In 1974 after the Horns beats the Aggies again, Ed Simonini saw very little good in the Longhorn team. He said, โEarl Campbell was the only guy Iโd shake hands with because heโs the only one I think is a man-coaches included.โ Marty Akins admitted bantering with Ed during the game. . Marty said, โhe was just bat-mouthing me. I just told him to look at the scoreboard.โ In 1975 the Aggies won, and Ed got back on his soap box and showed his lack of class as a winner. Ed only shook hands with Earl Campbell, Wyatt, and Jackson. Simonini said, โnow Iโm going to shoot off my mouth, I donโt think Marty Akins would have made any difference (in the game), and I donโt want to read that he would in the paper tomorrow.โ
That is a far cry from the gentle and kind-spirited email he sent to me in 2019 celebrating the life of Coach Emory Bellard.
Ed Begins by saying
Dear Billy,
Though weโve never met and went to โopposingโ schools, we share a love for Emory and how he โcoachedโ his players. Next to my father there was no other person that influenced more my thinking or development as a young adult. I was privileged to be one of several former players asked to speak at his funeral and told 2 stories that reflected what kind of a person Emory was.
#1 You may remember the undefeated 1975 A&M team that played Arkansas in Little Rock at the end of the year instead of the โtraditionalโ game versus t.u. Total fiasco for us, the โpiggesโ just kicked our butts. No National Championship, No SWC Championship, No undefeated season, lots of we should have never changed the traditional scheduleโ and second guessing. Youโve been there and know what Iโm talking about. Afterwards all the reporters are hammering Emory with their typical โwell coach, how do you feel right nowโ type questions. Instead of cutting them off, getting angry or refusing to answer, Emory is answering every question. Soft spoken, head down but never once losing his temper or acting out. They must have grilled him for at least 20 or 30 minutes and he answered every question!! Then he travels back to College Station, deals with a new group of reporters, alums, students and fans. Not once did I see him lose his composure, or blame anyone but himself for our loss. Take away โ Do your job. No matter the circumstances, itโs your job and your responsibility."
ED'S #77
#2 Remember your off-season conditioning, lots of running stairs, 40โs, weights, etc., right? At A&M someone had the bright idea to have players by position run 220โs, walk across the football field and run another, walk across, etc. etc. Weโd run 10 or 15 220s but it was ok because weโre all grouped by position and nobody could or would run much faster than anyone else. Itโs all good, right? And then Lester Hayes gets recruited and signs with A&M as a LINEBACKER!! This is the state 220 champion and all us slow, dumb LBโs are chasing his ass while heโs laughing, practically running backwards. Of course, the coaches are yelling at the stragglers (everyone but Lester) to stop โdogging itโ, run faster, etc. So now weโre all running like crazy and my foot is kicked by another player, I go down, stick my arm out to break the fall and pop my elbow out the opposite direction, OUCH!! Well, the 1st person to reach me was Emory. He sees my elbow and he gets on his concerned frown face. He takes my elbow, moves it back and forth and tries to push it back in place, DOUBLE OUCH!! I tell him itโs not going back in but damn if he doesnโt push on it again, YIKES!!! Thankfully Billy Pickard, our trainer, arrives and takes over. But now as Emory starts to stand up, he gets that goofy smile on his face, looks right at me and says, โGosh darn it Ed. Youโd do anything not to have to run those 220โsโ!! Take away โ No matter how much it hurts, never lose your sense of humor.
Ed Simonini