Honus Craig | |
Birth Date: | 30 November 1881 |
Birth Place: | Culleoka, Tennessee, U.S. |
Death Place: | Rally Hill, Maury County, Tennessee, U.S. |
Player Years1: | 1904–1907 |
Player Team1: | Vanderbilt |
Player Positions: | Halfback |
Coach Years1: | 1908 |
Coach Team1: | Polytechnic (TX) |
Coach Years2: | 1909–1910 |
Coach Team2: | Terrill School for Boys |
Awards: | 4x All-Southern (1904–1907) 1912 All-time Vandy 1st team. 1934 All-time Vandy team |
John Livingston "Honus" Craig (November 30, 1881 – April 18, 1942) was an American college football player and coach.
John Livingston Craig was born on November 30, 1881, in Culleoka, Tennessee, to Thompson Sloan Craig and Ella Cline.[1]
Craig was a prominent halfback for Dan McGugin's Vanderbilt Commodores football teams which won four SIAA titles. He was also selected All-Southern four times. McGugin once called him the South's greatest athlete and Vanderbilt's greatest halfback.[2] One report says "When Craig was confronted with the above formidable title yesterday by a reporter whose business it is to know such things, he blushed like a girl and tried to show why Dan McGugin's judgment is not always to be trusted." In Craig's opinion, Bob Blake was the South's greatest player. Craig stood 5 feet 9 inches and weighed 165 pounds.[3] He was nominated though not selected for an Associated Press All-Time Southeast 1920-1969 era team.[4]
Vanderbilt had a major intersection for the first time when it defeated Carlisle in 1906 by a single Bob Blake drop kick, "the crowning feat of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association season."[5] Craig called this his hardest game,[2] giving special praise to Albert Exendine as "the fastest end I ever saw."
Craig went over for the touchdown to beat Sewanee in 1907, after the play which Grantland Rice called the greatest thrill he ever witnessed in his years of watching sports, the double-pass play ending with a pass from Bob Blake to Stein Stone.[6] [7] Earlier in the game Craig caught a 35-yard touchdown pass from Blake.[8]
Craig once coached at the Columbia Military Academy.[9]
Craig was coach and athletic director at Texas Wesleyan University (then called Polytechnic College).
Craig died on April 18, 1942, in Maury County, Tennessee, while on a fishing trip. At the time of his death he was safety director for the Tennessee State Highway Department.[9]