A multitalented athlete, Wood earned a total of ten
varsity letters at Harvard: three each in football,
hockey, and
baseball, plus one in
tennis. Wood first made his national reputation as a sophomore in 1929, when he led Harvard to a comeback 20-20 tie with
Army: Wood threw a 40-yard touchdown pass and drop-kicked two extra points, including the kick to tie the game at the end. He appeared on the cover of the November 23, 1931 issue of
Time magazine. He was the consensus first-team quarterback as selected by most of the
1931 College Football All-America Teams. Wood was at the center of a controversy involving the famous sportscaster
Ted Husing. Commenting on Wood's poor play in the 1931 Harvard-
Dartmouth game, Husing opined, "Wood is certainly playing a putrid game today." Two plays later, Wood threw the winning touchdown pass in Harvard's 7–6 win. Harvard fans protested Husing's use of the word "putrid", and the Harvard athletic director notified Husing's boss,
William S. Paley at
CBS, that Husing would be banned from broadcasting Harvard home games. Wood was well known for his role in Harvard's rivalry with Yale, which was led by its own three-sport star,
Albie Booth. In the words of the 1931
Time article, "the essence of Harvard football this year, as Booth has been the essence of Yale football since his sophomore year, is William Barry Wood Jr., called "Barry" by sportswriters and "Bill" by friends." In 1930, the Harvard defense stymied Booth while Wood threw two touchdown passes, leading Harvard to a 13-0 win. Wood was elected to the
College Football Hall of Fame in 1980. ==Medical career==