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Wilford Moore

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Sport(s)
  
Football

1963–1964
  
Cleburne HS (TX)

1938–1940
  
Hardin–Simmons

Name
  
Wilford Moore

1947–1955
  
McMurry

Positions
  
Guard, Linebacker

1956–1957
  
Lubbock HS (TX)


Wilford Moore amacdncomsitesdefaultfilesimagecachesuperph

Born
  
November 20, 1919 Littlefield, Texas (
1919-11-20
)

1958–1962
  
Port Neches-Groves HS (TX)

Role
  
American football head coach

Died
  
January 21, 2014, Abilene, Texas, United States

McMurry vs. Oklahoma Panhandle


Wilford H. Moore (November 20, 1919 – January 21, 2014) was an American football coach. He was the highest winning coach in McMurry Indians football history and had the McMurry football stadium named in his honor.

A native of Littlefield, Texas, Moore earned his physical education degree from Hardin–Simmons University in 1941. He was an assistant coach at Abilene High in the fall of 1941, but joined the United States Army Air Corps on December 9 following the attack on Pearl Harbor.

After returning from World War II, he served as an assistant in 1946 at McMurry and then became the head coach the next year, coaching at McMurry from 1947 to 1955. Moore coached the Indians to a 45–28–5 record and led them to the Oleander Bowl in 1949.

Moore later coached at Lubbock High School, Port Neches-Groves High School and Cleburne High School before returning to Abilene, Texas in 1972 where he has lived ever since.

At Hardin–Simmons, he played alongside Bulldog Turner, who later starred for the Chicago Bears in the NFL. At McMurry he coached players like Les Cowan, Brad Rowland and Grant Teaff.

Moore was the only person to be inducted into the athletic halls of fame at both Hardin–Simmons University and McMurry University. Since Moore played for Hardin-Simmons and coached at McMurry, both schools created a trophy named in his honor for the crosstown game.

References

Wilford Moore Wikipedia


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