Harding Bisons Football
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Harding University Harding University is a private university with its main campus in Searcy, Arkansas. It is the largest private university in Arkansas. Established in 1924, the institution offers undergraduate, graduate, and pre-professional programs. The uni ...
in
college football College football (french: Football universitaire) refers to gridiron football played by teams of student athletes. It was through college football play that American football rules first gained popularity in the United States. Unlike most ...
as a Division II member of the
Great American Conference The Great American Conference (GAC) is a List of NCAA conferences, college athletic conference affiliated with the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the NCAA Division II, Division II level, with headquarters located in Russellvill ...
. Harding is located in Searcy, Arkansas. The Bisons are led by head coach
Paul Simmons Paul Simmons may refer to: *Paul Allen Simmons (1921–2014), U.S. federal judge *Paul Simmons (drummer), American drummer (Th' Legendary Shack Shakers, The Reverend Horton Heat, Petra) *Paul Simmons (football coach) Paul Simmons is an American ...
, a former Harding linebacker, with a record of 59-13. Simmons has coached the Bisons to four playoff appearances in a row, not counting the cancelled 2020 season. The back-to-back 2016 and 2017 seasons were the most successful run in the history of the program.
Ronnie Huckeba Ronnie Huckeba is a retired American football coach. He was the head coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas from 2007 to 2016. He compiled a record of 69–40, winning a Great American Conference championship and reaching the quarterf ...
's 2016 squad, before his retirement from coaching, won the conference title before making it to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Division II playoffs. The following year under first-year head coach Simmons, the Bisons won three post-season games to make it to the semifinals of the playoffs before losing to Texas A&M-Commerce (the storied football program formerly and widely known as East Texas State). There are 52 former Bison football players who have earned All-American status, either on the NAIA or the NCAA Division II levels.


