John Prock
Biographical details
Born(1929-03-13)March 13, 1929
Hollis, Oklahoma
DiedJune 17, 2012(2012-06-17) (aged 83)
Searcy, Arkansas
Playing career
1948Northwestern Oklahoma State
1952–1954Southwestern State
Position(s)Guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1955–1958Clinton HS (OK) (assistant)
1960–1963Harding (assistant)
1964–1987Harding
Head coaching record
Overall114–123–7
Bowls1–1
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
2 AIC (1972, 1976)

Clifford John Prock (March 13, 1929 – July 17, 2012) was an American football coach. He was the head football coach at Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas from 1964 to 1987.[1] He compiled a record of 114–123–7 , retiring as the fifth-winningest active coach in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) in 1987.[2]

A native of Hollis, Oklahoma, Prock was a four-sport star, growing up around other Hollis athletes Darrell Royal (future Texas coach), Ted Owens (future Kansas basketball coach) and Monte Moore (future major league baseball announcer). After playing college football for one semester at Northwestern Oklahoma State, Prock returned home to work for this father and for the county road department. He then joined the National Guard, deployed to Korea and became a platoon first sergeant of Company D, 120th Combat Engineers, using his road grader experience to help build roads and bridges for the allied forces. He then went back to college and played football, this time at Southwestern Oklahoma State, for three years, 1952-54. [3]

Going to Southwestern Oklahoma State was an easy decision for Prock since his former coach at Hollis, Joe Metcalf, had become the head coach there. Prock started for three years at guard and earned All-Oklahoma Collegiate Conference honors his senior year. The influence of Metcalf was not only monumental for Prock, but also for former Hollis player Darrell Royal. Later after retiring as head coach of the Texas Longhorns, Royal would mention that even at the end of his coaching career in 1976, he was still using the principles learned from two men; Bud Wilkinson at the University of Oklahoma, and Metcalf of Hollis High School and Southwestern Oklahoma State.[4]

Upon graduation from college, Prock took an assistant coaching job in 1955 under former Oklahoma Sooners football player Carl Allison at Clinton High School in Clinton, Oklahoma. Allison had learned the game as a four-year starter under coaching legend Bud Wilkinson, and very briefly as a Chicago Bear player under George Halas. Prock then followed Allison to Harding College as they worked to reinstate the Harding football program that had been dormant since 1931.

Prock then took over as head coach of Harding in 1964 after Allison returned to Norman to work for the Oklahoma Sooners as a scout. Coaching the Bisons through the 1987 season, Prock tutored three players who would go on to become the next three winning head coaches at Harding after his retirement; Larry Richmond, Randy Tribble and Ronnie Huckeba. Tribble and Huckeba were also long-time assistant coaches under Prock.

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall ConferenceStanding Bowl/playoffs
Harding Bisons (Arkansas Intercollegiate Conference) (1964–1987)
1964 Harding 2–81–67th
1965 Harding 5–3–13–3–1T–4th
1966 Harding 6–33–3T–4th
1967 Harding 3–70–67th
1968 Harding 2–80–67th
1969 Harding 7–2–14–23rd
1970 Harding 5–53–34th
1971 Harding 5–52–4T–4th
1972 Harding 10–15–1T–1stW Cowboy Bowl
1973 Harding 7–34–2T–2nd
1974 Harding 5–4–13–2–13rd
1975 Harding 4–62–45th
1976 Harding 7–55–1T–1stL Shrine Bowl
1977 Harding 4–72–4T–5th
1978 Harding 5–4–13–2–14th
1979 Harding 4–62–4T–5th
1980 Harding 3–81–5T–6th
1981 Harding 2–90–67th
1982 Harding 5–61–57th
1983 Harding 3–6–10–5–17th
1984 Harding 5–3–12–3–15th
1985 Harding 5–52–56th
1986 Harding 4–5–13–45th
1987 Harding 6–43–3T–3rd
Harding: 114–123–754–89–5
Total:114–123–7
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title or championship game berth

References

  1. "Former Harding Football Coach John Prock Passes Away at 83". hardingsports.com. Retrieved January 3, 2018.
  2. "All-time Game Results". hardingsports.com. Retrieved January 3, 2018.
  3. "Encyclopedia of Arkansas".
  4. "Oklahoma football: A special night with Darrell Royal". 7 November 2012.
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