Gene Gatwood says River, Holden had
biggest impact on his
life
Gene Gatwood dreamed of following
in the footsteps of his older brother Jimmy and play quarterback for Coach
Dobie Holden's Pearl River
College Wildcats.
But Gatwood's rocket passing
arm made famous his junior year at Petal High School didn't off set his
flea-like 5-6, 125-pound frame and the
legendary Wildcat football
coach told him -- three different times -- "don't call me, I'll call you."
The fourth time clicked and
after two seasons as a back-up to record-setting quarterback Bobby Weaver,
a 1989 Pearl River Sports Hall of
Fame inductee, Gatwood was
Holden's No. 1 man in 1960. That year he guided PRCC to a 9-1 record, a
co-state championship with Northwest,
and a 50-20 victory over
San Angelo, Tex., in the Hospitality Bowl in Gulfport.
Thirty-eight years later,
Gatwood joins his brother as 1998 inductees into the PRCC Sports Hall.
Admittedly, Gatwood was a
"Holden reject" at first.
"I went down to Poplarville
three different times before Coach Holden gave me a chance," Gatwood recalled
from his Centerville, Ga., home.
"The third trip resulted
in a third rejection and I was absolutely crushed."
The Gatwood family grew up
extremely poor -- even working as sharecroppers for a brief period in the
Mississippi delta -- but Gene knew an
education was his roadway
out of poverty.
"After being turned-down
for the third time, I'd basically came to the decision to go to work, save
my money, and then go to school at PRC," he
continued. "But about a
week after I reluctantly made that decision, I got a letter from Coach
Holden telling me that he was in the process of
changing over from a drive
offense to a passing one. He knew I could throw and invited me down for
a tryout.
"When I read that letter,
I cried. My mother cried. I had to run down and tell my old high school
coach. I was elated."
But when Gatwood arrived
on the Poplarville campus as a high school senior, 75 prospects were vying
for 33 scholarships on Holden's roster.
Eleven of those players
were quarterbacks -- including Weaver -- and all were much larger than
Gene.
"But I wasn't intimidated.
I knew I had tremendous drive and could really hum a football. But after
having a bad practice one day, I was worried
and went back to my room...I
didn't even eat supper in the cafeteria...and hid under my bed," he said.
"I thought 'if he (Holden) can't find me, he
can't run me off.'
"James Ginn (now a banker
in Bay St. Louis) finally came to the room and found me, but every time
I had what I thought was a bad practice, I'd
run to the cafeteria, grab
a biscuit, and run back to my room and hide. My worries were totally unfounded.
I wound-up earning a jersey," Gatwood
said.
In his last football game
he ever played -- the 1960 Hospitality Bowl -- Gatwood played in what was
probably the most physical game he'd ever
played, despite putting
up a stellar performance.
"We beat those Texas boys
good, but they nearly beat us to death physically," Gatwood recalled. "I
was cold-cocked by one of them and Coach
Holden woke me up on the
sideline with smelling salts. It was a heckuva way to end a football career."
Retired Clarion-Ledger sportswriter
Lee Baker covered that game.
"I can remember one of the
San Angelo players in the backfield trying to sack him and tiny, little
Gene grabbed the guy's face mask and must
have run around for 20 yards
holding on to the thing," Baker recollected. "And he finally got off the
pass. In all my years covering football, I never
saw anything like that."
The mite-sized Gatwood was
a favorite with the fans and the media.
Said Baker in articles on
the 1960 Hospitality Bowl:
"Gatwood has to soak overnight
to push the scales at 130"
"And the rest of the time,
Dobie Holdon will have a scrawny li'l ole pygmy-sized quarterback named
Gene Gatwood who will give San Angelo's
Rams just all the entertaining
they can stand."
San Angelo's Rams took a
dreadful beating, all because of a quarterback so small that he might not
even rate consideration for managerial
status on some teams. But
as he does most every time he steps upon a football field, 5-6, 130-pound
Gene Gatwood proved that size isn't
everything. As a matter
of precise fact, where he's concerned, size isn't hardly anything at all
for he is so tiny. But it was Gatwood pulling the
trigger time after time
to shoot the Rams from the high plains country of West Texas into utter
submission, 50-20, for the wildest rout in the
game's six-year history.
Little Gene pitched for five touchdowns and a pair of two-point conversions.
For good measure, he ran for both a
touchdown and a two-pointer."
"My last football game was
probably the worst beating I ever took in my life," Gatwood said. "I'll
never forget it as long as I live."
Holden would have Gatwood
and Charles Amacker, a Poplarville resident who was similarly sized, run
onto the field last because of their tiny
statures.
"Against Hinds, I ran out
last and fell flat on my face," Gatwood said. "The Hinds fans laughed their
heads off, but I got even with them by throwing
three touchdowns and three
two-point conversions and we stomped 'em 24-6. That was the last regular
season game of the year."
Here's a few of Gatwood's
credentials at Pearl River:
His 20 touchdown passes in 1960 ranks at the third-highest total in school
history.
After throwing an all-time high five interceptions against East Mississippi
in the 1960 season opener -- a 14-6 loss -- he only threw three in
the remaining nine games.
He was named to the 1960 All-State football team.
He was selected as Mississippi's junior college "Back of the Year" in 1960.
He was the recipient of the J.J. Holcomb Athletic Award for 1960.
Most senior college coaches felt Gatwood was too small for their squads,
but that didn't tarnish his pursuit of an education.
"In 1961, they started the
National Education Defense Loan program and I borrowed money to continue
my education at Southern Mississippi
(then Mississippi Southern
College) and wound-up earning a degree in math," he said.
Offers to coach followed,
but he opted to enter the U.S. Air Force because "I always wanted to learn
to fly."
Even though Gatwood eventually
rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel -- ex-Wildcat teammate J.E. Loicano
use to refer to Gatwood as "little
lieutenant" -- he failed
the Air Force's hearing test and never achieved his goal of becoming a
pilot, but his military service exposed him to the
then-new world of computers
through a communications school.
"I did so well in the school,
the Air Force wanted me to become a computer programmer, back in the days
when a computer was run by 30,000
vacuum tubes and took-up
a four-story building," he said. "But that opened-up many doors for me.
I wound-up creating a computer maintenance
program for the Air Force,
writing the course and teaching it. And you have to stay abreast of the
computer world every day, because it changes
every day."
During that time, he also
earned a master's degree in guidance and counseling at Troy State University
in Troy, Ala., then an Education
Specialists degree from
the University of Georgia, graduating with a perfect 4.0 grade-point average.
Gatwood never pursued his doctorate, but
has had many opportunities
to enter education administration.
"I love being in the classroom
and I will remain in the classroom," he said. "And I love Pearl River.
Some of the fondest memories of my life were
right there in Poplarville.
Playing for Coach Holden had the most profound impact on my life.
What a fine place to go to school."
Gatwood presently teaches
mathematics and introduction to computers at a vocational-technical center
in Warner Robins, Ga., adjacent to
Centerville.
He has been married to Georgia
Ann Jackson Gatwood of Coldwater since June 6, 1966, and they are the parents
of two children. Stacy Leigh,
age 28, is an Ole Miss graduate
and works for the Chamber of Commerce in Atlanta, Ga., while Jubal Jackson
(nicknamed "Stonewall" by his
dad), age 25, earned a chemical
engineering degree from Georgia Tech and works as a business manager in
Atlanta.