Note: The following appears in the Charlotte gameday football program.
Editor’s Note – This is the 150th season of college football. The author of this article, Tim Bourret, is one of 150 college football historians on a committee formed by ESPN that is selecting the top teams, games, players and programs during the first 150 years. In conjunction with that, Bourret is writing articles this year on the great moments in Clemson football history. Below is the third installment of the series.
When I was trying to determine the seven biggest moments in Clemson football history for this series, I remembered a book written in 1977 by former Clemson Sports Information Director Joe Sherman. In it, he had many stories that quoted the legendary Frank Howard, with whom Sherman worked from 1934-48.
One of the excerpts quoted Howard as saying that his most memorable play as Clemson’s head coach was a fourth-down run by Fred Cone late in the 1949 Gator Bowl victory over Missouri, a game Clemson won 24-23 at the end of the 1948 season.
If a hall of fame coach who served in that capacity for 30 years singles out one most-important play, it has to be one of the top moments in Tiger history.
The 1948 season was a significant landmark in Clemson history. Believe it or not, Howard was on the “hot seat” entering the season. The Tigers were coming off back-to-back 4-5 seasons.
But a class of sophomores, led by Cone, made a huge difference in 1948, and the Tigers had a remarkable season. Howard’s team had a 10-0 record in the regular season, with five of the wins by seven points or less.
Bobby Gage had a 90-yard punt return for the only score in a 6-0 win over NC State. Phil Prince blocked a punt that led to a touchdown in a 13-7 win over South Carolina. A 21-14 win at No. 19 Wake Forest on Nov. 13 moved the Tigers into the top 10 for the first time.