| No. 27, 31 | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Position | Defensive back | ||||||||
| Personal information | |||||||||
| Born | (1935-08-31)August 31, 1935 La Grange, Texas, U.S. | ||||||||
| Died | January 23, 2002(2002-01-23) (aged 66) Dauphin Island, Alabama, U.S. | ||||||||
| Listed height | 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) | ||||||||
| Listed weight | 180 lb (82 kg) | ||||||||
| Career information | |||||||||
| High school | Caldwell (TX) | ||||||||
| College | Florida | ||||||||
| NFL draft | 1957: 23rd round, 268th overall pick | ||||||||
| Career history | |||||||||
Playing | |||||||||
Coaching | |||||||||
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| Awards and highlights | |||||||||
| Career NFL statistics | |||||||||
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| Head coaching record | |||||||||
| Regular season | NCAA: 20–32–0 (.385) | ||||||||
John Richard Symank (August 31, 1935 – January 23, 2002) was an American college and professionalfootball player who was adefensive back in theNational Football League (NFL) for seven seasons during the 1950s and 1960s. Symank playedcollege football for theUniversity of Florida, and thereafter, he played professionally for theGreen Bay Packers andSt. Louis Cardinals of the NFL. He was later thehead coach forNorthern Arizona University and theUniversity of Texas at Arlington football teams.
Symank was born inLaGrange, Texas in 1935,[1] to Oswald "Curly" and Ann Pauline Symank. Symank's family was ofWendish descent, a Slavic group that emigrated to Central Texas in the mid-nineteenth century from Germany.
Symank's father died when Johnny was only 8 years old. Symank attendedCaldwell High School inCaldwell, Texas,[2] where he excelled in sports and lettered in high school football andtrack and field for the Caldwell Hornets.
After graduating from high school, Symank attendedArlington State Junior College in Arlington, Texas,[2] and played for theArlington Rebels football team under coachChena Gilstrap in 1953 and 1954. Symank enrolled in the college'sReserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) unit to fulfill his military obligation and remained an active ROTC member throughout his college career.
Symank accepted an athletic scholarship to transfer to theUniversity of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he played for coachBob Woodruff'sFlorida Gators football team in1955 and1956.[3] Woodruff later ranked Symank as one of the five best defensive backs to play for the Gators during the 1950s, and one of the ten best offensive backs of the decade.[4]
While he was a Gator, he earned two varsity letters in both football and track, and became a captain in the university's ROTC unit. Symank graduated from Florida with a bachelor's degree in business administration in 1957, and was later inducted into theUniversity of Florida Athletic Hall of Fame as a "Gator Great."[5]
Green Bay Packers scoutJack Vainisi "discovered" Symank, and the Packers subsequently selected him in the twenty-third round (268th pick overall) of the1957 NFL draft.[6] Despite Symank making the NFL record books hisrookie season with nine passinterceptions,[7] Green Bay finished the1957 season with a losing 3–9 record.
During the1958 season, the Packers played the undefeatedBaltimore Colts on their home field inBaltimore in the third game of the season. The Colts had talented second-yearquarterbackJohnny Unitas and were on their way to1958 NFL Championship. In the second quarter, Symank made a hit on Unitas that resulted in three broken ribs and a punctured lung. Some sports commentators described it as a "late hit" that happened as the play ended; Sarah Symank said that after the Packers reviewed the film, "it appeared to be a clean hit." Baltimore fans, and especially the press, were not so forgiving and many sports columnists accused Symank of breaking Unitas' ribs in a questionable play. The Colts won the game 56–0, and Unitas missed only two games from his injury. Years later, when Symank was a Baltimore Colts assistant coach, and Unitas was retired from football, the two became close friends.
He is only 5-11 and at 180 pounds he is the lightest man on this squad. Compared with the others he looks like a baseball infielder, but he is a football player. . . . There is no actor in Symank. He is serious and intense, and in a game he would just as soon break your leg as not. He has made it in this league because he gets a great deal more out of himself than his ability and size justify . . . but John gets the maximum out of himself in every game, and if I had thirty-five others like him I would have a far better team than I have.
— CoachVince Lombardi, describing Johnny Symank
as a professional football player inRun to Daylight.[8]
After two back-to-back losing seasons with the Packers, Symank's career fortunes turned when new coachVince Lombardi took total control of the Green Bay Packers organization—on and off the field. Lombardi, who had worked the previous five seasons as an assistant coach for theNew York Giants, was an enthusiastic leader eager to prove himself as a head coach. The Packers narrowly missed a shot at the NFL championship and Lombardi was recognized as the NFL coach of the year in1959.
In1960, the Packers returned with renewed confidence in themselves and Lombardi's system and philosophy. Symank led the Packers in both interception-return and kickoff-return yardage, helping his team get to the1960 NFL Championship Game. During the game, the Philadelphia Eagles' quarterback Norm Van Brocklin, on second down, threw a pass from the Packers' five-yard-line that Symank intercepted in the end zone for a touchback. This set up three downs and out as Packers quarterbackBart Starr threw three straight incomplete passes. On a fake punt play that was not ordered by Lombardi, Packers punter Max McGee ran thirty-five yards up the middle of the field for the first down; the Packers then drove the length of the field for a touchdown, putting the Packers back in the game. Despite the Packers furious fourth-quarter efforts, they fell eight yards short of winning the 1960 NFL championship as time expired; the final score was Philadelphia over Green Bay 17–13.
