Rome News-Tribune

Rememberin­g the great Steve Webber

- COLUMN|LORAN SMITH

As Georgia fans are enjoying a bountiful football season with expectatio­ns being met and national rankings accompanyi­ng the Bulldogs much of the fall, we pause to pay our respects to former baseball coach Steve Webber who died of cancer this past weekend.

Webber moved UGA to the head of the class in baseball, which has always been important in Athens. In fact, in the days before and during World War I, baseball was the most important sport on most college campuses.

A feud took place between Georgia and Georgia Tech, starting in 1917, following

Tom Philpott’s no-hit game on Grant Field. The crafty Bulldog left-hander was one of the biggest heroes in Athens for years. Talk about a big deal — Philpott’s not allowing any hits against the Yellow Jackets help precipitat­e Tech’s decision not to compete with UGA sports teams for nine years.

Georgia played its football games on the baseball diamond in the “hollow” at the foot of Lumpkin Street. Football’s popularity had not become entrenched as it is today.

Baseball has always been popular in Athens. Charley Trippi was as big of a star in baseball as he was in football. While he chose football when it came to competing profession­ally, he played against major leaguers during his time in the Air Force and knew that he could hit Big League pitching.

While baseball at Georgia experience­d up and down seasons over the years, Webber brought a national championsh­ip to Athens when the Bulldogs won the College World Series in 1990. He would become the winningest coach in UGA history with 500 victories. Georgia was the first school in history of the SEC to win the College World Series.

Webber didn’t have the biggest stadium on campus, he didn’t work with the biggest budget, but he had an eye for talent, he could communicat­e with players.

It is doubtful that any coach, except, perhaps Dan Magill in tennis, got more bang for the buck than Webber did in baseball.

One of my favorite photos is the one with Webber and President George H. W. Bush who invited the Georgia team to the White House following the winning of the College World Series.

The first President Bush was a passionate baseball fan. He kept in the Oval Office the first baseman’s mitt he used when he played in the infield at Yale. He treated that glove with enduring respect, keeping it oiled and looking like it did during his days on campus in New Haven.

Webber took two Georgia teams to the College World

Series. His first trip was in 1987 after winning the SEC regular season championsh­ip. Stanford won at Omaha, but Webber was inspired by his team’s success that season and worked for a return trip.

In 1990, it would be different. LSU won the SEC title, but Georgia made it to Omaha where the Bulldogs defeated Oklahoma State, 2-1, in the championsh­ip final.

When he moved on to profession­al baseball in 1997, he worked with five different Big League teams as a manager and scout, principall­y the Yankees in the days when George Steinbrenn­er was the owner of the team. He also spent time with the Padres, Astros and the Braves. His last year in baseball came in 2016 when he worked for the Braves.

Webber was a soft-spoken man with an engaging smile. He was a man of great principle and character, one who was highly regarded for his integrity and sense of fair play.

He developed a nice rapport with the baseball alumni who were always eager to lend support when he called on them. Vernon Brinson, a highly successful businessma­n in New Orleans, played for Big Jim Whatley in the late fifties, funded a batting cage soon after Webber took over the baseball program. “I had confidence that Steve was going to develop a successful program and wanted to support him from the start,” Brinson said.

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Smith

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