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A. L. Williams (American football)

A. L. Williams
Sport(s) Football
Biographical details
Born (1934-03-11) March 11, 1934 (age 83)
Haynesville, Louisiana
Playing career
1953–1956 Louisiana Tech
Position(s) Running back, wide receiver, punt returner
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
late 1950s Fair Park HS (LA)
1960–1965 Woodlawn High School (LA) (assistant)
1966–1973 Woodlawn High School (LA)
1974 Northwestern State (assistant)
1975–1982 Northwestern State
1983–1986 Louisiana Tech
Head coaching record
Overall 66–65–1 (college)
Accomplishments and honors
Awards
Louisiana Tech Athletic Hall of Fame (2007)

Albert Lawrence Williams, Jr., known as A. L. Williams (born March 11, 1934), is the retired former head football coach for the Northwestern State Demons and the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs.

A native of Haynesville in Claiborne Parish next to the Arkansas border, Williams graduated in 1953 from Fair Park High School in Shreveport in northwestern Louisiana. He led the 1952 Fair Park team to its only statewide championship in history. He then played football at Louisiana Tech under Coach Joe Aillet. In three seasons at Louisiana Tech, Williams averaged 17.9 yards per punt return on 43 attempts, 823 total yards. He also competed under coach Jimmy Mize in track in the 440, 880, and the one-mile relay events and set the Louisiana Tech and conference records in all three seasons.

In the late 1950s, Williams launched his career as a coach at his alma mater, Fair Park High School. In 1960, he was hired by his friend and colleague Lee Hedges as an assistant coach at the newly-opened Woodlawn High School in Shreveport. After five years, Williams was named the Woodlawn head coach, a position which he filled until 1974, when he became an assistant coach at Northwestern State in , Louisiana. He was soon head coach at NSU from 1975 to 1982, when he switched to Louisiana Tech, where he was the head coach from 1983 to 1986. He still resides in the shadows of Louisiana Tech at Ruston.

Over the years in his various schools Williams coached the quarterbacks Terry Bradshaw, Joe Ferguson, John Booty, Bobby Hebert, Tommy Spinks, Trey Prather, and Billy Laird. Four-time Super Bowl champ Bradshaw described Williams as "a good friend, who tried his best to teach me the fundamentals of being a quarterback. I was a little slow, but A. L. was patient with me. My foundation as a quarterback started with him at Woodlawn. He was absolutely amazing at teaching ... He could have had his own quarterback school if he wanted ...


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Wikipedia

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