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Emory Bellard

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Emory Dilworth Bellard (December 17, 1927 – February 10, 2011) was an American college and high school football coach and the inventor of the Wishbone formation. He was the head football coach at Texas A&M University from 1972 to 1978 and at Mississippi State University from 1979 until 1985.

Key Information

Bellard died on February 10, 2011, after battling amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's disease) since the fall of 2010.[1][2]

Bellard is a member of the Texas Sports Hall of Fame and the Texas High School Sports Hall Of Fame. He also won two National Championships at Texas as the offensive coordinator.

Early life

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A native of Luling, Texas, Bellard was one of 12 children. His father was a geologist and driller who arrived in Central Texas in the late 1920s to take part in the emerging oil boom.[3]

When he was 12 years old his family moved to Aransas Pass, Texas to facilitate his father’s recuperation after an accident, but his father succumbed to the injuries and died when Bellard was young. His mother managed a fishing bungalow, where he helped clean fish and made beds. As a junior he transferred to Aransas Pass High School so that he could play football. He graduated from the school in 1945.[4]

He went on to attend the University of Texas at Austin, where he played running back during his freshman year under coach Dana X. Bible. Bellard broke his leg during his sophomore season and transferred to Southwest Texas State University (now Texas State University) from which he graduated in 1949.

Coaching career

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High school

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Bellard was a high school head coach for 21 seasons, where he achieved a record of 177–59–9 and won three state titles. During his time as a high school coach, he explored the idea of running an offense out of a three-back formation.

Bellard started coaching in 1949 and became the head coach at Ingleside High School, a Class B school in Ingleside, Texas in 1952. He guided the school to two consecutive regional wins (as far as Class B football went) in 1953 and 1954, and a street near Ingleside High School is named after him.[5] He was then hired to succeed Joe Kerbel at Breckenridge High School, then a state powerhouse in the second-highest UIL classification. Under coach Kerbel and his predecessor Cooper Robbins, Breckenridge won three 3A state championships in 1951, 1952, and 1954. Bellard continued that winning tradition with state titles in 1958 and 1959.

In 1960, Bellard was selected over Gordon Wood to replace Bob Harrell as head coach at Central High School in San Angelo, Texas. San Angelo Central was playing in the highly competitive District 2-4A, nicknamed the "Little Southwest Conference", against perennial state champions such as Abilene and Odessa Permian. Bellard amassed a 59–19–2 record at San Angelo Central, winning a 4A state championship in 1966. He then left the high school ranks for the University of Texas at Austin.

During this time he coached at the 1960 Texas High School All-Star football game and was named the 1962 West Texas Coach of the Year.

In 1988, Bellard returned to the high school level, coaching Spring Westfield High School near Houston, Texas, to a 41–22–5 record over six seasons.

At Spring Westfield he won the 1993 Distinguished Coach Award from the National Football Foundation.

College

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Texas

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In 1967, Bellard was hired as the linebackers coach at the University of Texas at Austin and was moved to offensive coordinator in 1968. At this time, he developed and implemented the wishbone formation, a system inspired by the variations of the veer developed by Homer Rice and run by Bill Yeoman at the University of Houston.[6] He helped Texas to win 4 straight Southwest Conference Championships, 2 National Championships and 2 Cotton Bowls.

Texas A&M

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Bellard became head coach at Texas A&M in 1972, taking over head-coaching duties from Gene Stallings. In his seven years at Texas A&M, he finished with a record of 48–27 and three top-15 finishes.

Acting as his own offensive coordinator, Bellard hired former high school football coaches to assist him as backfield coaches, including Gil Bartosh (1973) and Chuck Moser (1974–1978). Both Bartosh and Moser had won Texas state championships. In 1975, however, Bellard hired Tom Wilson away from Jim Carlen's Texas Tech coaching staff to serve as the Aggies' offensive coordinator. For the defensive department, Bellard hired Melvin Robertson, one of the top defensive coaches, away from Bill Yeoman's coaching staff at the University of Houston. Robertson became defensive coordinator, and among his assistants were R. C. Slocum and Dan LaGrasta.

Bellard's first two seasons at Texas A&M were difficult, as his Aggies finished 3–8 and 5–6, respectively. In 1974, with a pair of his own recruiting classes suited to run the wishbone formation, the Aggies went 8–3, then followed it up with two 10–2 seasons, including a pair of wins over Royal and the Longhorns and three consecutive bowl games. After starting the 1978 season 4–0, Bellard resigned mid-season after two consecutive losses: 33–0 to Houston and 24–6 to Baylor.

