandson Scott and worked on the staff of The Red & Black with him -- good guy and I had the good fortune to meet his dad and granddad very briefly, years ago. They're a great family and a loyal bunch of Bulldogs. Bill will be in my prayers.
It is probably safe to say there will never be a better Bulldog than Bill Hartman: player, coach, booster, servant.
The story about Hartman tripping over Uga during an on-field presentation and almost killing him is great one. Jack Davis drew a funny picture of the event, and Sonny Seiler talks about it on the "Damn Good Dog" dogumentary. There's even videotape of it floating around. Comedy.
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