Ace Parker article from goduke.com
What a remarkable variety of achievements:
2-time football All-America at Duke
Set numerous school records for rushing yardage and touchdowns
Played 3 sports at Duke and was inducted into College Hall of Fame
Played in the NFL, winning a Player of the Year award and achieving induction into Pro Football Hall of Fame
Played Major League Baseball
World War II veteran
Longtime Duke Baseball coach, twice leading teams to the College World Series
We occasionally have discussions about Duke's greatest athlete ever; it may well be Ace Parker.
Give him a few more months and he'll have lived longer than Bill Werber did!
A movie is not about what it's about; it's about how it's about it.
---Roger Ebert
Some questions cannot be answered
Who’s gonna bury who
We need a love like Johnny, Johnny and June
---Over the Rhine
A movie is not about what it's about; it's about how it's about it.
---Roger Ebert
Some questions cannot be answered
Who’s gonna bury who
We need a love like Johnny, Johnny and June
---Over the Rhine
Among his other million accomplishment, Ace Parker was the main reason world record holder Dave Sime came to Duke. Ace had played pro ball at the AAA level with Dave Sime's father. When Dave was being recruited by Notre Dame and Army IIRC, he was told he was to play football, but his primary interest was baseball. Dave's father called Ace, and Ace said, "Come on down. I'm sure we can work something out." Dave came to Duke on a baseball scholarship but almot immediately began working out on the track. Within two years Dave had set world records in the sprints and hurdles. Sime did play baseball and IIRC was All-ACC at least one year.
sagegrouse
Parker is very definitely in the discussion as one of the great athletes in Duke history.
He's one of three Duke football players to win consensus All-America honors. He is in both the College Football and the NFL Hall of Fame.
He was good enough to play basketball at Duke -- and, of course, he was a great baseball player -- good enough to play Major League baseball.
As a teenager, he was a fantastic golfer. He beat Sam Snead in a long-driving contest while he was still in high school. Snead encouraged him to take up pro golf.
As noted above, Parker was Duke's long-time baseball coach, succeeding Jack Coombs in the early '50s and holding the job to the late '80s. He was the coach the last time Duke went to the College World Series (1961). He was also the backfield coach for Bill Murray -- when Duke had the best football program in the ACC. Parker finally left Duke when Murray retired and he was passed over to succeed him (Doug Knight insisted on hiring in Ivy League coach with a losing record at Cornelll -- Tom Harp ... although Eddie Cameron wanted to hire Bud Wilkinson).
There was a recent poll that voted Parker the greatest athloete in Virginia prep history ... ahead of Ronald Curry. I remember that when Virginia Tech played its first ACC football game, it was against Duke in Blacksburg -- and they honored Parker (who was originally planning to go to VPI).
Parker is now the oldest living member of the College ands Pro football HOFs. He's also the second oldest living former Major League baseball player (Bill Werber was the oldest for about two years before his death recently).
It's nice that we remember him at 100 ... a great Duke athlete!
Ace was playing for Duke when my parents were there and was the baseball coach and football asst (as noted) when i was there.
was pleased he got noted by PTI today.
Billy Werber and Ace were major league teammates. Ace's first game:
http://www.baseball-reference.com/bo...93704240.shtml
Wilkinson was available. He had retired from coaching at Oklahoma and his Senate run had come up short in 1964. He was working as the main analyst for ABC College Football (and since that was the only source of college football on TV those days, aside from the bowl games, that was a big job.).
Cameron know Wilkinson from his son -- Jay Wilkinson, who as an All-American running back/kick returner at Duke.
Was there a chance he might have come? Well, Cameron sent former coach Wallace Wade to New York to feel Wilkinson out. His first reaction was to say no and to recommend his former top assistant at Oklahoma, Gomer Jones. Before things could go much further, Knight -- who was determined to turn Duke into an Ivy League school -- forced Cameron ton hire Tom Harp, who had a losing record at Cornell. That was the beginning of the long, slow slide of Duke football. There were a first ups and downs in the next few decades, but replacing Murray with Harp was the first (huge) misstep.
Bud knew the Duke football program well as his son Jay had been an All-American halfback at Duke two years earlier, graduating in 1964. He knew all the football-connected staff and of course was close to Cameron. Had Knight not overruled Cameron in favor of Harp, Wilkinson would probably have accepted. What he didn't know was that Knight and others had a different vision of the future.
As for Harp, he probably did possess the X's and O's necessary to be a successful coach. We'll never know for sure, but he thought a Cornell type of approach to recruiting was fine. As a result, the entire football program was essentially destroyed by an administration which did not want big-time football. Knight seemed to think the Ivy model was a good one to follow. I also believe he really was convinced that the University of Chicago had done the right thing by abandoning football altogether. The general idea was that a great research/academic university and football scholarships were incompatible. He couldn't walk away from the ACC, however, so football had to stay. But he cobbled together a policy limiting salaries, recruitment, scheduling and resisting any redshirting. The pendulum began to swing back under Mike McGee, but he wasn't given the support he needed and was unnecessarily fired. The following years devolved into 40+ years of mediocrity. Not until Cut arrived was any serious consideration given to modifying the policy. I think Mike Krzyzewski was able to get the ear first of Nan and later of Dick, leading to a more realistic approach to football. But within the university there has always been an influential anti-football cadre.
The thinking at the time was that big-time football and first-rate academics were incompatible. This was the supposed lesson derived by the deemphasis of football that happened in the early '50s with the Ivy League. No, that's just how the Ivy League decided to approach the issue of college athletics. Then, Jim Plunkett arrived at Stanford about the same time Duke backed off of football, and -- mirabile dictu -- Stanford went to the Rose Bowl two years in a row. Gee, maybe a strong academic school can be competitive on the field.
I thought then and think now that Knight and the Board of Trustees were wrong. Moreover, I find the contradictions and hypocrisy in Ivy League athletics to be worse than anything that goes on at Duke.
sagegrouse