That's how
you could sum up the 1958 Oak Ridge High School football season -- and you don't have to look far to prove it.
Just take
a look at two numbers. One is 43.8, which is what the Wildcats' offense averaged each game. And the second is 2.6, the average
points the Ridger defense allowed that year.
Any questions?
But teams
in Tennessee knew what was coming. They could tell a storm was brewin' in 1958, just from what had happened the two
seasons prior. There was no denying that something special was going to take place in Oak Ridge, and it was up to Jack Armstrong's boys to deliver.
We can start
in the backfield with tailback Jackie Pope. You mention football in Oak Ridge and his name will come up ... it HAS to.
Pope averaged 17.2 yards per carry in 1958. The numbers he and the
offense put up are staggering, and just think what they would have been if they'd played the second half?
Most of the
time, Oak Ridge had things well in hand by halftime; so the starters got to rest.
But joining
Pope in the Wildcat backfield was Howard Dunnebacke, a tremendous fullback who set the tone in 1958 with a 44-yard
touchdown run on the season's first offensive play.
Wilson Mills
and Bobby Mitchell took the blocking back and wing positions.
In the line,
Oak Ridge had players such as Evan Weber, Eddie Alexander, Richard Ulm,
Roland Henderson, Sam Owen, Mike Brady, Larry Richards and Skippy Brinkman. Others included Lewis Lanter and Grady Wade, making
up a deep line for Armstrong and the Wildcats.
Brady is considered
by many to be the best center ever at Oak Ridge, making the
All-State list along with Pope that season. Richards did as well, dominating anyone who lined up across from him.
Brinkman,
who started since he was a sophomore, was huge for that time and was a crushing defensive lineman. He and the rest of the
senior football class in 1958 never lost a home game and essentially put Oak Ridge on the map in the game of football.
... But Game
No. 10 on the schedule defined the season. That's the one everyone talks about, with the Wildcats taking on Chattanooga Central
as close to 15,000 fans gathered at Blankenship Field.
It was No.
1 in the state (Oak Ridge) vs. No.2 for all the marbles. Central had won the state title
the year before, and they were big and they were mean.
The first
nine games of the season had seen the Wildcats outscore their opponents 424-20 and the closest opponent was McMinn County, which took a 40-14 spanking at the hands of Oak Ridge. Another interesting facet of this 1958 Clash of the Titans was Union Carbide shooting
color film of the game, using this new-fangled thing called slow-motion footage.
The much-anticipated
battle lived up to the hype; but Oak
Ridge got two scores from Pope
to win the game 14-6. That single moment, that game and that 1958 team went on to personify Oak Ridge Football in the eyes
of so many in East Tennessee. The size of the crowd was unheard of at that time, but that Friday
night built momentum for the game of high school football, turning it almost cult-like to so many here.
You can talk
about football being a different game, players being smaller, or whatever excuses you may want to make about the glory that
has been heaped upon the 1958 team. The simple fact is this: It wouldn't be such a special, pride-filled experience putting
on the Oak Ridge football uniform if not for the exploits and triumphs of the 1958 team and all teams in that era.
If you respect the tradition of Oak Ridge football, you must respect the teams that loved their community so much that they fought
hard, worked tirelessly, and won games to forge it.
Copyright,
2008, The Oak Ridger. All Rights Reserved.
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