History

Harding's football program began the same year that Harding College came into existence in 1924. The first eight years produced a 19-28-6 record, with most of the wins coming against high schools or college B and C teams. But the Bisons cultivated a steady following of excited students and townspeople, as evidenced in various volumes of Harding's yearbook, The Petit Jean. Among the opponents in the 1920s were five colleges that would become rivalries lasting into the 21st century. Arkansas State Teacher's College would eventually become the
University of Central Arkansas The University of Central Arkansas (Central Arkansas or UCA) is a public university in Conway, Arkansas. Founded in 1907 as the Arkansas State Normal School, the university is one of the oldest in the U.S. state of Arkansas. As the state's only n ...
, and Magnolia A&M would become
Southern Arkansas University Southern Arkansas University (SAU) is a public university in Magnolia, Arkansas. History Southern Arkansas University was established by an Act of the Arkansas Legislature in 1909 as a district agricultural high school for southwest Arkansas an ...
.
Henderson State University Henderson State University (HSU) is a public university in Arkadelphia, Arkansas. Founded in 1890 as Arkadelphia Methodist College, it is Arkansas's only member of the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges. Henderson has an undergraduate enrol ...
had begun as Arkadelphia Methodist College and was referred to as Henderson-Brown when Harding began playing them. Harding first played against
Arkansas Tech University Arkansas Tech University (ATU) is a public university in Russellville, Arkansas. The university offers programs at both baccalaureate and graduate levels in a range of fields. The Arkansas Tech University–Ozark Campus, a two-year satellite cam ...
's Third Team in 1924, and advanced to playing Tech's Second Team the next year. The first matchup against the
Ouachita Baptist Tigers The Ouachita Baptist Tigers are composed of 16 teams representing Ouachita Baptist University in intercollegiate athletics, including men and women's basketball, golf, soccer, swimming, and tennis. Men's sports include baseball, football, and wres ...
was in 1928, ending in a 0-0 tie. One special moment in Harding football history was a 1926 trip to Fayetteville, Arkansas, and a drubbing by the Arkansas Razorback Freshman Team. The head coach of the Razorbacks was
Francis Schmidt Francis Albert Schmidt (December 3, 1885 – September 19, 1944) was an American football player and coach of football, basketball, and baseball. He served as the head football coach at the University of Tulsa (1919–1921), the University of Arka ...
, who was nicknamed Francis "Close the Gates of Mercy" Schmidt. He loved to run the score up on lesser equipped teams. Harding, with many first-year players itself that year, was beaten badly by the Razorback freshmen, 0-74. As the effects of the Great Depression began to set in, the Harding College football program folded after the 1931 season due to the economic hardship. The Petit Jean yearbook included an ominous entry in regard to the football team's finances in 1931: The hope of again fielding an intercollegiate team was still alive through Harding College's dormant football years of 1932-1958. One of Coach
Paul Fiser Paul Idell Fiser (February 10, 1908 – June 25, 1978) was an American football coach. He was the head coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas, for one season in 1931, compiling a record of 4–3, after which the school shut down the progr ...
's prized players in 1931 was Ervin "Pinky" Berryhill. Berryhill would one day be the man to serve as athletics director when the intercollegiate football program would finally be reinstated almost three decades later in 1959. Intercollegiate athletics for all sports (football, basketball, baseball, all men's and women's sports) at Harding were disbanded in the 1930s due to the depression economy. In its place, led by former Harding athlete and then-current faculty member Berryhill, the Harding administration approved intramural competition on campus. As a result, 1939 saw “football” come back to the Harding campus in the form of two-hand touch intramural teams. Less than a decade later, the form of intra campus football had turned to “ragtag” ball, or flag football. Some future Harding assistant coaches and academic professors were members of these teams, including Clifton L. Ganus Jr., who would later become president of Harding University from 1965-1987. The fall of 1955 saw the return of full pads tackle football to Harding, in the form of intramural teams of 8-man football composed of students. Enough players showed up each autumn to form four teams of on-campus 8-man tackle football from 1955 to 1958. An All-Star game at the end of each season, which came to be called The Bison All-Star Game, came complete with the honoring of maids and a queen of the highlighted all-star game. By year-two of fully padded 8-man tackle football, 1956, the student association sponsored a game each Saturday night, so that the excitement of Saturday college football was back at Harding College. Autumn of 1957 saw the return of several intercollegiate sports for Harding, but football still had to wait two more years. Several of the players on these 8-man tackle intramural teams would go on to be part of the 1959 reemergence of Harding Bisons football on the intercollegiate level. The main impactful decision by Athletics Director Pinky Berryhill in leading Harding back into intercollegiate football in 1959 was the recruitment and hiring of an Oklahoma Sooner football legend. The Harding football program was reignited from the ground up in 1959 by former legendary Oklahoma Sooner player
Carl Allison Carl Allison (June 2, 1933 – December 3, 2013) was an American football player and coach of football and baseball. He was a four-year starter for coach Bud Wilkinson at the University of Oklahoma from 1951 to 1954, finishing his career as the te ...
, who had been a rare four-year starter for the Sooners during the
Bud Wilkinson Charles Burnham "Bud" Wilkinson (April 23, 1916 – February 9, 1994) was an American football player, coach, broadcaster, and politician. He served as the head football coach at the University of Oklahoma from 1947 to 1963, compiling a record of ...
dynasty. He was a captain on OU's 1954 undefeated team, and was drafted in the 22nd round of the
1955 NFL Draft The 1955 NFL season, 1955 National Football League NFL draft, draft was held January 27–28, 1955 at the Warwick New York Hotel, Warwick Hotel in New York City. This was the ninth year that the List of first overall National Football League Dra ...
by the
Chicago Bears The Chicago Bears are a professional American football team based in Chicago. The Bears compete in the National Football League (NFL) as a member club of the league's National Football Conference (NFC) North division. The Bears have won nine NF ...
., coached by
George Halas George Stanley Halas Sr. (; February 2, 1895October 31, 1983), nicknamed "Papa Bear" and "Mr. Everything", was an American professional football player, coach, and team owner. He was the founder and owner of the National Football League's Chic ...
. Oklahoma head coach Wilkinson, the former three-time national championship player in the 1930s
Bernie Bierman Bernard W. Bierman (March 11, 1894 – March 7, 1977) was an American football player and coach of football and basketball. He coached from 1919 to 1950 except for a span during World War II when he served in the U.S. armed forces. Bierman was th ...
University of Minnesota dynasty, heaped arguably the greatest praise of any player he ever coached onto Carl Allison: Bud Wilkinson's high praise of Allison as a leader and player came almost a decade after Wilkinson himself had created the
Oklahoma drill The Oklahoma drill is an American football practice technique used to test players in confined full contact situations. The technique was developed by Oklahoma Sooners coach Bud Wilkinson. Description The drill has several variations. The most ...
, a drill meant to weed out hundreds of former World War II soldiers trying out for the Oklahoma Sooners football team on the
G.I. Bill The Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, commonly known as the G.I. Bill, was a law that provided a range of benefits for some of the returning World War II veterans (commonly referred to as G.I.s). The original G.I. Bill expired in 1956, bu ...
. Carl Allison did not make the cut for the Chicago Bears roster, and instead instantly became the head football coach at Clinton (OK) High School. Moving straight from the playing field to head coach, he took what he had learned playing for Wilkinson at Oklahoma, and became part of the Bud Wilkinson coaching tree. He hired another first year coach,
John Prock Clifford John Prock (March 13, 1929 – July 17, 2012) was an American football coach. He was the head football coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas from 1964 to 1987. He compiled a record of 114–123–7 , retiring as the fifth-winnin ...
, a former three-year starting lineman at Southwestern Oklahoma State. The former coach at Hollis, Oklahoma, Joe Bailey Metcalf, had taken the Southwestern job and recruited his old player Prock to Weatherford, as Prock was returning home from military service in Korea. Prock had grown up in Hollis around future Texas Longhorn coach
Darrell Royal Darrell K Royal (July 6, 1924 – November 7, 2012) was an All-American football player and coach. He served as the head coach at Mississippi State University (1954–1955), the University of Washington (1956), and the University of Texas (1957 ...
, who had also played at Oklahoma under Bud Wilkinson, and who also revered the mentorship of Coach Joe Metcalf. Carl Allison and his assistant Prock then joined forces to restart the Harding football program in Searcy, Arkansas. When Allison briefly returned to Norman as a scout for the Oklahoma Sooners, John Prock became Harding's head coach and would serve in that capacity for the next two-plus decades. He would go on to coach the next three future Harding head coaches, as well as hiring two of them,
Randy Tribble Randy Tribble is an American football coach. He was the head football coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas from 1994 to 2007, compiling a record of 73–63–1. He was an assistant coach at Harding for 13 years before becoming head ...
and
Ronnie Huckeba Ronnie Huckeba is a retired American football coach. He was the head coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas from 2007 to 2016. He compiled a record of 69–40, winning a Great American Conference championship and reaching the quarterf ...
, as long-time assistants. Counting Allison and Prock restarting the Harding football program, the Bisons have had only 6 head coaches in the last 60-plus years. Larry Richmond, Tribble and Huckeba, all had winning records, as does current coach Paul Simmons, who has become the winningest percentage coach in Harding's history. Harding's historic influence from the state of Oklahoma made for significant football recruiting inroads into the Sooner state. With the latter influence of long-term assistant coaches, some of whom became Harding head coaches, a much wider permanent net was cast throughout the most fertile recruiting grounds of the south. Richmond was a Memphis native, but had also coached in Louisiana and Texas. Tribble was a Florida native who also had coached in Texas, and Huckeba was a Georgia native who had previously coached in Texas and Louisiana. Today's Harding football recruiting base is nationwide and beyond.


