![]() |
DOAK WALKER AWARD Phil Steele is proud to be a paticipant on the voting committee for this award |
![]() |
||
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE 2010 DOAK AWARD WINNER: LaMichael James Oregon |
![]() |
||
2010 Finalists: |
||||
| SELECTION PROCESS | ![]() |
|---|---|
Each summer, all NCAA Division I-A colleges and universities may nominate running backs from their respective football teams who satisfy the following selection criteria: * Candidate plays predominantly at the running back position and has made extraordinary contributions to his team. In October, each Division I-A college or university is given the additional opportunity to nominate a candidate or to nominate a replacement for a preseason candidate who may not have performed according to preseason expectations. Throughout the season, statistical updates are compiled by the Forum office and released to the media and National Selection Committee, which includes sportswriters, television commentators, analysts, radio sports personalities and former All-America and NFL All-Pro football players. In mid-November, the PricewaterhouseCoopers SMU Athletic Forum Board of Directors convenes to review the achievements of all candidates and votes to select ten semifinalists for the Award. The following day, the files of the semifinalists are forwarded to the Doak Walker Award National Selection Committee, who then votes to determine three finalists. The National Selection Committee will then cast a second vote to determine the winner. The recipient of the Award is announced live on The Home Depot College Football Awards show on ESPN, and presented with the Award at the Doak Walker Award Presentation Banquet in Dallas. |
|
The award recipient receives a stunning action sculpture of Doak Walker, cast in bronze and mounted on a wooden base. It was created by renowned artist J. Blair Buswell of Provo, Utah, a former running back at Brigham Young University who has sculpted the busts of more than a dozen inductees in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. |
|
| ABOUT DOAK WALKER | |
|---|---|
Doak Walker epitomized leadership, sportsmanship, and academic and athletic achievement during his storied career at SMU in the late 1940's. Gracing the covers of numerous national magazines, "the Doaker" was a national phenomenon. The versatile Walker, who also punted, returned punts and kickoffs, and kicked extra points, earned All-America honors in 1947, 1948 and 1949. After starting as a freshman in 1945, he missed the 1946 season due to his service in the Army; however, by his junior season, his exploits on the field had become legendary, and in 1948, Walker won the Heisman Trophy. Because of extraordinary fan interest in Walker, who led the Mustangs to Southwest Conference championships and Cotton Bowl appearances during the 1947 and 1948 seasons, SMU moved its home football games from campus to an expanded Cotton Bowl. The Cotton Bowl recognized Walker's achievements with a plaque at its main entrance that reads: "The Cotton Bowl, the House that Doak Built." Walker received his degree on schedule before reporting to the Detroit Lions for his rookie season in 1950. As a rookie, he led the NFL in scoring with 128 points. During his six years with the Lions, he led the team to NFL Championships in 1952 and 1953 and was named All-Pro four times. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1959 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1986. Prior to the 2000 season, Walker's jersey number 37 was the sole number in the history of SMU athletics to be retired. |
![]() |
| On September 27, 1998, 50 years to the day after appearing on the cover of Life Magazine, Walker passed away due to complications from a skiing accident. | |
| PAST DOAK WALKER AWARD RECIPIENTS | ||
|---|---|---|
2009 - TOBY GERHARD, STANFORD |
1999 - RON DAYNE, WISCONSIN 1998 - RICKY WILLIAMS, TEXAS 1997 - RICKY WILLIAMS, TEXAS 1996 - BRYRON HANSPARD, TEXAS TECH 1995 - EDDIE GEORGE, OHIO ST 1994 - RASHAAN SALAAM, COLORADO 1993 - BAM MORRIS - TEXAS TECH 1992 - GARRISON HEARST, GEORGIA 1991 - TREVOR COBB, RICE 1990 - GREG LEWIS, WASHINGTON |
|




