Jimmy Gatwood---That's how Jimmy Gatwood
became an All-American & Hall of Famer
Jimmy Gatwood admits that
lots of folks thought he was crazy back in the 1950s when he was quarterback
for the Pearl River College Wildcats.
"I loved to practice," said
Gatwood, who spent 33 years coaching football before retiring in 1995.
"And it was because of Coach (Dobie) Holden.
I loved the man and that
made me love to practice for him. There was never a dull moment around
Dobie."
Gatwood, who will be inducted
into the PRCC Sports Hall of Fame, arrived at The River in the fall of
1955 as a high school senior after playing at
Petal High School for Coach
Lewis McKissack, a former Holden disciple who was inducted into the PRCC
Hall last year.
"Coach Holden just pestered
my daddy so much that he and Coach McKissack agreed that it was a good
move," Gatwood said. "Back in those
days the (Poplarville) high
school was part of Pearl River and the football team played with the college
guys."
Gatwood warmed the bench
in 1955, but moved into a starting role as a college freshman in 1956,
guiding the Wildcats to a state championship
with a perfect 9-0 record.
But his inauguration as a signal-caller is a story in itself, as he arrived
at The River as a running back.
"Coach Holden already had
two quarterbacks. Billy James, a big old boy who could knock a mule down
with a ball at 40 yards, and Danny Mac
Summers of Picayune," Gatwood
said. "Billy would get rattled by Dobie's hollering and Danny Mac would
just holler back.
"One day I was standing around
listening to all this and Dobie walks up to me, hands me a football, and
says, 'here, you're now a quarterback.'
"I said, 'no coach, I don't
want to do this,' but Dobie says, 'look, if you play quarterback, I guarantee
you'll be an All-American.'
"I guess he knew what he
was talking about, but I didn't get a lot of teaching stuff. I learned
to play quarterback by watching Billy and Danny Mac."
Gatwood said he agreed to
play QB under one condition.
"I've told some of my old
teammates this and very few of them believe me," he explained. "I walked
into Dobie's office and told him 'I'd play
quarterback for him, but
the first time you cuss me, I'm heading back to Petal.'
"He never did and I never
headed back to Petal. Coach Holden knew how to get the most out of you,"
Gatwood said. "He knew what to say, when
to say it, and what not
to say. One night we were playing Sunflower (now Mississippi Delta) and
I wasn't running very well and Dobie asked me if I
was yellow. That's all it
took. That fired me up."
That 1956 team, which scored
207 points and allowed only 49, was selected to play in the Junior Rose
Bowl in Pasadena, Cal., but the
Mississippi Legislature
prohibited Holden's team from participating because PRCC's opponent—Compton
Junior College from California -- had
black players on its roster.
"That would've been a trip
of a lifetime," Gatwood said. "But back in those days of segregation, it
was a big deal to the legislators."
Gatwood ran for 12 touchdowns
in 1956, while passing for 14 and earned All-State honorable mention status.
In 1957, the Wildcats finished
with a disappointing 6-2-1 mark (lost to eventual state champ Hinds 35-32,
Co-Lin 14-13, and tied East
Mississippi 13-13), but
Gatwood again rushed for 12 TDs and earned All-State and All-American recognition.
He even played quarterback and
punted in that year's All-American
Junior College game in Jackson.
A full football scholarship
to the University of Miami ensued for Gatwood and Wildcat teammate Paul
Highstreet (a tackle), but the duo didn't take
much of a liking to south
Florida. Gatwood sat out of football for a year, then enrolled at Louisiana
College, a much smaller school in Pinedale,
La.
"Paul and I left after one
quarter of school," he said. "We are home boys and missed Mississippi.
It was quite a contrast for a couple of Dobie
boys to go to a school where
you had four practice fields and changed from one to another every 15 or
20 minutes.
"Looking back, that was probably
one of the biggest mistakes I ever made in my life," Gatwood continued.
"I was the biggest quarterback down
there and I could've started."
Former Kentucky coach Frank
Cursey and former Vanderbilt coach George McIntosh were also QBs for the
Hurricanes during Gatwood's stint in
Florida.
Following his graduation
from LC, Gatwood started his lengthy coaching career, spending two years
at Northwest Junior High in Meridian, which
were "two of the finest
years I ever had. Those kids would work their butts off for you."
He then moved on to Petal
High School for a season, then took over the head job at the University
Military School in Mobile, Ala., where he
stayed for three years before
moving on to Watkins for his first of two stints (1968 until 1972). The
1973 and 1974 seasons were spent at West
Jones High School, then
he returned to Watkins as an assistant under head coach George Blair.
Blair and Gatwood were both
from the old school and expected their players give it all they had.
"I can remember playing against
one of Bull Sullivan's Scooba (East Mississippi) teams one year and I ran
out of bounds on their side of the
field. Some guy kneed me
in the face and knocked my two front teeth back and I couldn't close my
mouth and could hardly talk. Coach Holden
came over and pulled my
teeth out straight."
"I went back in, handed-off
to the fullback 11 straight times, and drove the ball 70 yards down the
field for a score. I had a high tolerance for pain,
but you don't see that much
any more. Coach Holden expected you to play and you'd play your heart out
for him."
Gatwood enjoys his retirement
years, spending time with his three daughters Ava Shoemaker, Shirley Hensarling,
and Stephanie. But he also
works part-time as an examiner
for commercial drivers licenses.