Steve Spurrier - Head Ball Coach
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An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
375 Hudson Street
New York, New York 10014
Copyright 2016 by Steve Spurrier
Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.
Blue Rider Press is a registered trademark and its colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC
All photos courtesy Steve Spurrier, family, friends, and associates, with the following exceptions: Photos , courtesy University of Florida.
eBook ISBN: 9780399574689
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Spurrier, Steve, author. | Martin, Buddy, author.
Title: Head ball coach : my life in football, doing it differentlyand winning / Steve Spurrier with Buddy Martin ; foreword by Paul Finebaum.
Description: New York: Blue Rider Press, 2016.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016029233 | ISBN 9780399574665 (hardback)
Subjects: LCSH: Spurrier, Steve. | Football coachesUnited StatesBiography. | BISAC: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Sports. | SPORTS & RECREATION / Football. | BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Leadership.
Classification: LCC GV939.S65 A3 2016 | DDC 796.332092 [B]dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016029233
p. cm.
Penguin is committed to publishing works of quality and integrity. In that spirit, we are proud to offer this book to our readers; however, the story, the experiences, and the words are the authors alone.
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I am dedicating this book to the very best parents any young boy could have, Reverend John Graham Spurrier Jr. and Marjorie Orr Spurrier.
My dad taught me to compete in everything, and if you are keeping score, you try your very best to win the game.
My mom would simply say before any game, Stevie, just do the best you can!
I was blessed to have parents who allowed me to pursue my God-given talents in sports and chase my dreams, wherever that path may lead.
I dont know if Ive ever been around a guy as obsessed with winning and perfection as he was. He had a tremendous work ethic. Every day at practice, whether you were in a meeting or on the field or in the stadiumanything associated with footballif you did not give 100 percent or did not play or perform close to perfect, you heard about it. It was the best four years of my life and I was fortunate to play for him.
Jesse Palmer, ESPN analyst, former Gator quarterback
Coach stands on what is now named Steve Spurrier-Florida Field, announced in June 2016. Spurrier will also serve as an ambassador and consultant for the University of Floridas athletic department.
Paul Finebaum
W hen I saw the breaking-news bulletin on my phone the night of October 12, 2015, I sat stunned, unable to move. I stared at the screen for a moment, hoping my eyes had deceived me, hoping against hope it wasnt true. It couldnt be.
But it was.
And it quickly became one of those never-forget, unable-to-breathe kinds of scenes. My first emotion was selfishI was mad at him. I mumbled to myself: How can you do this? This is not fair. Then I slowly began smiling and nodding my head. The Head Ball Coach had done it again.
One more hidden-ball trick play by him left us all searching for the pigskin while he went racing past us down the field for the winning score. I quickly understood that the announcement that Steve Spurrier was stepping down at South Carolina wasnt an end, but a beginning. He wasnt going to follow the normal path. He was ending one of the most brilliant careers in college football history his own wayputting his own personal imprint on the announcement. It wasnt perfect. But it was typical Spurrierleaving everyone talking, debating, screaming and hollering, pointing fingers, but also praising him.
In the days that followed, tributes came from all corners of the college football universe, from every major coach in the game, from Saban to Meyerand then some, from Darius Rucker to Rick Flairand most, if not all, correctly said the HBC had secured a spot on college footballs Mount Rushmore.
But that tells only part of the story, part of what made Spurrier one of the games most compelling coaches. And personally, my favorite coach of all-time to cover and be around.
Who else could be the greatest coach at two SEC schools?
Who else could win a Heisman Trophy and coach another player who won one?
Who else could be one of the most polarizing figures of the first half of his coaching careeronly to become one of the most beloved in the second half?
Who else but Stephen Orr Spurrier?
It is easy to say Spurriers greatest days were at Florida: the swagger and style, to say nothing of an avalanche of SEC titlesincluding four in a row. Four in a row! Still hard to believe years later, plus the national championship. But in some ways, his most meaningful accomplishments as a coach were at South Carolina, where he lifted the schools spirits and stature, leading the Gamecocks to the SEC title game in 2010.
Attention was paid and respect was earned after three straight eleven-win seasonsand Top 10 finishesat South Carolina, mind youas well as producing the No. 1 pick in the 2014 NFL draft.
I asked him once in a quiet moment at his old office at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium if he agreed with a newspaper ranking that listed him as the best coach in college football. He sat there for a moment, shrugged, and with that all-too-familiar and often-imitated voiceso sharp and often shrill it could pierce a hole through a steel platesaid: Well, thats their opinion. For the record, he didnt argue or correct a mistake, as he often did with sportswriters. He knew the poll was precise, but to soften the blow, he added: Im really just a coach who calls ball plays.
In other words, the Head Ball Coach.
And now the HBC had stepped down. Done. Called it a career.
The next day in Columbia, as the nation watched his emotional press conferenceemotional for others, not so much to himairing on ESPN and other networks and being treated with the gravity and solemnity of a presidential nomination to the Supreme Court, I couldnt help recalling a line written by John Logue of TheAtlanta Journal about the HBC during his playing days. He had led the Gators to yet another improbable victory over North Carolina State, and Logue wrote of Spurriers superiority: Blindfolded, with his back to the wall, with his hands tied behind him, Steve Spurrier would still be a two-point favorite at his own execution.
He did it his wayone reason many today remain so sad for his departure from football, but also so extremely fortunate and grateful to have had a front-row seat to view his greatness.
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