Bellard helped to desegregate college football by recruiting African-American athletes to Texas A&M. He is also helped to implement women’s athletic programs at the university. While at A&M he was named the 1975 AFC College Coach of the Year and received the 1975 Academy of American Football Gold Cup.[4]

He was named to the Texas A&M University’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 1994.[4]

Mississippi State

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After A&M, Bellard spent seven seasons as head coach at Mississippi State University. His best years as the Bulldogs head coach were in 1980 and 1981, when his team finished 9–3 and 8–4, respectively. Also, Bellard was the coach when Mississippi State defeated number 1, undefeated Alabama 6-3 in Jackson, Mississippi in 1980.

However, the Bulldogs significantly regressed after 1981. In the next four seasons, he only won a total of four games in SEC play. Before the 1985 season, Bellard boldly predicted that the Bulldogs would rebound and win their first SEC title since 1941. They not only failed to do so, but went winless in SEC play. Bellard was fired after the season.[7]

Head coaching record

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College

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Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Texas A&M Aggies (Southwest Conference) (1972–1978)
1972 Texas A&M 3–8 2–5 T–7th
1973 Texas A&M 5–6 3–4 6th
1974 Texas A&M 8–3 5–2 T–2nd 15 16
1975 Texas A&M 10–2 6–1 T–1st L Liberty 12 11
1976 Texas A&M 10–2 6–2 3rd W Sun 8 7
1977 Texas A&M 8–4 4–4 5th L Astro-Bluebonnet
1978 Texas A&M 4–2* 1–2*
Texas A&M: 48–27 27–20 *Bellard resigned after 6 games
Mississippi State Bulldogs (Southeastern Conference) (1979–1985)
1979 Mississippi State 3–8 2–4 8th
1980 Mississippi State 9–3 5–1 3rd L Sun 19
1981 Mississippi State 8–4 4–2 3rd W Hall of Fame 17
1982 Mississippi State 5–6 2–4 8th
1983 Mississippi State 3–8 1–5 8th
1984 Mississippi State 4–7 1–5 T–9th
1985 Mississippi State 5–6 0–6 10th
Mississippi State: 37–42 15–27
Total: 85–69
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

High school

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Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Ingleside Mustangs () (1952–1954)
1952 Ingleside 8–3 1st
1953 Ingleside 12–0 1st
1954 Ingleside 12–0 1st
Ingleside: 32–3
Breckenridge Buckaroos () (1955–1959)
1955 Breckenridge 10–3 1st
1956 Breckenridge 4–6
1957 Breckenridge 7–3–1 1st
1958 Breckenridge 13–1 1st
1959 Breckenridge 11–1–2 1st
Breckenridge: 45–14–3
San Angelo Central Bobcats () (1960–1966)
1960 San Angelo Central 5–5
1961 San Angelo Central 10–2 1st
1962 San Angelo Central 8–4
1963 San Angelo Central 9–2–1 1st
1964 San Angelo Central 5–4–1
1965 San Angelo Central 9–1
1966 San Angelo Central 13–1 1st
San Angelo Central: 59–19–2
Spring Westfield Mustangs () (1988–1993)
1988 Spring Westfield 5–4–1
1989 Spring Westfield 6–4–1
1990 Spring Westfield 5–5
1991 Spring Westfield 8–3 2nd
1992 Spring Westfield 10–1–2 1st
1993 Spring Westfield 7–5–1 2nd
Spring Westfield: 41–22–5
Total: 177–58–10
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Emory Dilworth Bellard (December 17, 1927 – February 10, 2011) was an American football coach who invented the wishbone offensive formation and achieved success at both high school and college levels.[1][2] Bellard's coaching career spanned 43 years, beginning with high school teams in Texas where he compiled a 177–59–9 record over 21 seasons and secured three state championships at Breckenridge High School in 1958 and 1959, and at San Angelo Central High School in 1966.[3][4] As an assistant coach at the University of Texas from 1967 to 1971, he refined the wishbone, a triple-option running attack that revolutionized offensive strategies by emphasizing speed and misdirection.[2][1] Appointed head coach at Texas A&M in 1972, Bellard implemented the wishbone to transform the Aggies into a Southwest Conference co-champion in 1975, with a 48–27 record over seven seasons that included three bowl appearances and a national lead in total defense that year.[5][1] He later coached Mississippi State from 1980 to 1985, contributing to an overall major college record of 85–69, before returning to high school coaching in Texas until retirement in 1993.[6] Bellard died from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and was posthumously honored in halls of fame including the Texas Sports Hall of Fame and Texas High School Football Hall of Fame.[3][4][7]

