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Max Bumgardner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American football player and coach (1923–2005)

Max Bumgardner
No. 36
PositionsDefensive end
End
Personal information
Born(1923-05-13)May 13, 1923
Wichita Falls, Texas, U.S.
DiedApril 12, 2005(2005-04-12) (aged 81)
Greenville, Texas, U.S.
Listed height6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Listed weight190 lb (86 kg)
Career information
High schoolWichita Falls
(Wichita Falls, Texas)
CollegeTexas
NFL draft1948: 1st round, 10th overall pick
Career history
Playing
Coaching
Operations
  • San Angelo / Angelo State (1950–1968)
    Athletic director
Awards and highlights
  • Third-teamAll-American (1947)
  • First-team All-SWC (1947)
  • Southwest Conference Champion - (1942)
  • Cotton Bowl Champion - (1943)
  • Sugar Bowl Champion - (1948)
Stats atPro Football Reference

Max Andrew Bumgardner (May 13, 1923 – April 12, 2005) was an Americanfootball player and coach. After playingcollege football as anend at theUniversity of Texas at Austin, where he earned aBachelor of Science degree in physical education in 1948, he was selected in the first round, 10th overall, of the1948 NFL draft by theChicago Bears, but was sent to theDetroit Lions.[1] He played for just one season in theNational Football League (NFL), with the Lions.[2]

Bumgardner grew up in the town of Chicken Ridge, Texas just outside of Wichita Falls.[3]

Bumgardner started playing at Texas in 1942 under coachDana X. Bible and helped the team win the Conference Championship and then the1943 Cotton Bowl Classic. That year he also won the light-heavyweight boxing championship and was a golden gloves boxer. He left school to fight inWorld War II, where he was a staff sergeant in the Combat Engineering Corps and served in France and Germany before returning to school in 1946.

At Texas, he was captain of the 1947 Football team that won the1948 Sugar Bowl and a favorite target ofBobby Layne. He, Layne and fellow end R.E. "Peppy" Blount were all drafted by the Bears in 1948.[3]Bumgardner began his coaching career in 1949 atDenison High School inDenison, Texas, where he worked as an assistant under head football coachLes Cranfill.[4] In 1950, he was hired as the head football coach andathletic director at San Angelo College—now known asAngelo State University—inSan Angelo, Texas.[5] He was named Texas Junior College Coach of the Year in 1951 and 1955. Bumgardner remained in that post as the school became a four-year college, renamed as Angelo State College ND playing in the NAIA, and then moved up to Division II of the NCAA in 1968. He resigned as head coach in 1968, but stayed on as athletic director until 1972.[6]

In 1972Emory Bellard, a UT assistant and inventor of the wishbone offense, became head football coach at Texas A&M, and he recruited Bumgardner to join his staff as an academic counselor, a job he maintained until 1979 when he retired from coaching and teaching.[3]

He became marketing manager of a real estate firm in Bryan and in 1987, he retired to Pecan Plantation near Granbury, Texas. He moved to Greenville, Texas in 2001 to be near his daughter. He died of congestive heart failure on April 12, 2005, in Greenville and was buried in the family cemetery there.[3]

Head coaching record

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College

[edit]
YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffs
Angelo State Rams(NAIA independent)(1964–1967)
1964Angelo State5–4
1965Angelo State3–7
1966Angelo State0–10
1967Angelo State3–6
Angelo State Rams(Lone Star Conference)(1968)
1968Angelo State2–9N/AN/A
Angelo State:13–36
Total:13–36

Junior college

[edit]
YearTeamOverallConferenceStandingBowl/playoffs
San Angelo Rams(Pioneer Conference)(1950–1960)
1950San Angelo8–23–01st
1951San Angelo6–34–01st
1952San Angelo5–41–35th
1953San Angelo5–51–35th
1954San Angelo5–3–12–1–12nd
1955San Angelo8–24–01st
1956San Angelo8–13–1T–1st
1957San Angelo4–5–12–23rd
1958San Angelo5–52–4T–4th
1959San Angelo4–51–45th
1960San Angelo7–33–12nd
San Angelo:65–38–226–19–2
Total:65–38–2
      National championship        Conference title        Conference division title or championship game berth

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^The Alcade Volume 37, Issue 6.
  2. ^"Max Bumgardner".pro-football-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. RetrievedDecember 10, 2014.
  3. ^abcdMaher, John (April 14, 2005)."Former UT football co-captain dies".Austin-American Statesman. RetrievedDecember 30, 2024.
  4. ^"Max Bumgardner At Denison High".The Marshall News Messenger.Marshall, Texas.Associated Press. January 16, 1949. p. 10. RetrievedJune 7, 2020 – viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon.
  5. ^"Max Bumgardner Gets San Angelo JC Post".Fort Worth Star-Telegram.Fort Worth, Texas.Associated Press. January 17, 1950. p. 24. RetrievedJune 7, 2020 – viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon.
  6. ^"Angelo State's Bumgardner Quits Grid Coach Post".Mexia News.Mexia, Texas.Associated Press. November 6, 1968. p. 8. RetrievedJune 7, 2020 – viaNewspapers.comOpen access icon.

External links

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