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Program Feature: Josh Cody

Program Feature: Josh Cody

Oct. 20, 2005

Editor’s Note: This article will appear in Saturday’s game day program. Be sure to pick up your copy at the game.

By Sam Blackman

Although a lot of changes have taken place in college athletics since Josh Cody paced the sidelines as head football and basketball coach in the late 1920s and early 1930s, some principles he stressed should never change.

After leaving Clemson after the 1930 season with a 29-11-1 record, Cody coached at Vanderbilt, Florida, and today’s opponent Temple, which was his final stop in coaching and administration. At one time or another, he coached both the football and basketball teams that are competing today at Death Valley.

Somewhere, Cody has to be smiling and a little surprised that his former schools from different areas of the country are playing on the gridiron today.

Cody played football at Vanderbilt. He remains the only Commodore to earn All-America honors three times (1915,16,19). The 1920 Vanderbilt graduate was selected as an All-Time All-American by the Football Writers Association. The Commodores had a 23-9-3 record, as he was a devastating lineman on both sides of the ball under legendary Head Coach Dan McGugin.

On occasion, he played in the backfield, and was both a great passer and drop-kicker. He once converted on a 45-yard drop-kick against Michigan.

As one teammate recalled, “He would tell the running backs on which side of him to go, and you could depend on him to take out two men as needed. He was the best football player I’ve ever seen.”

Cody also played basketball, baseball, and was on the track team at Vanderbilt, earning 13 varsity letters in all. And, if this was not enough, he was a lieutenant in World War I in 1917 and 1918.

Another teammate who witnessed his greatness once said, “He was a farm boy and he had no polish, but he was very honest and sincere. He didn’t have a scholarship – we had none in those days – but he had a real job. He cleaned the gym every day, cleaned up the locker rooms and the showers, and tended to the coal furnace after practice.”

There were also many documentations to his toughness. Teammates remember that he did not like to wear pads, so he cut up an old quilt and sewed it into the shoulders of his jersey.

Upon graduation, Cody started his coaching career at Mercer in 1920 as coach of all sports and athletic director. In 1923, Cody came back to Vanderbilt as head basketball and baseball coach, and as an assistant in other sports. In 1926-27, the Commodores finished 20-4 and won the Southern Conference basketball title under his tutelage.

In his first year as head football coach at Clemson (1927), he led the Tigers to a 5-3-1 record, then guided Clemson to back-to-back 8-3 seasons in 1928 and 1929.

Cody was a popular man among the Clemson student body. He was nicknamed “Big Man” because of his large stature. According to one account when he was seen on campus and the name “Big Man” was yelled, he would turn and wave and smile the largest grin. He loved and respected the students at Clemson, and they loved him.

This probably was best exemplified when it was rumored he was leaving after three years at Clemson. To show their appreciation for his fine record (including a then 3-0 mark against South Carolina), the students, faculty, and staff acted quickly and took up a collection to buy him a brand new black Buick, and presented him this new car in front of the steps at Tillman Hall on May 6, 1929. He would stay for one more year after this kind gesture. In 1930, the Tigers finished with an 8-2 mark in his final football season at Clemson, the first time in history the Tigers had won at least eight games in three consecutive years.

Cody is the only coach in Tiger history who has been around more than two years who never lost a football game to South Carolina. He also defeated Furman three straight seasons, had a 13-0-1 home record, and had a 72-percent winning mark overall, fourth best in Clemson history. He also coached Clemson’s first All-American, center O.K. Pressley. Cody also coached basketball at Clemson for five years and led the Tigers to a 16-9 slate in 1930. During the 1928-30 seasons, he guided Clemson to a 22-4 mark at home on the hardwood.

While Cody was coaching the football and basketball teams, he had a capable assistant in Joe Guyon, who also coached the baseball team. Guyon was a Native American that had attended Carlisle Indian School (1912-13) with the great Jim Thorpe, the greatest athlete in the first 50 years of the 20th Century according to Associated Press.

Guyon played two years under John Heisman at Georgia Tech (1917-18), including the Yellow Jackets’ 1917 National Championship team. Guyon also had the distinction of playing both pro football and baseball, and was named to the National Foundation Football Hall of Fame and the NFL Hall of Fame in Canton, OH. An injury in baseball ended his playing career, and so he came to Clemson as a coach.

Upon leaving Clemson, Cody returned to Vanderbilt as an assistant football coach and head basketball coach. He was the head football coach and athletic director at Florida from 1936-39.

In 1940, Cody was a line coach at Temple and was appointed head basketball coach in 1942. He held that post until he became athletic director in 1952. During his tenure as basketball coach, Cody racked up 124 victories and guided the Owls to the NCAA Tournament in 1944, the first NCAA Tournament appearance in the history of the program. That team reached the Elite Eight of the tournament.

In 1955, he coached the football team at Temple after the original coach resigned on the eve of the season. The Owls were winless that year (0-8), but Cody never complained, and instead stressed, “They were improving and trying hard.”

During his career, Cody had a few guiding principles he developed that he thought were important.

At that time, Cody had African-Americans playing at Temple on the basketball team. When asked before the NCAA Tournament what he would do if segregation became an issue and his team could not stay in the same hotel or eat in the same restaurant, he simply replied, “We will not play in that city. We go together as a team or not play at all.”

Such was Cody – he loved his players and respected them, and they did the same.

“I’ve always tried to treat a player the way I’d expect my son to be treated,” was another of his guiding principles.

Another rule he lived by was, “It’s important to realize how much influence a coach can have on his youngsters,” he once said.

Cody retired to a farm in New Jersey. He died of a heart attack on June 19, 1961 in Mount Laurel, NJ at the age of 69. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a player in 1970 and the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame in 1999.

Cody enjoyed a wide reputation as athlete, coach, administrator, and gentleman. Although many things have changed in the last 80 or so years since Cody was at Clemson, some things that he stressed, like the importance of character and respect for others, will never change.

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