Early Life

Childhood and Education

Emory Dilworth Bellard was born on December 17, 1927, in Luling, Texas, to Pearl and Louie Cass Bellard, members of a working-class family in which his father labored in the local oilfields.[2][8] He spent his early years in Luling on "Davis Hill," immersed in a large extended family that included twenty male first cousins, with whom he organized informal games that served as his initial introduction to football fundamentals amid the pervasive Texas high school football culture of the era.[9][1] Bellard's formal education and athletic involvement began at the University of Texas at Austin, where he played running back before transferring to Southwest Texas State Teachers College (now Texas State University), reflecting a modest collegiate playing career without notable prominence or professional prospects.[1] This path, marked by self-reliant observation of local games and hands-on play rather than elite recruitment, underscored his grassroots grounding in the sport during the post-World War II period.[1][9] Upon completing his education, Bellard entered Texas public schools as a teacher and assistant coach, bypassing traditional pipelines and leveraging his practical knowledge for an unassisted entry into the profession in the late 1940s and early 1950s.[1][7] This bootstrapped transition highlighted the discipline instilled by his family's circumstances and the era's emphasis on hard work in regional athletics.[2]

Coaching Career

High School Coaching

Bellard commenced his head coaching tenure at Ingleside High School from 1952 to 1954, achieving consecutive regional championships during this period.[1] He then assumed leadership at Breckenridge High School from 1955 to 1959, guiding the team to back-to-back Class 3A state championships in 1958 and 1959.[1] [5] From 1960 to 1966, he coached San Angelo Central High School, where his squad secured the Class 4A state title in 1966 after defeating Houston Spring Branch in the championship game on December 17.[1] [5] Over 21 seasons as a high school head coach, Bellard amassed a record of 177 wins, 59 losses, and 9 ties, including the three Texas state championships that underscored his proficiency in talent development amid resource constraints typical of public high school programs.[3] [10] His methods prioritized ground-oriented attacks and stringent discipline, fostering consistent success in demanding districts by emphasizing execution of fundamentals over star recruitment.[11] In recognition of his rising stature, Bellard served as head coach for the 1960 Texas High School All-Star football game in Dallas.[1] [9] After collegiate stints, he returned to high school ranks at Spring Westfield High School from 1988 to 1993, reversing a program mired at four wins across the previous two seasons through renewed focus on disciplined play and basic offensive schemes.[12] [10] These efforts across multiple Texas schools built his reputation for revitalizing underperforming teams via rigorous training and strategic emphasis on controllable elements like blocking and tackling proficiency.[3]

College Assistant Roles

Bellard joined the coaching staff of the University of Texas Longhorns as an offensive assistant under head coach Darrell Royal in 1967, bringing experience from successful high school programs where he had implemented run-heavy schemes.[1] In this role, he focused on adapting those strategies to college-level athleticism, emphasizing precise execution and physical preparation to exploit defensive alignments, which contributed to the team's undefeated regular seasons and extended winning streaks, including 30 consecutive Southwest Conference victories from 1968 to 1970.[13] Under Bellard's influence on offensive play-calling and adjustments, the Longhorns achieved back-to-back national championships in 1969 and 1970, with the team posting dominant rushing performances that underscored the efficiency of the evolving schemes: an average of 363 rushing yards per game in 1969 and 374.5 in 1970, alongside minimized turnovers through ball-control principles that prioritized handoffs over risky passes.[14][15] These metrics reflected causal improvements in preparation, as Bellard stressed film study and conditioning to counter faster college defenses, directly linking schematic discipline to on-field dominance without relying on aerial attacks.[1] The Longhorns' sustained success elevated Bellard's profile, positioning him for head coaching opportunities; following Gene Stallings' dismissal after the 1971 season, he was hired as head coach at Texas A&M in 1972, realizing his goal of leading a major college program.[1][5]

