Assistant and North Carolina Pre-Flight After graduating from the University of Alabama in 1936, Bryant was hired as the line coach under head coach
A. B. Hollingsworth at
Union University in
Jackson, Tennessee, but he left that position when offered an assistant coaching position under
Frank Thomas at the
University of Alabama. Over the next four years, the team compiled a 29–5–3 record. In 1937, he was offered a position as the line coach for
VMI under
Pooley Hubert, but Bryant ultimately declined the offered and signed a two-year contract to stay with Alabama. In 1940, he left Alabama to become the line coach at
Vanderbilt University under first-year
Red Sanders. During their
1940 season, Bryant served as head coach of the Commodores for their 7–7 tie against
Kentucky as Sanders was recovering from an
appendectomy. After the
1941 season, Bryant was offered the head coaching job at the
University of Arkansas. However,
Pearl Harbor was bombed soon thereafter, and Bryant declined the position to join the
United States Navy. In 1942, he served as the ends coach for the
Georgia Pre-Flight Skycrackers. Bryant then served off North Africa, on the
United States Army Transport SS Uruguay, seeing no combat action. On February 12, 1943, in the North Atlantic the oil tanker
USS Salmonie suffered a steering fault and accidentally rammed the SS
Uruguay amidships. The tanker's bow made a 70-foot (21m) hole in
Uruguays hull and penetrated her, killing 13 soldiers and injuring 50. The
Uruguays crew contained the damage by building a temporary bulkhead and three days later she reached Bermuda. President Franklin D. Roosevelt decorated
Uruguays Captain, Albert Spaulding, with the Merchant Marine Distinguished Service Medal for saving many lives, his ship and her cargo. Bryant was later granted an honorable discharge to train recruits and coach the
North Carolina Navy Pre-Flight football team. One of the players he coached for the Navy was the future
Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback
Otto Graham. While in the navy, Bryant attained the rank of
lieutenant commander. After meeting with Byrd the next day, Bryant received the job as head coach of the
Maryland Terrapins. In his only season at Maryland, Bryant led the team to a 6–2–1 record. However, Bryant and Byrd came into conflict. In the most prominent incident, while Bryant was on vacation, Byrd brought back a player that was suspended by Bryant for not following the team rules. After
the 1945 season, Bryant left Maryland to take over as head coach at the
University of Kentucky.
Kentucky Bryant coached at Kentucky for eight seasons. Under Bryant, Kentucky made its first bowl appearance in
1947 and won its first
Southeastern Conference title in 1950. The
1950 Kentucky Wildcats football team finished with a school best 11–1 record and concluded the season with a victory over
Bud Wilkinson's top-ranked
Oklahoma Sooners in the
Sugar Bowl. The final AP poll was released before bowl games in that era, so Kentucky ended the regular season ranked No. 7. But several other contemporaneous polls, as well as the Sagarin Ratings System applied retrospectively, declared Bryant's 1950 Wildcats to be the national champions, but neither the NCAA nor College Football Data Warehouse recognizes this claim. Bryant also led Kentucky to appearances in the
Great Lakes Bowl,
Orange Bowl, and
Cotton Bowl Classic. Though he led Kentucky's football program to its greatest achievement, Bryant resigned after the 1953 season because he felt that
Adolph Rupp's basketball team would always be the school's primary sport. The point shaving scandal that rocked the basketball program had Kentucky focus their energy on basketball, keeping Rupp on even after it had broken the rules in 1951, causing the Wildcats to be given the
death penalty for the 1952–53 season. Bryant tried to resign that year for
Arkansas but the school did not let him. Once it was confirmed that Rupp would not resign, Bryant was even more determined to leave. Years after leaving Lexington, when Bryant was Alabama's athletic director in 1969, he called Rupp to ask if he had any recommendations for Alabama's new basketball coach. Rupp recommended
C. M. Newton, a former backup player at Kentucky in the late 1940s. Newton went on to lead the Crimson Tide to three straight SEC titles.
