WillisWG
I don't like radicals left or right!
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Get him to be a WR. We've had a ton of wide receivers that were track stars first.
"Ladies and gentlemen, Willie Gault has run all the way to the State Capitol"
My point was they didn't come here for track first as you suggested. None of our great AA receivers were track first guys. None
I get it. Jeff Powell might not have been named an AA in football, but he was good and came from track and field. He scored that big TD in the '86 Sugar Bowl against Miami and racked up over a hundred yards that game. He was an AA in Track and Field before he played football. Willie Gault is another Vol legend dual athlete, as well as Bobby Dodd and the list goes on. Anthony Miller started in track and field until his high school coach convinced him to play football as a senior. He got a scholly for track and field and then transferred so he could play football and became a star wide receiver for Tennessee. Go Vols!My point was they didn't come here for track first as you suggested. None of our great AA receivers were track first guys. None
Yeah, Powell definitely came to UT for track, transferring from William&Mary. Miller was a JUCO AA receivers who came here for football but was a track guy before football in high school. Gault was dual but was a HS AA receiver. All our best all time receivers were football first guys. Seivers, Morgan, McGee, Pickens, Nash, Harper. Harper also-ran hurdles a couple of years in the track team. Powell was a RBI get it. Jeff Powell might not have been named an AA in football, but he was good and came from track and field. He scored that big TD in the '86 Sugar Bowl against Miami and racked up over a hundred yards that game. He was an AA in Track and Field before he played football. Willie Gault is another Vol legend dual athlete, as well as Bobby Dodd and the list goes on. Anthony Miller started in track and field until his high school coach convinced him to play football as a senior. He got a scholly for track and field and then transferred so he could play football and became a star wide receiver for Tennessee. Go Vols!
Knew him some. Really nice guy. Timed him a few times at Tom Black when he was considering offer from Pro Track .
Richmond Flowers, Jr. grew up in a household of high expectations. His father, Richmond Flowers Sr. was an Alabama state senator and later the Attorney General. While in high school, Flowers set the national high school record for the High Hurdles in 13.5, tied the national low hurdle record of 18.2 and set the World Record for a high school athlete running the college hurdles in 13.8.
In the 1964 Alabama State Track Championships, he finished first in five events with five state records. He ended his high school career with eight gold medals, two silver medals, five state records, two national records and one world record. Even today, 40 years later, his performance has not been approached.
In track, he was a four-time track and field All-American, an NCAA High Hurdle Champion and NCAA record holder in two events. In 1968, he had become the number on hurdler in the world and favored to win the gold at the Mexico Olympics. That year, he was just 1/10 second off the World 60 yard high hurdle record becoming Tennessee’s first NCAA Track Champion.
Flowers defeated the World record holder, Earl McCullough and finished first seven times in eight major meets. He also defeated Willie Davenport, the eventual 1968 Olympic Gold medalist, on Davenport’s own home track, and then repeated the defeat the following day on Flowers’ home track. Named the number one high hurdler in the world, his dream of winning the Olympic title ended on June 2, 1968 with a season ending hamstring injury.