Head Coach at Texas A&M

Bellard was appointed head coach and athletic director at Texas A&M University on December 11, 1971, succeeding Phil Bennett, and began his tenure with the Aggies in the 1972 season amid a program that had endured nine consecutive losing seasons in the Southwest Conference.[1] Over his six full seasons and partial seventh, he compiled an overall record of 48 wins and 27 losses, marking a revival from prior mediocrity through emphasis on disciplined execution and offensive efficiency suited to the team's personnel.[7] His teams achieved winning records in four of his first five full seasons, including 10-2 in 1976, culminating in a co-Southwest Conference championship in 1975—the program's first since 1941.[16] Bellard's strategic approach yielded three consecutive bowl appearances from 1975 to 1977, a feat not seen at Texas A&M since the 1940s, with a notable 37-7 victory over Florida in the 1977 Sun Bowl highlighting effective game planning against Southeastern opponents.[9][7] These successes stemmed from instilling a culture of accountability and leveraging run-heavy schemes that maximized available talent, enabling competitive showings against rivals like the University of Texas, though the Aggies split series with the Longhorns during his tenure.[6] In recruiting, Bellard pragmatically expanded outreach to Black athletes to bolster talent depth in a Southwest Conference increasingly pressured by demographic shifts and competitive necessities, signing eight Black players in his inaugural 1972 class—more than the program had previously integrated despite earlier hesitancy.[17] This move, among the earliest large-scale efforts by a conference coach, addressed talent shortages from traditional pipelines and contributed to on-field improvements without ideological framing, as evidenced by subsequent player contributions to winning campaigns.[18] Decline set in during 1978, with the Aggies starting 4-0 before consecutive losses to Arkansas and Baylor amid mounting scrutiny from alumni and fans over perceived stagnation in recruiting pipelines disrupted by regional competition and internal administrative frictions.[19] On October 24, 1978, Bellard resigned midseason as both coach and athletic director, citing unsustainable pressure and lack of institutional backing from university president Jarvis Miller during a dispute involving assistant coach promotions and player unrest, ending his tenure with the program he had initially stabilized but ultimately unable to sustain amid escalating expectations.[20][21]

Head Coach at Mississippi State

Bellard was appointed head coach at Mississippi State University on December 18, 1978, succeeding Bob Tyler, and led the Bulldogs for seven seasons from 1979 to 1985, amassing an overall record of 37–42 (.468) and a Southeastern Conference mark of 15–27 (.357).[22][6] His tenure began with modest struggles in 1979 (3–8 overall, 2–4 SEC), but peaked in 1980 with a 9–3 record, including a historic 6–3 upset victory over #1 Alabama on October 25—leveraging Bellard's expertise as the Wishbone's inventor to counter the Crimson Tide's own triple-option attack—and a Sun Bowl appearance, though the Bulldogs lost 31–17 to #8 Nebraska.[23][6] The 1981 season followed at 8–4 (5–3 SEC), capped by a 10–7 win over Kansas in the Hall of Fame Classic, marking the program's first bowl victory since 1941 and a #19 final AP ranking.[7][6] Subsequent years exposed persistent challenges in the talent-scarce Mississippi recruiting base, where Bellard's Wishbone variations—reliant on skilled option quarterbacks and blocking backs—faltered against the SEC's defensive powerhouses like Auburn, Georgia, and LSU, yielding low-scoring outputs and offensive mismatches.[24] For instance, the 1983 team averaged just 13.1 points per game in a 3–8 campaign (1–5 SEC), while 1984 saw 18.0 points in a 4–7 finish (1–5 SEC), reflecting scheme limitations without the elite athleticism available in Texas pipelines.[25] The 1982 (5–6, 2–4 SEC) and 1985 (5–6, 0–6 SEC) seasons extended a streak of four consecutive non-winning records, underscoring rebuild failures amid conference parity and inadequate depth for sustained triple-option execution.[6][26] Bellard's dismissal on November 28, 1985—immediately relieving him of duties despite an ongoing contract through January 15, 1986—followed the 1985 team's collapse from preseason expectations, including his own bold prediction of an SEC title, amid zero conference wins and consistent underperformance against regional rivals.[27][28] This outcome highlighted the SEC's unforgiving volatility, where schematic innovations proved insufficient without superior talent acquisition in a non-Texas environment.[29]