Texas A&M In 1954, Bryant accepted the head coaching job at
Texas A&M University. He also served as
athletic director. The
Aggies suffered through a grueling 1–9
season in 1954, which began with the infamous training camp in
Junction, Texas. The "survivors" were given the name "
Junction Boys". In a 1980 interview with
Time magazine, Bryant admitted that he had been too hard on the Junction Boys and "if I'd have been one of those players, I'd have quit too." The following year, Bryant's star back
John David Crow won the
Heisman Trophy, and the
1957 Aggies were in title contention until they lost to the #20
Rice Owls in
Houston, amid rumors that Alabama would be going after Bryant. Again, as at Kentucky, Bryant attempted to integrate the Texas A&M squad. "We'll be the last football team in the Southwest Conference to integrate", he was told by a Texas A&M official. "Well", Bryant replied, "then that's where we're going to finish in football." At the close of the 1957 season, having compiled an overall 25–14–2 record at Texas A&M, Bryant returned to Tuscaloosa to take the head coaching position, succeeding
Jennings B. Whitworth, as well as the athletic director job at Alabama. Bryant's first spring practice back at Alabama was much like what happened at Junction. Some of Bryant's assistants thought it was even more difficult, as dozens of players quit the team. After winning a combined four games in the three years before Bryant's arrival (including Alabama's only winless season on the field in modern times), the Tide went 5–4–1 in Bryant's
first season. The next year, in
1959, Alabama beat
Auburn and appeared in the inaugural
Liberty Bowl, the first time the Crimson Tide had beaten Auburn or appeared in a bowl game in six years. In the 1960 season, Bryant led Alabama to an 8–1–2 record and a #9 ranking in the final AP Poll. In 1961, with quarterback
Pat Trammell and football greats
Lee Roy Jordan and
Billy Neighbors, Alabama went 11–0 and defeated
Arkansas 10–3 in the
Sugar Bowl to claim the national championship. The next three years (1962–1964) featured
Joe Namath at quarterback and were among Bryant's finest. The 1962
Crimson Tide went 10–1, and the season ended with a 17–0 victory in the
Orange Bowl over
Bud Wilkinson's
Oklahoma Sooners. The Crimson Tide finished No. 5 in the AP Poll. The 1963
Crimson Tide went 9–2, and the ended with a 12–7 victory over
Ole Miss in the
Sugar Bowl, which was the first game between the two Southeastern Conference neighbors in almost twenty years, and only the second in thirty years. Alabama finished No. 8 in the AP Poll In
1964 the Tide went 10–0 in the regular season and won another national championship, but lost 21–17 to
Texas in the
Orange Bowl. The Tide ended up sharing the 1964 national title with
Arkansas, as the Razorbacks won the
Cotton Bowl Classic, and had beaten
Texas in Austin. Before 1968, the AP and UPI polls gave out their championships before the bowl games (with the exception of the 1965 season). The AP ceased this practice before the 1968 season, but the UPI continued until 1973. The
1965 Crimson Tide went 9–1–1 and repeated as champions after defeating
Nebraska, 39–28, in the
Orange Bowl. Coming off back-to-back national championship seasons, Bryant's
1966 Alabama team went undefeated, beating a strong
Nebraska team, 34–7, in the
Sugar Bowl. However, Alabama finished third in the AP Poll behind
Michigan State and champions
Notre Dame, who had previously
played to a 10–10 tie in a late regular season game. In a biography of Bryant written by Allen Barra, the author suggests that the major polling services refused to elect Alabama as national champion for a third straight year because of Alabama Governor
George Wallace's recent stand against integration. Alabama finished the year #8 at 8–2–1, losing 20–16 in the
Cotton Bowl Classic to
Texas A&M, coached by former Bryant player and assistant coach
Gene Stallings. In
1968 Bryant again could not match his previous successes, as the team finished No. 17 went 8–3, losing to the
Missouri, 35–10, in the
Gator Bowl. The
1969 and
1970 teams finished 6–5 and 6–5–1 respectively. After these disappointing efforts, many began to wonder if the 57-year-old Bryant was washed up. He himself began feeling the same way and considered either retiring from coaching or leaving college football for the
National Football League (NFL). For years, Bryant was accused of racism for refusing to recruit black players. (He had tried to do so at Kentucky in the late 40s but was denied by then University President, Herman Donovan.) Bryant said that the prevailing social climate and the overwhelming presence of noted segregationist George Wallace in Alabama, first as governor and then as a presidential candidate, did not let him do this. He finally was able to convince the administration to allow him to do so, leading to the recruitment of
Wilbur Jackson as Alabama's first black scholarship player who was recruited in 1969 and signed in the Spring of 1970. Junior-college transfer
John Mitchell became the first black player for Alabama in 1971 because freshmen, thus Jackson, were not eligible to play at that time. They would both be a credit to the university by their conduct and play, thus widening the door and warming the welcome for many more to follow. By 1973, one-third of the team's starters were black, and Mitchell became the Tide's first black coach that season. In 1971 Bryant began engineering a comeback. This included abandoning the pro-style offense tailored to departed quarterback
Scott Hunter's passing ability for the relatively new
wishbone formation.