During the1961 season, Lombardi led the Packers to an improved record of 11–3, a Western Conference title, and a short trip to the1961 NFL Championship Game. The New Year's Eve game, held in Green Bay, was the first NFL game ever to gross over one million dollars, and was attended by 39,029 people. Symank started and played in almost every defensive play of the game, as the Packers defense held the Giants scoreless in a 37–0 blow-out. The following season, Lombardi led Symank and the Packers to another victory in the1962 NFL Championship Game.
In1963, Symank was traded along withBill Quinlan to the New York Giants. Before Symank ever wore a Giants uniform, he was traded again to theSt. Louis Cardinals, where he played his final 9–5 season under coachWally Lemm. During Symank's seven-year NFL career, he played in eighty-nine regular season games, recovered twelve fumbles, intercepted nineteen passes and returning them for 387 yards and a touchdown.[1]
Symank's college and professional coaching career spanned two and a half decades. Symank's first assistant coaching job was atTulane University inNew Orleans, Louisiana in 1964, when he met fellow assistant coachBill Arnsparger, a relationship that spanned Symank's entire coaching career. In 1965, he went to theUniversity of Virginia inCharlottesville, Virginia and worked under head coachGeorge Blackburn.
Norb Hecker, one of Lombardi's assistants who coached Symank at Green Bay, became the head coach of theAtlanta Falcons, the NFL's new expansions team, in1966. Hecker recruited Symank to join the Falcons' first coaching staff. In1967, Symank and Hecker were joined in Atlanta by former PackerLew Carpenter. The Falcons' owner was frustrated with his team's 4–26–1 record, and Hecker was fired after the third game of his third season. Former Eagles quarterback Norm Van Brocklin took over as the Falcons head coach for the balance of the1968 season, and the Falcons assistant coaches including Symank were fired at season's end.
Symank was the head football coach forNorthern Arizona University (NAU) in Flagstaff, Arizona in 1969 and 1970,[9] He picked his former Packers teammate and quarterbackLamar McHan as hisoffensive coordinator andC. O. Brocato, a very successful coach at Jesuit High School inShreveport, Louisiana, as hisdefensive coordinator. The trio coached the NAU Lumberjacks together for two years and moved again when hisalma mater, the University of Texas at Arlington (formerly Arlington State Junior College), asked him to be the head coach of theUT Arlington Mavericks. Symank was the eleventh headcollege football coach for the Arlington Mavericks, and he held that position for three seasons, from 1971 until 1973. He and his assistants assumed command over a completely demoralized team and set out to rebuild the program using the same techniques he had learned from Lombardi. Symank's three-year win–loss record at UT Arlington was 11–21.
Bill Arnsparger became the head coach of the New York Giants in1974, and called Symank to join his new staff. After winning just seven games in three seasons, Arnsparger was fired in1976. Symank was hired byTed Marchibroda as an assistant coach for the Baltimore Colts, and also coached under Marchibroda's successor, Mike McCormack, from1980 to1981. After years of frustration, the Colts management was ready to make major changes, so Symank, along with the rest of the Colts coaches, were fired.
In 1984 a new opportunity presented itself when Bill Arnsparger accepted the head coaching position atLouisiana State University (LSU) in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Hired to be the LSU defensive coordinator, Symank was the first assistant hired by Arnsparger. TheLSU Tigers posted an 8–3–2 record, including the loss to Nebraska in the Sugar Bowl. Arnsparger earned the SEC's Coach of the Year award for turning around an LSU program that had a losing 4–7 record the year before. In 1985 the Tigers came back even stronger, and Symank moved from defensive coordinator to coach the Tigers linebackers and coordinate Arnsparger's recruiting program. He had an affinity for recruiting small town high school players, and felt it was his duty to give promising young players the same chance he had been given. A college education, four years playing college football, and maybe a shot at an NFL roster, but most importantly, Symank would always say: "get that diploma because no matter how good you are, you can't play forever."
Symank died at his beach house onDauphin Island, Alabama in 2002; he was 66 years old. He was survived by his wife Sarah and their children.
| Year | Team | Overall | Conference | Standing | Bowl/playoffs | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Northern Arizona Lumberjacks(NCAA College Division independent)(1969) | |||||||||
| 1969 | Northern Arizona | 7–3 | |||||||
| Northern Arizona Lumberjacks(Big Sky Conference)(1970) | |||||||||
| 1970 | Northern Arizona | 2–8 | 0–4 | 7th | |||||
| Northern Arizona: | 9–11 | 0–4 | |||||||
| UT Arlington Mavericks(Southland Conference)(1971–1973) | |||||||||
| 1971 | UT Arlington | 2–9 | 1–4 | T–6th | |||||
| 1972 | UT Arlington | 5–6 | 4–1 | 2nd | |||||
| 1973 | UT Arlington | 4–6 | 2–3 | T–4th | |||||
| UT Arlington: | 11–21 | 7–8 | |||||||
| Total: | 20–32 | ||||||||