Inducted 1975
Date of Birth
4/11/1903
Birthplace
Dayton, TN
School
Florida A&M University (1945-1969)
Bio
Jake Gaither had a simple coaching philosophy, one which has become the most-quoted recruiting theory in football. He wanted his players "mo-bile, a-gile and hos-tile". He found enough players of that caliber, and taught them well enough, that he will never be forgotten whenever the conversation settles upon the names of football's great coaches. Gaither was an All-Conference end at Knoxville College. He coached at the academy level, Henderson Institute and St. Paul's, 1927-36. He moved to Florida A&M as assistant coach in 1937 and was Florida A&M head coach 1945-69. His 25-year record was 203-36-4, a percentage of .844. His teams won their conference 18 times and were black college national champions six times. He had a bachelor's degree from Knoxville, 1927, and master's from Ohio State, 1937. In 1963, he wrote a book, "The Split Line T." Gaither was a member of the President's Council on Physical Fitness. In 1975, he was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame, received a Distinguished American Award from the Walter Camp Foundation, and received the A.A. Stagg Award from the American Football Coaches Association. The state of Florida produced a film "Coach and Teacher" portraying him as part of its "Great Floridian" series. In Tallahassee, a street, a park, a golf course, and a gymnasium were named for him. In a ten-year streak 1953-62, his teams went 87-7-1. He was a champion debater in college and a dynamic speaker afterward.
Stats
Wins 203
Losses 36
Ties 4
Class of 1975
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