Dennis Wilson— River wins State Title In 1970
Dennis Wilson
knew he had a huge responsibility resting on his shoulder pads when he
started his second season with Pearl River’s Wildcats in the fall of 1970..
Wilson was
earmarked to take over the starting quarterback duties for Coach John Russell’s
defending state champion team, which posted an undefeated 9-0 record
the previous season.
A 5-11, 160-pound
sophomore out of North Forrest High School, Wilson had backed-up All-Stater
Steve Worrell in 1969...a season that saw the Wildcats win their 12th state
championship. He played sparingly as a freshman, but managed a bit of personal
hoopla, passing for a touchdown in PRCC’s 54-0 championship clincher against
Holmes.
“I went into
my sophomore year feeling I would be the starter, but that wasn’t a sure
thing. Two
freshmen
(Roy Yarbrough of Hattiesburg and Gene Estapa of Bay St. Louis) were talented
players and looked pretty good during preseason,” Wilson said.
But Wilson’s
experience gave him the nod and he guided The River to its 13th title that
season, while accomplishing feats that have placed his name all through
the Wildcat record book.
He will be
inducted into the college’s Sports Hall of Fame during homecoming festivities.
Dennis Wilson
was lean and gangly, but an outstanding all-around athlete when he
graduated from North Forrest High School in the spring of 1969. He had
already earned all kind of accolades as a quarterback, defensive back,
and punt returner for Coach Sonny Jordan’s team and was named to the All
Singing River Conference team. Incredibly, Wilson had single-handedly scored
171 points his senior season with the Eagles.
“I had a few
options heading into college,” he said. “William Carey wanted me for basketball
and baseball. Mississippi College wanted me for baseball and football.
But neither offered me a full scholarship. Coach (John) Russell at Pearl
River did.”
So did Miller
Hammill, former men’s head basketball coach at PRCC who is now “Dr. Hammill”
and is the college’s Dean of Student Affairs. Hammill recruited Wilson
off the football field to add depth at his guard position.
“Dennis wasn’t
the most athletic person to ever come through Pearl River, but he was dedicated
and worked hard,” said Hammill. “And even though he excelled more in football
than he did basketball, he was an excellent ball handler and solid defensive
player on the court.”
Wilson was
primarily a reserve point guard, but he did start several games as the
Wildcats’ roundball QB, according to Hammill.
“It was unusual
for a student athlete to play two sports on this level back then,” he said.
“Dennis is just a good athlete and great leader. It was a privilege to
have coached him. He is one of the best people I ever coached or known.
He is a class person.”
After reporting
for his first day of preseason drills in early August of 1969, Wilson’s
fortunes took an abrupt turn. He took a vicious hit in practice that separated
his right shoulder..the one he threw passes with.
“I thought
everything was over for me right then and there,” he recalled. “I had never
been seriously injured before. Coach Russell let me take time to heal-up,
but I still suited-up for the games. After two or three weeks into the
season, I was getting an occasional quarterback sneak, then a few sweeps.
I started feeling better and better and started playing more and more.
“Even though
I never started that season, I saw some playing time.”
Dennis’ sophomore
season in 1970 season saw a dream 4-0 start and he earned MVP honors in
two of the Wildcats’ four wins. PRCC’s boasted a win streak of 14 games.
The River opened-up with a 26-3 blasting of Northeast, then wrecked
Southwest 31-6 with Wilson passing for 253 yards on 12 completions. In
next week’s 28-7 victory over Northwest, Wilson passed for two TDs and
had a 37-yard run to set up another score.
Next came a
12-0 shutout over arch-rival Gulf Coast that pushed the undefeated Wildcats
into the limelight with a No. 1 national ranking.
But all the
excitement was short-lived. The following week, the streak and ranking
vanished in Scooba when East Mississippi’s Lions handed the Wildcats a
heartbreaking 23-12 setback.
“We went in
to our East Mississippi like a firestorm,” Wilson said. “In the first quarter,
I ran right up the middle for a 25-yard touchdown, but things went downhill
quickly.”
From that point
on, the Wildcats would lose six of eight fumbles, have two touchdowns called
back due to penalties, even though Wilson led the offense to 333 yards
and finished the game completing 10 of 24 passes for 185 yards of that
total.
“It was a real
disheartening thing for the entire team,” he said.
The Wildcats
took it out on Hinds the next week at homecoming and blasted the Eagles
35-0, despite being penalized 14 times for 140 yards. Week No. 7 saw Pearl
River lose four of seven fumbles to Copiah-Lincoln and lose 21-14 on the
road, even though Wilson had a 14 of 29 night for 220 yards.
Pearl River
won its hard-fought East Central game the following week 14-6 in Decatur
with Wilson earning MVP honors, then clinched the division crown a week
later with a 29-22 win over Jones. The Wildcats ended their regular season
with a 37-7 win over Holmes and awaited an East Central rematch for the
state title.
“We’d already
played them a few weeks earlier and that was a tough game,” Wilson said.
“We expected the same in the championship, plus we had to go up there (Decatur)
for a second time.”
In the title match,
the Wildcats recovered a Warrior fumble on the game’s opening possession.
Wilson ran a counter QB keeper on first down right up the middle for a
touchdown. East Central answered with a three-and-out on its ensuing series.
Pearl River’s ball and this time it takes the Wildcats only two plays to
score.
“We had run
only three offensive plays and were up 14-0,” said Wilson, who, along with
Donald Bridges, earned MVP honors in the game. “We were as surprised as
anybody.”
Pearl River
went on to claim a 27-8 victory and a 13th state championship.
Wilson went
on to Mississippi College in Clinton and played sparingly as a junior,
but entered the 1972 season as the starter. He suffered a hairline leg
fracture that year and his season was over as a QB, even though he played
some wide receiver later in the season.
After graduating
from MC in 1973, he coached high school ball in the Jackson area for four
years, then returned to the Choctaws as a graduate assistant wide receivers
coach. After earning his master’s degree, he coached at Hinds Community
College for a season (1978), then returned to south Mississippi as head
coach of Forrest County Agricultural High School in Brooklyn.
In 1980, he
turned the FCAHS football reins over to former Wildcat teammate Perry Wheat
(who, incidentally, coaches the Aggies today), moved to Texas and entered
sales for a year. He remained in the Lone Star state as a coach and administrator
in the Houston area, eventually moving up to assistant principal posts
at middle schools in Missouri City and Truitt.
Wilson has
since left the school business and entered his family’s manufactured housing
business in Tupelo.
“My brother
had been in this business a long, long time and our business is growing
and growing,” he said, noting the Wilsons have recently opened a second
dealership in Tupelo, which is the 11th statewide.
For the past
five years, Dennis has served on the State Board of Directors for the Mississippi
Manufactured Housing Association.
While in Texas,
Dennis met and married his wife, Vickie, who is a choral teacher. She spent
three years at Northeast Community College in Booneville, two years at
Tupelo High, and is currently teaching at Ole Miss. Dennis has two stepsons.
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