Who
is Sutton’s Number One individual sports figure?
About
five years ago, we suggested that the 1922 Sutton High basketball team was
Sutton’s No. 1 sports story, and no one has questioned that assessment. This
month we suggest that Johnny Bender was the top individual sports figure of our
community.
Johnny
Bender left a broad legacy across the world of sports. He was an outstanding
collegiate athlete but his bigger impact was as a coach.
He
was a graduate of the Sutton High Class of ’00 and as much as we’d like to
detail his high school career, we lack details to tell that story.
Johnny Reinhold "Johnny" Bender was born in Sutton in 1882 and was in the Sutton High School Class of 1900. |
Let’s move
on to college.
Johnny
Bender was one of the first Nebraska football stars. The pertinent entry on the
all-time list of Nebraska lettermen reads, “Bender, Johnny, 1900-01-02-03-04.
Yes, you saw that correctly. Johnny Bender was a 5-year letterman the
University of Nebraska football team. He was one of only two players to have
that record. John Ringer from Lincoln did it one year earlier, 1899 – 1903.
That is a record that will stand for all time, unless the NCAA makes some major
rule changes.
Johnny
Bender arrived on the Nebraska campus in 1900 along with the new coach, Walter
C. “Bummy” Booth who had graduated from Princeton that spring. Booth compiled a
46-8-1 record in his six years at Nebraska, five of those years with Johnny
Bender as his star halfback. One Husker recruiting website states that Bender
arrived at Nebraska on a scholarship to play quarterback.
That
1900 season was also the first year Nebraska played as The Cornhuskers.
Nebraska
was undefeated through the 1902 and 1903 seasons ripping off 24 consecutive
wins until a 6-0 loss to Colorado in the third game of the 1904 season. That
record stood until the Tom Osborne led Huskers won 26 in a row, ending with the
19-0 loss to Pat Tillman and the Arizona State Wildcats in the second game of
1996.
The
1902 team was not scored on; the 1903 team gave up 5 points to Knox College
though Lincoln High did score 6 points on them in an exhibition game. Johnny
Bender was the captain of the 1903 team. He held the Nebraska career scoring
record when he left the Huskers.
His
Wikipedia entry claims that he balked at playing against Minnesota one year until
the school made good on his pay demands. Could be.
John
Reinhold Bender was born in Sutton on May 14, 1882, the son of Jacob Andrew
Bender and Eugenia “Jennie” Reuss. Jacob Bender was from the Russian village of
Balzer along the Volga River, his wife was from the nearby village of Moor.
Their arrival in Sutton in 1875 was as part of the migration of Germans from
Russia after 1872.
The
oldest Bender child was Henry who became a Sutton auctioneer. Emilie Bender
married Elmer Trabert; Theresia Bender was the wife of Dr. Herman Bening. John
Reinhold “Johnny” was the fourth child in the family. Nathaniel Gustave “Gus”
followed Johnny and Irmengarde Bender was married to Joseph Hash.
Eugenia
Bender died in 1898 within a year after Irmengarde was born. Jacob married
Amalia Heinz in 1902; she died in 1912. He then married Pauline Leonhardt in
1913. Jacob died in 1928.
The Bender business was the John Deere Implement dealership that operated in Sutton for about 125 years. Johnny's father Jacob built this building in 1906. |
Jacob
Bender began business with Mr. Zimblemen with the Bender & Zimbleman
implement dealership. The partnership ended and the business was soon named
Jacob Bender & Son with Gus Bender as the partner. The business operated
for about 125 years, later in the hands of the three sons of Gus Bender and
Clara Henrietta Landmann, Paul, Fritz and Wally. (Paul Jacob, Frederick
Gustave, and Wallace Niel). It was a large John Deere franchise earning
performance awards from that company regularly.
But
back to Johnny.
