The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Legendary football coach dies at 89

- By Todd Holcomb

Billy Henderson won three state titles at Athens’ Clarke Central High and 285 games overall.

Billy Henderson, a legendary Georgia high school football coach who led Clarke Central to state championsh­ips in 1977, 1979 and 1985, died on Wednesday in hospice care in Athens. He was 89.

Henderson won 285 games in 35 seasons as a head coach at Willingham in Macon, his hometown, and at Clarke Central in Ath

ens, where he took over in 1973 and became a revered local figure. His victory total ranked fifth in state history when he retired after the 1995 season.

Henderson, born June 2, 1928, was an outstandin­g athlete at Macon’s Sidney Lanier High in the 1940s, gaining All-America status in football and baseball before playing those sports at the University of Georgia. He played in a 1945 national baseball allstar game coached by Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth but turned down profession­al baseball opportunit­ies to play football at Geor

gia, where he was halfback, initially the backup to star Charley Trippi on the Bulldogs’ undefeated 1946 team.

Henderson first coached football as an assistant at Jefferson High, then joined Athens High’s staff under former Georgia teammate Weyman Sellers from 1953 to 1955, when Athens won a state championsh­ip with Fran Tarkenton.

Henderson would coach at Furman and South Carolina before becoming newly opened Willingham’s head coach in 1958. His Willingham teams were considered

overachiev­ers and were known for their three straight wins over Valdosta from 1963 through 1965.

Willingham closed in 1970 when Bibb County schools were consolidat­ed, and Henderson moved to Mount de Sales, a private Catholic school in Macon. He assisted the football team there and also became head baseball coach, leading Mount de Sales to state titles in that sport.

In 1973, Henderson moved to Clarke Central High, where

he would build a football powerhouse that would last decades. Clarke Central had opened in 1970 as a merger of Athens and Burney-Harris high schools. Clarke’s football program struggled with integratio­n, and the Gladiators finished 1-9 in 1972, just three years after Athens High had won a state title.

Henderson rallied the school and community together, and in just four seasons, the city had a championsh­ip again. The 1977 team went 14-0 and defeated Buck Belue-led Valdosta 16-14 for the title. In 1979, Clarke went undefeated again, beating Tift County 20-10 for the championsh­ip. Clarke won the title for a third time in 1985, finishing 15-0.

Henderson’s Clarke Central teams would win 11 region titles and play for a state championsh­ip seven times. Henderson coached 42 first-team all-state players at Clarke and Willingham. Some of his more notable players included Jim Bob Harris, Karey Johnson, Chris Morocco, Derek Dooley, Robbie Kamerschen, John Kasay, Chuck Smith, Adrian Jarrell and David Perno.

Henderson retired in 1996 because of an illness that left him deaf in one ear and gave him occasional bouts of vertigo. Henderson remained active in the Athens community in retirement. He founded the Athens Athletic Hall of Fame in 2000. In 2005, he was given the Bill

Hartman Award, the highest honor accorded to a former University of Georgia student-athlete.

Funeral arrangemen­ts have not been announced.

 ?? 1994 FILE ?? Billy Henderson built a football powerhouse at Athens’ Clarke Central High, where he was coach from 1973 until he retired in 1996 with three state titles.
1994 FILE Billy Henderson built a football powerhouse at Athens’ Clarke Central High, where he was coach from 1973 until he retired in 1996 with three state titles.
 ?? 1998 FILE ?? Clarke Central’s legendary coach Billy Henderson displays some of the memorabili­a from his championsh­ip seasons at the Athens high school.
1998 FILE Clarke Central’s legendary coach Billy Henderson displays some of the memorabili­a from his championsh­ip seasons at the Athens high school.

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