Tony Walker— Former
All-State QB now assistant DA in Ville Platte, La., area
Those who came
to know Tony Walker during his two-years on the Pearl River Community College
campus in the mid-1970s, knew he would be successful in life.
A Ville Platte,
La., “ragin’ Cajun,” Walker quarterbacked the Wildcat football team in
1974 and 1975 and his toughness and reckless, never-say-die attitude won
the hearts of all his Pearl River teammates and fans. He was a natural
born leader.
“Tony led by
example,” said former teammate Tim Heldt, one of Walker’s favorite wide
receivers and now head coach at Lumberton High. “He was a great leader
and his work habits, toughness, and intelligence shined through. It spilled
over to all the other guys.”
Starting the
last three games of 1974 and all of the 1975 season, Walker’s accomplishments
on the gridiron have etched his name permanently in the Wildcat football
archives. Twice — in back-to-back games — during his sophomore season,
he completed an astonishing 11 consecutive passes and was named his team’s
“Most Valuable Back,” while earning the same honor in the annual MACJC
All-Star Game. Walker was named All-State and led an offense that produced
1,353 passing yards
(seventh-highest total in history) and 3,488 total yards (eighth highest).
He guided The River to 571 offensive yards in 1975’s 20-6 romp over Copiah-Lincoln,
which is fifth-highest in history.
Walker, who
is now an assistant district attorney in his hometown, will be inducted
into the college’s Sports Hall of Fame Saturday, October 30, during 1999
homecoming festivities. Former Wildcat quarterback and basketball guard
Dennis Wilson of Tupelo and former All-State basketball and standout baseball
player Garland Parish of Sandy Hook will also be inducted.
Walker arrived
on the PRCC campus in August, 1974, after an outstanding athletic career
at Ville Platte’s Evangeline Academy. When it came to high school sports,
Tony was “all everything.” He was an All-State quarterback and defensive
back on the football team, earned All-State honors and a 440-yard dash
state championship in track and field, and was a standout leftfielder on
EA’s baseball team.
He says he
was dead set on playing football after high school, but the “10 or so”
major colleges that showed interest finally concluded his 5-11, 158-pound
frame was too small for their ranks.
“There were
a few senior colleges that wanted me to walk-on, but two junior colleges
(PRCC and Southwest) offered me full scholarships,” Walker said. “I leaned
in that direction because I thought I could go play ball in Mississippi
and play right away.”
Tony picked
The River, mainly because of his immediate liking of then-head coach John
Russell and PRCC’s superior facilities.
“I was very
excited. Then Coach Russell, who recruited me, resigned one week before
the start of the season,” he said. “Things started off real crazy.”
Nineteen seventy-four
was a truly wild season. Not only did the head coach resign, but the season
opener was delayed three weeks because of a hurricane that had ripped through
south Mississippi. One opponent from the North Division was even dropped
from the nine-game schedule because of the shortened season.
Second-year
assistant coach Harvey Seligman was named interim head coach.
“Sure, I had
hoped that I would’ve played more than I did at the start, but the coaches
felt that experience went a long way and I backed-up Lee Meitzler for five
games,” Walker said. “I wasn’t use to standing on the sidelines, but I
knew good things would happen in time.”
His patience and hard
work paid off as he wound-up taking the bulk of the snaps in the final
three games. The River won the first two of those final three — 31-13 over
Northeast and 37-6 over Southwest — but fell 17-13 to Hinds in the season
finale. Despite finishing with a lackluster 4-4 mark, the ’74 Wildcats
were still only one win away from making the playoffs.
Seligman remained
on the Wildcat staff, but former assistant J.C. Arban took over in 1975
after serving three seasons (1972, 1973, 1974) as offensive coordinator
at Southern Miss. Arban brought the Veer offense with which he had found
much success in Hattiesburg with the Golden Eagles.
“It was a fun
offense and Coach Arban knew it well,” Walker said. “He was always a kick.
He would go through two plugs of chewing tobacco at every practice. He
was a very intelligent coach.”
Arban’s actions
in the Northeast game Walker’s sophomore season made a profound impression
on the young quarterback that remains today.
“We were 5-1
and we went into that game thinking we would win it coming and going,”
he said. “And we should have, but we were lucky to even win. For some reason
our offense just didn’t click.”
Things started
as expected. Pearl River quickly went up 14-0 in the opening quarter, but
Arban’s Veer quickly stagnated and the Wildcats’ sputtering offense gave
way to a Northeast surge and in the third period the Tigers had pulled
within four — 14-10. In the final quarter, it took the Wildcats’ scrappy
defense to salvage the win, as the inspired Tigers drove to the PRCC six
before being held on downs.
“After that,
we drove all the way to their one, but only seconds were left on the clock,”
Walker recalled. “All us guys on the field wanted another touchdown and
it would’ve been easy. But Coach Arban said ‘no.’ We killed the clock and
left things as they were. I always respected him for that...that was his
way of saluting Northeast for a great effort. It was a great game.”