Return to High School Coaching

After concluding his college head coaching tenure at Mississippi State University in 1985, Bellard returned to high school football in 1988 as head coach at Westfield High School in Spring, Texas, a program that had struggled with only four wins in the previous two seasons.[12] [30] Over six seasons from 1988 to 1993, he compiled a 41–22–5 record with the Mustangs, guiding the team to playoff appearances after an initial near-miss and reaching the Class 5A Division I quarterfinals in his final year with a 20–0 loss to Plano.[30] [31] This period reflected Bellard's shift to a lower-pressure environment focused on developing young players through emphasis on execution and discipline, away from the high-stakes college recruiting and media scrutiny that marked his earlier career setbacks at Texas A&M and Mississippi State.[30] [1] His tenure contributed to a career-high school record of 177–59–9 across 21 seasons, underscoring a return to roots in Texas prep football where he had previously achieved state championships.[10] Bellard retired following the 1993 season at age 65, ending a coaching career spanning over four decades that began in 1949.[10] [31]

Innovations in Football

Development of the Wishbone Offense

Emory Bellard devised the Wishbone offense in 1968 as offensive coordinator for the University of Texas Longhorns, building on prior option schemes through iterative practice sessions to emphasize run efficiency and defensive misdirection.[14][32] The formation aligns a quarterback under center with an offset fullback positioned a step behind and to the side, flanked by two halfbacks in a "Y" configuration, enabling a triple-option attack where the quarterback reads the defensive end to decide between handing off to the fullback, keeping for a dive or pitch to a halfback.[1][33] This setup addressed veer offense vulnerabilities—such as predictable pitch reads—by incorporating the fullback as a lead blocker or decoy, which forced defenses to account for multiple threats simultaneously, thereby reducing tackling angles and enhancing yardage gains through superior blocking leverage and ball security.[34] Under Bellard's scheme, Texas achieved dominant rushing outputs, averaging 363 yards per game in 1969 and 374.5 in 1970, which powered undefeated seasons and national championships in both years via consistent ground control that limited opponents' possessions.[15][35] The offense's empirical success stemmed from its first-principles focus on quarterback decision-making under pressure, prioritizing option reads over pass-heavy trends, which minimized turnovers (Texas fumbled just 12 times combined in those seasons) and exploited athletic mismatches in the backfield.[15] The Wishbone's adoption spread rapidly, with Oklahoma implementing it in 1971 to set an NCAA single-season rushing record of 472.4 yards per game, fueling national titles in 1974 and 1975, while Alabama under Bear Bryant adapted it post-1970 to reverse early-decade struggles, securing three national championships between 1973 and 1979 through analogous run dominance.[36][37] These outcomes validated the formation's causal efficacy in resource-constrained environments, where recruiting speed for options outweighed lineman bulk, though its decline by the 1980s correlated with NCAA rules liberalizing substitutions and the rise of pro-style passing offenses that favored spread concepts over triple options.[36] Despite this evolution, the Wishbone's legacy persists in verifiable metrics: programs using variants won 12 national titles from 1969 to 1985, underscoring its role in elevating run-centric strategies before aerial innovations reshaped the sport.[14]

Legacy and Impact

Achievements and Honors

Bellard was inducted into the Texas A&M Athletic Hall of Fame in 1994, the Texas Sports Hall of Fame in 1995, and the Texas High School Football Hall of Fame in 2011.[1][3][10] During his 21 seasons as a high school head coach in Texas, Bellard compiled a record of 177 wins, 59 losses, and 9 ties, including three state championships that demonstrated his early tactical acumen in run-oriented schemes: back-to-back Class 3A titles at Breckenridge High School in 1958 and 1959, followed by a Class 4A championship at San Angelo Central High School in 1966.[3][1] As offensive coordinator at the University of Texas, Bellard devised the wishbone formation in 1968, which powered the Longhorns to Southwest Conference titles from 1969 to 1974 and national championships in 1969 and 1970; between 1969 and 1979, teams employing the wishbone offense won or shared seven national titles, underscoring its effectiveness in prioritizing triple-option rushing plays that overwhelmed defenses prior to the modern passing era's dominance.[2][3] In 1975, as head coach at Texas A&M, Bellard earned American Football Coaches Association College Coach of the Year honors after guiding the Aggies to an 8-3 record and a Southwest Conference co-championship, their first Cotton Bowl appearance since 1941.[3]

