I remember when UT-Chattanooga was good…
UTC joined the SoCon in time for the 1977 football season. In that first year, under Joe Morrison, the Mocs won the league. In fact, UTC won or tied for the title the first three years it competed in the conference.
Morrison moved on to New Mexico and UTC brought in Bill “Brother” Oliver to coach. Oliver was there four years. He never won the league championship, but his teams were good – he won at least 7 games in each of those years.
Oliver left, to be replaced by Buddy Nix. Nix was at UTC for nine seasons, and in his first year, the Mocs won the conference title again, albeit with a 6-5 overall record. Nix went 6-5 in four of his nine years, and 7-4 in another, but wasn’t able to maintain the 7-8 win standard established by Morrison and Oliver. Three of his final five seasons were losing campaigns, and the bottom dropped out in 1992, when the Mocs were 2-9 overall and winless in SoCon play.
Old-timers who remember UTC coming into the league and consistently challenging for the conference title might be surprised to know that the Mocs haven’t had a winning record in SoCon play since 1991 and in that same time period have only managed two winning seasons overall. The coaches who have tried to restore the program to its former glory since the departure of Nix: Tommy West (4-7 in one season before taking the head coaching position at Clemson), Buddy Green (one winning campaign in six seasons), Donnie Kirkpatrick (three seasons in which he won fewer games each year), and Rodney Allison (one winning season in six years).
Allison is the current coach, although he is playing out the string, as UTC has already announced he won’t be back next year. UTC is 1-9 this season, with the only win over Cumberland (yes, the same school that lost 222-0 to Georgia Tech in 1916).
Chattanooga’s opponents are averaging over 40 points per game against the Mocs. UTC is only scoring 12 points per game. In other words, it’s not one of those “close but no cigar” seasons. The nine losses are all by at least 20 points. UTC quarterbacks have thrown 16 interceptions in 10 games while maintaining a completion percentage of 46%. (It’s possible that Allison’s son, Sloan, may start at QB against The Citadel. He has been a backup most of the season but has seen time in most of the Mocs’ games.) UTC is averaging only 2.3 yards per rush. Its opponents are averaging 6.2 yards per rush.
You know it’s been a bad season when the beat writer for the local paper notes that “punter Jeff Lloyd, who lost his starting job for three games, may be the Mocs’ most productive player.”
Later in the column he writes that Lloyd has been effective “when he has been able to get a punt off.”
UTC’s struggles have presented an opportunity for assorted anti-football advocates to step forward and call for the program’s elimination. The loudest of these voices is a computer science professor at UTC named Joe Dumas. From the link:
“This is a perfect time for UTC to get out of the football business for good and concentrate on academics while maintaining successful athletic programs like basketball, golf, tennis, etc.”
I’m not sure the professor has considered the possibility that those other “successful athletic programs” might have a harder time staying successful after the Southern Conference boots UTC out of the league, which it almost certainly would do if the school dropped football.
Allison also has claimed that the publicity surrounding Dumas and company’s efforts have hurt the program, making it harder to recruit, etc. – in other words, a self-fulfilling prophecy. I don’t know if I buy that. At almost every school there are always a few spoilsports and malcontents who want to drop all sports (except for the ones they like, naturally). UTC’s problems in football started long before the get-rid-of-pigskin bandwagon built its first wheel.
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As far as Saturday is concerned, it’s Homecoming and The Citadel’s opponent has already mailed in the season. The Bulldogs’ next opponent is Florida.
The Citadel better win this game.
Filed under: Football, The Citadel | Tagged: Bill Oliver, Buddy Green, Buddy Nix, Chattanooga, Cumberland, Donnie Kirkpatrick, Joe Dumas, Joe Morrison, Rodney Allison, Southern Conference, The Citadel, Tommy West, UT-Chattanooga, UTC | Leave a comment »