Conference championships

† Denotes shared title. Conference affiliations *1924–1931: Independent *1960–1994:
Arkansas Intercollegiate Conference The Arkansas Intercollegiate Conference (AIC) was an athletic conference in existence from 1927 or 1928 to 1995 affiliated with the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA). The conference membership consisted entirely of colleges ...
*1995–1996: NAIA Independent *1997–1999;
Lone Star Conference The Lone Star Conference (LSC) is a college athletic conference affiliated with the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division II level. Member institutions are located in the southwestern United States, with schools in Tex ...
*2000–2010:
Gulf South Conference The Gulf South Conference (GSC) is a college athletic conference affiliated with the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division II level, which operates in the Southeastern United States. History Originally known as the Mid ...
*2011–present:
Great American Conference The Great American Conference (GAC) is a List of NCAA conferences, college athletic conference affiliated with the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the NCAA Division II, Division II level, with headquarters located in Russellvill ...
No team from 1932 to 1958


Playoff appearances

The Bisons participated in the NAIA Division I Playoffs twice: 1989 and 1992 The Bisons have participated in the NCAA Division II Playoffs seven times: 2012, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2021.


Bowl games

The Bisons have participated in three College Division bowl games.


Records against historic rivals

* Arkansas Tech: 28-31 * Arkansas-Monticello: 34-24 *
Central Arkansas Central Arkansas, also known as the Little Rock metro, designated by the United States Office of Management and Budget as the Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway Metropolitan Statistical Area, is the most populous metro area in the U.S. state of ...
: 6-30-3 * Henderson State: 25-33-1 *
Lane College Lane College is a private historically black college associated with the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church and located in Jackson, Tennessee. It offers associate and baccalaureate degrees in the arts and sciences. History Lane College was ...
: 15-1 *
Millsaps College Millsaps College is a private liberal arts college in Jackson, Mississippi. It was founded in 1890 and is affiliated with the United Methodist Church. History The college was founded in 1889–90 by a Confederate veteran, Major Reuben Webster M ...
: 10-2-2 *
Northwestern Oklahoma Northwestern Oklahoma is the geographical region of the state of Oklahoma which includes the Oklahoma Panhandle and a majority of the Cherokee Outlet, stretching to an eastern extent along Interstate 35, and its southern extent along the Canadi ...
: 13-4 * Ouachita Baptist: 34-26-4 *
Southeastern Oklahoma Choctaw Country is the Oklahoma Department of Tourism and Recreation's official tourism designation for Southeastern Oklahoma. The name was previously Kiamichi Country until changed in honor of the Choctaw Nation headquartered there. The current ...
: 25-8 * Southern Arkansas: 30-28-1 *
Southwestern Oklahoma Southwest Oklahoma is a geographical name for the southwest portion of the state of Oklahoma, typically considered to be south of the Canadian River, extending eastward from the Texas border to a line roughly from Weatherford, to Anadarko, to ...
: 11-4 *
Tarleton State Tarleton State University is a public university with its main campus in Stephenville, Texas. It is a founding member of the Texas A&M University System and enrolled over 14,000 students in the fall of 2020. History John Tarleton Agricultural ...
: 6-2-1 * West Alabama: 6-8


