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We Have Lost The Great Harry ShufordModerators: PonyPride, SmooPower
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We Have Lost The Great Harry ShufordI received a phone call a this afternoon letting me know that Harry Shuford had passed away this morning. I am sure that all of you know that Harry was a star on our 1935 National Championship Team that went to the Rose Bowl. Harry was not only a great player for the Mustangs but also a great man and we will miss him tremendously.
![]() Former SMU star Shuford dies at 92 He was fullback on Mustangs' 1935 championship team ![]() 02:00 AM CDT on Thursday, May 17, 2007 By KEITH WHITMIRE / The Dallas Morning News [email protected] Harry Shuford, a two-time All American and tri-captain of SMU's 1936 Rose Bowl team, died Wednesday. He was 92. Shuford was a fullback on SMU's 1935 national championship team that lost to Stanford in the 1936 Rose Bowl. "He was just a first-class person, I'll tell you that," said Maco Stewart, a teammate on the 1935 team. "He wasn't a fast fellow, he was just steady. You could count on him. He wasn't going to make mistakes." Shuford was an All-American in 1934 and 1935 but later became known as the boyhood idol of Doak Walker, who won the 1948 Heisman Trophy while playing for SMU. Shuford befriended the young Walker, who was said to have chosen the number 37 when he arrived at SMU because that was Shuford's number. Shuford was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles but attended law school at SMU, where he graduated first in his class. He went on to a prominent career in law and banking. He served as an assistant attorney general for the state of Texas as well as general counsel for Dr Pepper. After switching careers to banking, he was the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and the chairman of the board of First National Bank of Dallas. Among his many civic endeavors, Shuford was the president of the Cotton Bowl Athletic Association as well as the Salesmanship Club of Dallas. "He was involved in everything and lived a full and rich life," his son, David Shuford, said. "He was pretty modest about [his football career] over the years, but at the end he talked about his football days and was proud of it." Shuford died in his sleep at Presbyterian Village North where he had lived the last eight years, his son said. A private graveside service will be followed by a public memorial at 11 a.m. Friday at Oak Lawn United Methodist Church. http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/spt/stories/051707dnsposmushuford.3662dfe.html "THE SMU BLVD - - NO PLACE ELSE" (retired)
I am a little late with this, but Mr. Shufford was a champion in all respects. He made SMU, Dallas and Texas great. While I am sad he passed, it is nice to remember what he meant to SMU. RIP - Thanks for being a Mustang.
An atheist is a guy who watches a Notre Dame-SMU football game and
doesn't care who wins. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
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