Facebook video of acceptance speech
NATCHITOCHES, La. — Otis Washington deflected
praise Saturday during his Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame acceptance speech.
"It was never, ever, ever about me," said Washington, a 1961
Xavier University of Louisiana graduate and a Selma, Ala., native. "I just went along for the ride. And boy, what a ride."
Washington coached St. Augustine High School of New Orleans to Class 4A state
football championships in 1975, 1978 and 1979 and a 4A runner-up berth in 1971. He left St. Aug after the
1979 season and was an assistant coach at LSU for one season, then head coach at Southern University
from 1981-86. He also was an assistant coach at Tulane and director of the New Orleans Police Athletic League.
"Otis Washington brought discipline, character, excellence and leadership to
St. Aug's football program," said former St. Aug athletics director Emmett Moten, Washington's presenter. "And he brought
a can-do, never-say-can't attitude."
Washington thanked many who helped him achieve the honor, including
his wife of 48 years, Linda, also an XU graduate.
"She has endured untold numbers of Sunday film sessions at our home and many evenings alone
as I prepared for each week's upcoming game," Washington said. "She has endured taunts and barbs from boorish fans
and through it all remains my greatest support, my rock. She has served as a surrogate mother
to literally dozens of young men. I can't imagine having accomplished any of this without her. I could not
possibly end without thanking her."
Washington, who starred in football and baseball as a Xavier student, also is a member of the Allstate Sugar Bowl Hall of Fame (inducted 1994),
the Louisiana High School Sports Hall of Fame (2012) and the New Orleans High School Sports Hall of Fame.
Also inducted Saturday were football's Leonard Smith, Kevin Faulk, Jake Delhomme and Pat Collins,
softball's Yvette Girouard, horse racing's Frank Brothers and and basketball's Avery Johnson, a St. Aug graduate.
A sellout crowd of 831 was in attendance for dinner and inductions at the Natchitoches Events Center.
There are nearly 400 members in the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame, including recipients of the
Dave Dixon Louisiana Sports Leadership Award and the Distinguished Service Award in Sports Journalism.
The first induction class was in 1959.
"There's not a nicer, classier guy in this room tonight than Otis Washington," Collins said.