Johnny
Bender’s first coaching job was at Washington State University where his 1906
team went 6-0 and the next year posted a 7-1 record. He also had the head
basketball coaching gig where his team was 12-3, the schools best mark so far,
by far. And he was the baseball coach.
His
next job was at the Haskell Indian Nations University where his 1908 and 1909
teams were 3-6-1 and 7-2.
Then
onto Saint Louis University in 1910 and 1911 where Johnny Bender entered sports
folklore.
A St. Louis sportswriter thought that Coach Johnny Bender looked like the Billiken doll leading to the Saint Louis U. sports teams becoming the Billikens and they still are. |
There
was a doll on the market in those days, designed by a Kansas City art teacher
that was called the Billiken. Wikipedia describes the doll as, “…elephant-like
with pointed ears, a mischievous smile and a tuft of hair on its pointed head.
His arms were short and he was generally sitting with his legs stretched out in
front of him. Billiken was known as ‘The God of Things as They Ought to Be.’”
The doll was associated with good luck. A St. Louis sports reporter also
thought it looked a little like Johnny Bender.
Locals
began to refer to the Saint Louis football team as “Bender’s Billikens” and the
name stuck. It is still the nickname and mascot of teams at Saint Louis
University St. Louis University High School.
The
cultural reach of Sutton history stretches far and wide.
Bender’s
next move was rare among coaches. He returned to Washington State for the
1912-1914 seasons giving him five seasons with that school divided into two
separate appearances. Did any other coach, and school, do such a thing?
Next
was a one-year stop at Kansas State and a mediocre 3-4-1 season but Johnny
Bender did have two lasting contributions to that institution. He started the
annual homecoming event and named his team the “Wildcats”.
We
come to a singular event in collegiate coaching history with Bender’s next
move, at least, I can’t find another like it. Coach Bender swapped jobs with
Tennessee head football coach Zora G. Clevenger between the 1915 and 1916
seasons. Coach Bender was at Tennessee from 1916 through 1920 posting an 6-0-1
record in 1916, 3-3-3 in 1919 and 7-2 in 1920. The school did not field teams in
’17 and ’18 as the nation had a distraction for its young men during those
years.
John
Bender served in the 360th Infantry during World War I. He was a
captain when he filled out his WWI draft registration card listing his wife’s
home address in Knox, Indiana and his employment at Ft. Bliss near El Paso,
Texas. He attained the rank of major in the army.
Tennessee
had a lousy football program in those years. Bender’s team shocked the
southeast, including Tennessee fans with an upset of Vanderbilt one year. A
book called “Legends of the Tennessee Volunteers” by Marvin West illustrated
the weakness of the program by pointing out that Coach Bender resigned at UT
because Knoxville High made him a better offer. Maybe. Could be. Anyhow, Robert
Neyland arrived in the mid-1920’s fixing things for the Volunteers.
Coach
Bender’s contribution to football strategy while at Tennessee was the short
punt formation.
And
our coach had the Tennessee basketball program in 1917, 1920 and 1921 with a
29-15 record; and was coach of the baseball team in ’17 and ’20.
Sutton's Johnny Bender was the first star running back for the Cornhuskers and made his name in collegiate coaching. |
Johnny
Bender’s career in coaching major college football ended at Tennessee. He took
a job as a physical education instructor at a small college in Houston where he
coached a squad of volunteer football players. He named them the Cougars after
his Washington State team. The college newspaper picked up “The Cougar” name.
The small college grew into the University of Houston still using that name.
Johnny
Bender had married Pearl Josephine Cassell in Knox, Indiana in 1909. They had
three children, John Jacob, Margaret Josephine and William Cassell and were
living in Houston when John Bender died on July 24, 1928.
He
is buried in the Sutton Cemetery where the flagpole was dedicated by Pearl in
1933 in memory of Major Bender.
While
we are talking about individual sports figures, we’ll briefly mention one more,
not a Sutton story, but an area story.