Darrell Royal, the Texas football coach whose assistant,
Emory Bellard virtually invented the wishbone, taught Bryant its basics, but Bryant developed successful variations of the wishbone that Royal had never used. The change helped make the remainder of the decade a successful one for the Crimson Tide. The
1971 Alabama Crimson Tide football team went undefeated in the regular season and rose to No. 2 in the AP Poll, but were dominated by top-ranked
Nebraska 38–6 in the
Orange Bowl. In the 1972 season, Bryant led Alabama to a 10–0 start before falling to No. 9
Auburn in the
Iron Bowl and #7
Texas in the
Cotton Bowl. Bryant's
1973 squad went undefeated in the regular season and split national championships with
Notre Dame. Notre Dame later defeated Alabama, 24–23, in the
Sugar Bowl. The UPI thereafter moved its final poll until after the bowl games. The Crimson Tide fared very similarly in the 1974 season. The team went undefeated in the regular season but fell to the #9
Notre Dame in the
Orange Bowl 13–11. The 1975 season started off with a 20–7 setback to the
Missouri Tigers. Alabama won every game after that, including the
Sugar Bowl over
Penn State, to finish 11–1 but finished No. 3 in the final AP Poll. Alabama went 9–3 in the 1976 season. The Crimson Tide finished the season with a 36–6 victory over #7
UCLA in the
Liberty Bowl. Alabama finished No. 11 in the final AP Poll In the 1977 season, Alabama suffered a 31–24 loss to
Nebraska in the second game of the season. Alabama won every game after that including a 35–6 victory over #9
Ohio State in the
Sugar Bowl but
Notre Dame ended up as National Champions and Alabama was ranked No. 2. The
1978 Alabama Crimson Tide football team split the national title with
USC despite losing to the Trojans in September. The Trojans lost later in the year to three-loss
Arizona State and drop to number3. At the end of the year, number2 Alabama would beat undefeated and top-ranked
Penn State in the
Sugar Bowl, with the famous late-game goal line stand to preserve the victory. Bryant won his sixth and final national title in
1979 after a 24–9
Sugar Bowl victory over
Arkansas to cap a 12–0 season. Bryant led Alabama to a 10–2 record and a #6 ranking in the final AP Poll in the 1980 season. The season ended with a 30–2 victory over #6
Baylor in the
Cotton Bowl. In 1981, Bryant led the Crimson Tide to a 9–2–1 record and a #7 ranking in the final AP Poll. Bryant coached at Alabama for twenty-five years, winning six national titles (1961, 1964, 1965, 1973, 1978, and 1979) and thirteen SEC championships. Bryant's win over in-state rival
Auburn, coached by former Bryant assistant
Pat Dye on November 28, 1981, was Bryant's 315th as a head coach, which was the most of any head coach at that time. His all-time record as a coach was 323–85–17. ==Personal life and death==