Criticisms and Challenges

Bellard's tenure as head coach at Texas A&M concluded prematurely amid mounting pressures from fans and alumni, despite a respectable 48-27 overall record from 1972 to midway through the 1978 season. On October 25, 1978, following two straight losses that dropped the Aggies to 2-3, he resigned as both head coach and athletic director after seeking but not receiving assurances of continued support from university president H. Rollins Gesell. This decision reflected the intense expectations at major programs, where even consistent winning seasons and three bowl appearances— including a 1975 Southwestern Conference co-championship—failed to quell dissatisfaction with inconsistent results against top competition.[19][7][1] His subsequent stint at Mississippi State from 1979 to 1985 proved more challenging, with a 37-42 record that fell below .500 and led to his dismissal on November 28, 1985, after a 45-27 loss to intrastate rival Ole Miss; the university bought out the final year of his contract for $125,000. While highlights included a historic 6-3 upset over No. 1 Alabama on October 25, 1980—leveraging Bellard's defensive knowledge of the Wishbone against Bear Bryant's Crimson Tide—and two top-20 finishes, the Bulldogs struggled for sustained success in the Southeastern Conference, where recruiting and competitive dynamics differed markedly from Texas. This sub-.500 performance underscored difficulties in replicating prior achievements outside the Southwest Conference's talent pipeline.[27][38][39] Bellard's rigid commitment to run-heavy schemes like the Wishbone and its variations drew internal frustration, particularly at Texas A&M, where administrators grew weary of the conservative approach amid calls for more dynamic play. As college football shifted toward passing-oriented offenses in the 1980s, the empirical decline in his teams' effectiveness highlighted limitations in adapting to defensive evolutions and broader strategic trends, contributing to career stagnation after initial innovations. No substantiated ethical controversies emerged, with challenges rooted instead in performance metrics and program demands.[21]

Personal Life

Family and Later Years

Bellard was married to his first wife, Mary Kay Watkins, for 44 years until her death in 1994.[1][40] The couple had three children: sons Emory Dilworth Bellard Jr. and Robert "Bob" Bellard, and daughter Debra Lyn Bellard-Young.[8][40] Emory Jr., who died in 2003 at age 52, and Debra Lyn, who predeceased her father, were part of the family unit that supported Bellard through his career transitions, including moves from Texas high schools to assistant and head coaching roles at universities in Texas and Mississippi.[41][40][1] Following Mary Kay's death, Bellard married Susan in 1994, with whom he shared 17 years until his own passing.[8][1] Bob Bellard carried on the family tradition in coaching, serving as head football coach at Bryan High School in Texas.[8] The family's stability amid Bellard's professional demands exemplified a traditional structure, with no public records of personal controversies or disruptions.[1] After retiring from coaching in January 1995 following a stint at Spring Westfield High School, Bellard settled in Central Texas, residing in areas like Georgetown.[5][42] His post-retirement life centered on personal reflection and limited public engagements tied to his Texas roots, maintaining a low profile away from the gridiron.[9]

Death and Tributes

Emory Bellard died on February 10, 2011, at the age of 83 from complications of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive neurodegenerative disease also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, at the Tiffin House care facility in Georgetown, Texas.[2][1][43] He had been diagnosed with ALS in 2010 after experiencing symptoms that impaired motor function.[44][1] Following his death, tributes from the Texas college football community emphasized Bellard's invention of the Wishbone formation, which powered national championships at the University of Texas and Southwest Conference titles at Texas A&M, crediting it with revolutionizing run-oriented offenses through triple-option execution.[16][2] Texas A&M officials and former players highlighted his coaching integrity and the formation's enduring tactical efficiency, while University of Texas figures, including associates of longtime coach Darrell Royal under whom Bellard served as an assistant, recalled his disciplined approach to player development and game preparation.[16][7] Media obituaries, such as those in The New York Times and Los Angeles Times, focused on his innovations' measurable impact—evidenced by undefeated seasons and bowl victories—over subsequent head-coaching records marred by personnel and administrative challenges.[2][7] A funeral service was held on February 12, 2011, at 2:00 p.m. at First Baptist Church in Georgetown, arranged by Ramsey Funeral Home & Crematorium, drawing attendees from Texas high school and college football circles who respected Bellard's commitment to ground-control strategies that prioritized physical dominance and ball security.[45][8] His wife, Susan, survived him, and no public eulogies veered into extraneous commentary, instead underscoring verifiable outcomes like the Wishbone's role in enabling 30 consecutive games without a punt during its Texas tenure.[2][43]

References

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