List of head coaches

* Earl B. Thompson: 1924-1924 (2–2–0) * Clint Kercheville: 1925-1925 (2–3–1) *
Clyde Matthews Clyde Milton Matthews, also spelled Mathews, (December 22, 1878 – December 29, 1929), was an American college football coach. He served as head football coach at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 1904 along with Arthur R. Hal ...
: 1926-1926 (1-5-0) * W.T. Henry: 1927-1927 (0–8–1) * Frank Turbeville: 1928-1928 (3-1–2) * Buck Arnold: 1929–1930 (7–6–2) *
Paul Fiser Paul Idell Fiser (February 10, 1908 – June 25, 1978) was an American football coach. He was the head coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas, for one season in 1931, compiling a record of 4–3, after which the school shut down the progr ...
: 1931-1931 (4–3–0) *
Carl Allison Carl Allison (June 2, 1933 – December 3, 2013) was an American football player and coach of football and baseball. He was a four-year starter for coach Bud Wilkinson at the University of Oklahoma from 1951 to 1954, finishing his career as the te ...
: 1959–1963 (13–26–3) *
John Prock Clifford John Prock (March 13, 1929 – July 17, 2012) was an American football coach. He was the head football coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas from 1964 to 1987. He compiled a record of 114–123–7 , retiring as the fifth-winnin ...
: 1964–1987 (114–123–7) * Larry Richmond: 1988–1993 (37–25-1) *
Randy Tribble Randy Tribble is an American football coach. He was the head football coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas from 1994 to 2007, compiling a record of 73–63–1. He was an assistant coach at Harding for 13 years before becoming head ...
: 1994–2007 (74–62–1) *
Ronnie Huckeba Ronnie Huckeba is a retired American football coach. He was the head coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas from 2007 to 2016. He compiled a record of 69–40, winning a Great American Conference championship and reaching the quarterf ...
: 2007–2016 (49–35–0) *
Paul Simmons Paul Simmons may refer to: *Paul Allen Simmons (1921–2014), U.S. federal judge *Paul Simmons (drummer), American drummer (Th' Legendary Shack Shakers, The Reverend Horton Heat, Petra) *Paul Simmons (football coach) Paul Simmons is an American ...
: 2017–Present (59–13–0)


List of Harding players in professional football

* Ronnie Peacock: 1972 - Pittsburgh Steelers *Tom Ed Gooden: 1974 - Cleveland Browns *Alan Dixon: 1974 - Minnesota Vikings *Barney Crawford: 1975 - Miami Dolphins * Bruce Baldwin: 1983 - Denver Broncos * Gill Stegall: 1985 - Denver Gold (USFL): 1986 - Tampa Bay Bandits (USFL), Montreal Alouettes (CFL): 1987 - Montreal Alouettes (CFL), St Louis Cardinals: 1988 - Detroit Lions * Tank Daniels: 2006 - Philadelphia Eagles: 2007 - New York Giants: 2008 - New York Giants, Philadelphia Eagles: 2009 - Hartford Colonials, Jacksonville Jaguars * Kurt Adams: 2011-12 - Winnipeg Blue Bombers * Eddie Russ: 2011-13 - Saskatchewan Roughriders *
Rene Stephan Rene Stephan (born May 7, 1988) is a professional Canadian football linebacker. He was drafted 23rd overall in the fourth round of the 2012 CFL Draft by the Blue Bombers and signed with the team on May 11, 2012. He played college football C ...
: 2012-14 - Winnipeg Blue Bombers * Ty Powell: 2013 - Seattle Seahawks, NY Giants: 2013-2015 - Buffalo Bills: 2016 - Philadelphia Eagles *Donatella Luckett: 2015 - Kansas City Chiefs, San Diego Chargers


List of Harding players in the Super Bowl

* Tank Daniels: 2007 - New York Giants


References


External links

* {{Great American Conference football navbox
Football Football is a family of team sports that involve, to varying degrees, kicking a ball to score a goal. Unqualified, the word ''football'' normally means the form of football that is the most popular where the word is used. Sports commonly c ...