Walker’s final
season started off on a dismal note when the Wildcats blew an early 9-0
lead and East Central rebounded with a 16-9 win. Week No. 2 saw the Wildcats
overcome a 6-0 halftime deficit against Mississippi Delta to take a 21-6
win. A week later, Walker ran and passed for 207 total yards to guide the
Wildcats to a 26-6 win over arch-rival Jones, but his impressive offensive
show isn’t what stands out from that game. Tony Walker showed just how
resilient he was as a football player.
“They (JCJC)
had this big defensive end who was killing me every time on the outside
option,” he said. “He was a great player and was really nailing me, but
we got him one time when we sent (Rusty) Cavataio off tackle instead of
off guard and blocked down on the big guy for a six-or-seven-yard gain.
I stood up in his face and was laughing. He hauled off and busted me in
the chin, dislocating my jaw.
“I went to
the sideline and could barely speak to tell (PRCC trainer) Doc (Hudson)
my left row of teeth were in the middle of my mouth. Doc initially thought
it (jaw) was broken, but after wrapping his thumb in gauze and getting
a couple of guys to hold me down, he stuck his thumb in my mouth, grabbed
my jaw, and put it back in place.
“Doc said,
‘you’re okay...go back in.’ So I did. A minute or two later I was running
down the sideline and a knee caught my jaw and it was dislocated again.”
See Walker, next page...
This time,
Hudson didn’t bother with the gauze, but quickly — and painfully — put
Walker’s jaw back in place for a second time in five minutes.
“Doc said,
‘you’re okay, get back in there.’ I wanted to, but Coach Arban said no.
The next day I was miserable. I couldn’t eat and only barely could talk.”
But the injury
had little effect on Walker’s football skills. A week later, he ran for
97 yards and passed for 157 in the Wildcats’ record-setting bashing of
Copiah-Lincoln. Perk week followed and the Bulldogs took a hard-fought
36-29 win, but not without a little magic from Walker, who completed 11
straight passes at one point in the game. He is the only Wildcat player
to accomplish and duplicate that feat.
“I was knocked
crazy in that game. I was breaking down the sideline and cut back with
a nice inside move. As soon as I made my turn...wham!...a big linebacker
laid me out cold,” he recalled. “That was the hardest hit I ever took.
I can only barely remember it. I just remember waking up with Doc working
me over with the ammonia.”
A groggy Walker
was back in the game minutes later.
The Wildcats
rebounded the next game and demolished Holmes 34-0, with Walker duplicating
his consecutive completion feat, then came the heart stopping squeaker
against Northeast. Southwest was the next victim 35-15, then The River
canned Hinds 23-7 to wrap-up the season as runners-up in the South Division.
After leaving
Pearl River, football should have remained a part of Walker’s life, but
a postseason trip to Southwestern Louisiana in Lafayette — near Ville Platte
— brought an end to his football career.
“USL had showed
a little bit of interest in me out of high school, but they decided I was
too small,” he said. “After I played at Pearl River, they wanted me, so
I went down and they gave me the red carpet treatment, but no scholarship.
They wanted me to walk-on.
“I told my
dad that I was going back to The River, use my free semester of school,
have a good time, and graduate. My football career was over,” he said.
“I knew I wasn’t ever going to make a living as a player at it and knew
I needed to get on with my life. Besides, they (USL) thought I was too
small two years earlier and I was still 5-11 and was only five pounds heavier.
”
He returned
to Poplarville and graduated in May, 1976, then transferred to McNeese
State in Lake Charles where he earned his undergraduate degree before entering
the LSU School of Law. He graduated there in 1981 and was admitted to the
state bar the same year.
Walker practiced
law for several years before taking an assistant district attorney’s position
in 1984. The rest is history and he is now the DA office’s No. 1 assistant.
He married
his high school sweetheart — Jennifer Fontenot — while a junior at McNeese
and they are the parents of two boys: 18-year-old Jack, who is a premed
freshman at LSU-Eunice; and 15-year-old “Joe Willie” (Joseph William),
who is a sophomore at Sacred Heart High School in Ville Platte.
“Joe Willie”
is named after — you guessed it — Joe Willie Namath, New York Jet quarterback
legend and Walker’s football idol.
“I always knew
I would name a son Joe Willie,” he said. “We named Jack after my great-granddaddy,
so when the second one came around, I had no choice. Besides, “Joe Willie”
fits him better...he’s the spittin’ image of me at that age.”
“Joe Willie”
will play his first season of prep football next fall at Sacred Heart High.
Even
though he acquired his dad’s athletic skills, his previous high school
(Bayou Chicot) didn’t have a football squad and he could only participate
in baseball, basketball, and track.
What’s in the
cards for Tony Walker.
“I’d like to
be the DA one day,” he says.
Don’t be surprised
if he accomplishes that goal.
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