Ralph Hatley Explained

Ralph Hatley
Birth Date:3 April 1913
Birth Place:Trenton, Tennessee, U.S.
Death Place:Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.
Player Years1:1933–1935
Player Team1:Tennessee
Player Positions:Tackle, guard
Coach Years1:1936
Coach Team1:Tennessee–Martin (line)
Coach Years2:1937–1940
Coach Team2:Dyersburg HS (TN)
Coach Years3:1941–1946
Coach Team3:Christian Brothers HS (TN)
Coach Years4:1947–1957
Overall Record:60–43–5 (college)
Bowl Record:1–0

Ralph Lee Hatley Sr. (April 3, 1913 – October 14, 2001) was an American football coach and player. He served as the head football coach at Memphis State University from 1947 to 1957, compiling a record of 60–43–5 in 11 seasons.[1] As head coach, he led the Tigers to their first bowl appearance, a 32–12 victory in the 1956 Burley Bowl over East Tennessee State. A standout lineman under Robert Neyland at Tennessee from 1933 to 1935, Hatley also served as head coach at two Tennessee high schools, Dyersburg High School in Dyersburg, Tennessee and Christian Brothers High School in Memphis, Tennessee as well as an assistant coach at the University of Tennessee at Martin.

Early life

Hatley was born in Trenton, Tennessee on April 3, 1913, and raised in Jackson, Tennessee.[1] He starred as a player at Jackson High School before heading to Knoxville, Tennessee to play for legendary coach Robert Neyland.[2] With the Volunteers, Hatley was an offensive lineman and a captain for the 1934 Tennessee Volunteers football team and also was selected to the all-SEC team that year.[1] He was a teammate of Cecil Humphreys, who would later serve as athletics director at Memphis State who hired Hatley as head football coach.

Coaching career

After graduating from the University of Tennessee, Hatley embarked on a coaching career, first at the University of Tennessee at Martin in 1936.[1] From there, he returned to west Tennessee and took over as head coach at Dyersburg High School for four years[3] before moving to Memphis to take the head coaching position at Christian Brothers High School.[1] After Memphis State University did not field a football team from 1943 to 1946 due to the events surrounding World War II, athletics director Cecil Humphreys turned to Hatley to lead the football program. One of his first moves as head coach was to name Billy Murphy as an assistant coach. Hatley's first Tigers team in 1947 had 38 freshmen, but still managed to earn a 6–2–1 record. In 1949, Hatley's Tigers outscored their opponents 385-87 throughout the season and led the nation in total points scored for the season. In 1949, Memphis State finished 9–2 and set a then-school record with 21,000 in attendance to watch the team play Ole Miss. Hatley hired Ken Donahue as line coach in 1951.[4] [5] During Hatley's tenure as head coach, Memphis State graduated 98% of its football players.[1] In 1956, Hatley's Tigers made their first bowl appearance in school history in the final playing of the Burley Bowl, a 32–12 victory over East Tennessee.[6] Hatley retired as head coach after the 1957 season with a 60–43–5 record.[1] He retired as the school's winningest head coach and remained so until he was surpassed by his successor in 1967.[7]

After coaching

After retiring from coaching, Hatley was named chair of Memphis State's health, recreation and fitness department.[1] He served as president of the Tennessee College Physical Education Association and was honored for his service with awards from the College of Physical Education of the United States and State of Tennessee Health and Physical Education Association.[1] Hatley died on October 14, 2001, at age 88.

Personal life

Hatley was married to the former Ruth Wahli.[8] Hatley's son, Ralph Lee Hatley, Jr., starred in football at Memphis State in the early 1970s before becoming a well-known performing arts actor in the Memphis area.[9] [10]

Head coaching record

College

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ralph Hatley « Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame. tshf.net. December 17, 2017.
  2. Web site: M Club Hall of Fame . December 17, 2017 . University of Memphis Athletics.
  3. Web site: The Jackson Sun from Jackson, Tennessee on October 31, 1940 · 10.
  4. Web site: Shearer . John . October 14, 2016 . Assistant Football Coach Ken Donahue Left Positive Mark At Alabama And Tennessee . February 11, 2024 . Chattanoogan.com . en.
  5. Web site: Shearer . John . October 13, 2016 . Donahue brought toughness to Vols, Alabama . December 1, 2019 . Knoxville News Sentinel . en.
  6. Web site: The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee on November 23, 1956 · Page 50. newspapers.com. December 17, 2017.
  7. Web site: Memphis Tigers Face of the Program . February 11, 2024 . ESPN.com.
  8. Web site: RALPH HATLEY Obituary - Memphis, Tennessee. Legacy.com. December 17, 2017.
  9. Web site: Davis . Chris . May 17, 2011 . Memphis actor Ralph Hatley dies . February 11, 2024 . MemphisFlyer.
  10. Book: Lentz, H.M. . Obituaries in the Performing Arts, 2011 . 2012 . McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers . 9780786491346 . 151 . December 17, 2017. Google Books.