Clarence
Mitchell was born in Franklin, Nebraska on February 22, 1891. He was a baseball
pitcher in the major leagues from 1911 to 1932 playing for the Detroit Tigers,
Cincinnati Reds, New York Giants, Brooklyn Robins, Philadelphia Phillies and
the St. Louis Cardinals. He was a spitball pitcher.
For
the youngsters in the crowd, the spitball was an especially effective pitch
that was enhanced by placing a foreign substance on the ball affecting the
balance of the ball. The most readily available substance was expectorate, yes,
spit. The subject still comes up when an umpire detects evidence – there are
rules.
The
rule against the spitter went into effect in 1920. A number of spitball
pitchers, 8 to 17 depending on your reading choices, were allowed to continue
to throw their spitter through the end of their careers – they were
“grandfathered”. Clarence Mitchell was a left-handed pitcher. He was the “Only
Grandfathered Left-Handed Spitball Pitcher” in the major leagues. A singular
distinction.
But
after Mitchell retired and was running a bar in Aurora, Nebraska, his spitball
pitching distinction was not what he capitalized on.
Mitchell
was with the Brooklyn Dodgers (aka Robins) in the 1920 World Series against the
Cleveland Indians. In Game 5, Clarence Mtichell came up to bat with men on
first and second and hit a line drive to Cleveland second baseman Bill Wambsganss
who then stepped on second base and then tagged the oncoming runner from first
completing the only unassisted triple play in World Series history. A big
enough deal, but in Mitchell’s next at-bat, he hit into a double play
accounting for five outs in two consecutive at-bats, in a World Series game – a
serious record.
Clarence
Mitchell’s post-career Aurora bar featured a swizzle stick stamped with the
account of his ignominious World Series batting feat.
Oh,
yes, game 5 of the 1920 World Series also saw the first World Series grand slam
home run AND the first World Series home run by a pitcher – not Clarence
Mitchell. And Brooklyn outhit Cleveland in that game but lost 8-1.
Clarence Mitchell is buried in the Aurora Cemetery where his tombstone has to make the short list for "most interesting". |
3 comments:
The top picture in your article on Johnny Bender is not him. It is his nephew Paul J. Bender. FYI
Greetings Anonymous, Let's talk!
After posting this photo of my grandmother's brother, my great Uncle J.R. Bender on Ancestry.com, I was contacted by an individual who was writing an article for the Sutton Museum, to see if I would be willing to let him use this photo, because he had never seen my photo before, especially with the "S" for Sutton High School on Johnny Bender's Letterman's shirt. I have this photo in my possession, with it being marked on the back as Johnny R. Bender. My Grandmother was Irmengarde (Bender) Hash. I will try to track down the 1900 Sutton High School yearbooks to see if there is a photo I can compare mine to. I am interested in how you believe this photo is instead that of his nephew Paul J. Bender? Looking forward to our conversation. I can be reached at my email below, or also at clgtrans@hotmail.com Sincerely, Mrs. Catherine Hash Gardner
Hello again Anonymous...I believe you are right, that the photo I have is mislabeled (probably by my mother, as it does not seem to be in my grandmother Irmengarde's handwriting), and that the photo for this article is a photo of Paul Jacob Bender, born 1916. The Sutton Museum has some yearbooks from the years 1931-1935. It would be great if someone could verify this photo of Paul for sure!
I also have a family group photo of Gus Bender's with this same person wearing the "S" for Sutton letterman's shirt, so this must be his son, Paul Jacob Bender. My assumptions were incorrect, even more now, looking at the age of Gus (Nathaniel Gustave Bender), as this young man would definitely not be his older brother John R. Bender, (born in 1882) as they were only 2 years apart. Johnny Bender was playing for the Nebraska Corn Huskers in 1902.
Great catch Anonymous!!! I love it when photos can be corrected and positively identified. Thank you so very much. I would still like to make your acquaintance, as I have other Bender family photos I am trying to identify. Sincerely, Mrs. Gardner clgtrans@hotmail.com
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