City Owes Cholly Mac a Whole LotCity Owes Cholly Mac a Whole Lot

City Owes Cholly Mac a Whole Lot

McClendon Honored With Lifetime Achievement Award

BATON ROUGE — Charles McClendon, the winningest coach in LSU football history, will be honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award as part of the 43rd annual Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award banquet in Houston on Wednesday.

The Lifetime Achievement Award is only the second one ever handed out in conjunction with the Bear Bryant Awards ceremony. The only other coach to receive the Lifetime Achievement Award is that of Darrell Royal, the longtime head coach at the University of Texas.

“I’m certainly honored to receive an award that is associated with my old coach,” McClendon told the Baton Rouge Advocate this week. “We had a great relationship. I was one of the few people who could give him a hard time, but he could give it back as well.”

McClendon played for Bryant at Kentucky for two years in 1949 and 1950 and he started his coaching career with the Wildcats a year later as a graduate assistant. McClendon then coached at Vanderbilt for the 1952 season before joining the LSU staff in 1953. McClendon served as an assistant coach at LSU for nine seasons, including the national championship season in 1958, before being elevated to head coach in 1962.

As head coach of the Tigers, McClendon led LSU to a 137-59-7 overall mark during his 18 years in Baton Rouge. In his first season as head coach of the Tigers, McClendon guided LSU to a 9-1-1 overall record, which included a 13-0 victory over Texas in the Cotton Bowl.

Over his 18-year coaching span, the Tigers played in 13 bowl games and won the 1970 SEC title. In all, LSU had 16 winning seasons under McClendon, which included six 9-win seasons and 11 years in which the Tigers won at least eight games. His career winning percentage was .692.

McClendon coached 21 first team All-Americas with the Tigers and he also had a total of 56 first team All-SEC selections. McClendon was named SEC Coach of the Year twice, in 1969 and 1970, and he was also named National Coach of the Year in 1970 after leading the Tigers to a 9-3 overall mark and a perfect 5-0 record in SEC action.

McClendon was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1986 and he’s also a member of the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame.