(
pictured):
Stan Jones and
Randy White. The
College Football Hall of Fame has commemorated many of the sport's most outstanding and most innovative personalities. Among them are six former Maryland players and four former Maryland head coaches. In 1980,
Bob Ward became the first Maryland player in the College Football Hall of Fame. He also served as the team's head coach in 1967 and 1968, but without much success. In 1983, the Hall of Fame inducted former quarterback
Jack Scarbath, who led Maryland to a school-record 22-game winning streak and an upset victory over first-ranked
Tennessee in the 1952 "
Game of the Century". That season, Scarbath was named a first-team All-American by unanimous consensus and finished as the runner-up in the
Heisman Trophy vote. Center
Bob Pellegrini was inducted in 1996. Named the ACC's
best blocker in 1955, Pellegrini was a starter on the
1953 national championship team, the
AP Poll eighth-ranked
1954 team, and the third-ranked
1955 team. Two former Maryland players have been inducted into both the College Football Hall of Fame and the
Pro Football Hall of Fame for accomplishments during their professional playing careers. Tackle
Stan Jones was named a unanimous consensus All-American after the 1953 national championship campaign. After graduation, he embarked upon a 13-year NFL career that included seven consecutive
Pro Bowls. Jones was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1991 and the College Football Hall of Fame in 2000. Defensive tackle
Randy White was twice named to the All-American first team, the second time by unanimous consensus in 1974. That season, White helped Maryland to an ACC championship and received numerous lineman and player of the year accolades. During his 14-year NFL career, White played in three Super Bowls, six
National Football Conference championships, and missed only one game. In 1968,
Clark Shaughnessy became the first Maryland coach inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. Shaughnessy pioneered the
pass-oriented variation of the
T-formation that largely replaced the
single-wing, and he coached Maryland for two non-consecutive seasons in the 1940s. Shaughnessy mentored Terrapins quarterback and future head coach
Tommy Mont, the third-ranked passer in the nation in 1942.
Bear Bryant, inducted in 1986, is best known for leading
Alabama to six national championships, but his first head coaching job came at Maryland in 1945. Bryant's team finished the season 6–2–1, and he later said that the Maryland position was the one "that launched me to whatever I've accomplished".
Jim Tatum, inducted in 1984, served as Maryland's head coach
from 1947 to 1955, and his teams secured two national championships, three conference championships, and five
bowl game appearances. Tatum compiled a 73–15–4 record without a losing season, and he remains Maryland's all-time
winningest coach of the modern era. When
Jerry Claiborne arrived in 1972, Maryland had suffered through seven straight losing seasons. In his second year, Claiborne engineered a turnaround, and from 1973 to 1978, he led Maryland to six consecutive bowl games and three consecutive ACC championships. After losing the to
Houston, Maryland narrowly missed an opportunity for the national championship. Claiborne was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1999. Since 1982, the
University of Maryland Athletic Hall of Fame has enshrined some of the school's greatest athletes. Inductees have included sixty-two football players, three of whom also served as head coach, and two head football coaches who were not alumni of the university.
athletic director, professor,
university president, and politician. Other football players in the 1982 class included
Bosey Berger, a
Major League Baseball player;
Burton Shipley, Maryland's first
basketball coach; and
Fred Linkous, a
Lacrosse Hall of Famer.
College Football Hall of Fame University of Maryland Athletic Hall of Fame References: ==Glossary==