Michael T Waits—1963-65 Wildcat Football
Following
an outstanding athletic career at Hattiesburg High during the early 1960s,
Mike Waits figured his playing days were over.
He was a three-sport let-terman
for the Tigers and an All-State and All-Big 8 Conference center-linebacker.
He also played in the Mississippi High School All-Star Game. But Waits
had one “small” problem — he weigh-ed less than 160 pounds.
“When I graduated from Hattiesburg,
I was about 155...if I was soaking wet,” said Waits. “I didn’t have any
scholarship offers.”
That’s when legendary PRC
head coach Dobie Hol-den invited Waits for a try-out.
“Coach Holden gave me a scholarship,”
said Waits. “If he hadn’t given me that chance, I would have probably gone
on to the army and then gotten a job.”
Waits, 56, a partner in Shows,
Dearman and Waits Engineering, Inc., in Hatties-burg, attended PRC from
1963-65. The 1963 Wildcats finished 9-0-1 and won the state title. Waits
was a start-ing linebacker on that team. In 1964, Waits played linebacker
and wide receiver on a team that finished 7-3. He was the defensive captain
and made the All-State Junior College first team.
His accomplishments on the
gridiron earned Waits a place in the college’s Sports Hall of Fame. He
was in-ducted Oct. 20 during 2001 Homecoming festivities.
“This is a tremendous honor,”
said Waits. “My time at Pearl River was the greatest experience in my life.
When I went down there, I was an undisciplined play-er and student. But
with folks like Dr. Marvin White, Dr. John Grant, and Walter Lowe down
there, they disciplined me. I was in Mr. Lowe’s very first history class
down there. Those people took an interest in me. They took an undis-ciplined
kid and molded him into something.”
Waits was the only Hattiesburg
Tiger to sign with The River in 1963. When he first reported for fall practice,
things were quite different.
“The first shock was the
equipment. At Hattiesburg, we had good gear, but the pads and such Coach
Holden issued to us had patches all over them.”
Waits moved into the starting
lineup in the second game in 1963 when the line-backer ahead of him broke
his leg. That team recorded four shutouts, while the only blemish was a
tie with Ita-wamba.
Playing for Holden was a
unique experience.
“Coach Holden was a mas-ter
psychologist,” said Waits. “He would absolutely get 150 percent out of
you. He knew how to get inside your head and you either took it or went
home. He would run a play over and over...we’d practice the same play all
week long so it would be ab-solutely perfect at game-time.”
In 1964, PRC shutout five
opponents, including arch-rivals Jones and Gulf Coast.
Waits graduated from
PRC in 1965 with an associate’s degree in engineering. He turned down football
offers from New Mexico State and Millsaps to pursue an en-gineering degree
at Mississippi State.
Said Waits, “The River gave
me the foundation and the basics to succeed at State. Pearl River holds
a special place in my heart.”