Kerry Marbury was
Warrick Dunn years
before there even
was a Warrick Dunn.
Tampa Bay’s
miniature 5-9,
180-pound running
back has had five
productive seasons
in the NFL, topping
the 1,000-yard mark
twice for the
Buccaneers. Dunn
became nationally
known in college
playing for Bobby
Bowden at Florida
State, where he was
the first FSU back
ever to rush for
1,000 yards three
straight seasons.
Bowden convinced
Dunn to become a
Seminole in 1992
after a prolific
high school career
in Baton Rouge, La.
His brilliant speed,
maneuverability and
elusiveness probably
reminded the coach
of a similar runner
he had at West
Virginia University
in the early 1970s.
That ballcarrier was
Kerry Marbury, who
grew up in tiny
Carolina, W.Va. -- a
coal town located
not far from
Fairmont. As a
youngster Marbury
was always one of
the smallest players
on the field. To
play Pop Warner
football he once had
to stuff his stomach
with bananas and
drink enough water
just to make the
minimum 76-pound
weight.
Marbury would bribe
his mother Lizella
by doing some work
around the house
before sneaking off
to the football
field, where he
perfected his game
under the watchful
eye of Nick Saban,
Sr.
By the time he was a
junior at Monongah
High School in 1968,
Marbury had
developed an
impressive
reputation in West
Virginia prep
football circles.
Playing alongside
quarterback Nick
Saban, Marbury
helped Monongah to
two consecutive
state titles and
finished his career
with more than 6,000
yards rushing. He
once gained 402
yards in a game
against Kingwood
High.
“I would have to say
that Marbury is
easily one of the
ten best running
backs to ever play
high school football
in West Virginia,”
said retired
Wheeling
Intelligencer
editor Doug Huff,
who today keeps
track of national
high school records.
“He had a lot of
ability.”
Marbury was
recruited by just
about every major
college in the
country but he
decided to sign with
nearby West Virginia
University. Jim
Carlen was the coach
at the time but
Marbury never had
the chance to play
for Carlen, who left
to take the Texas
Tech job after the
Mountaineers
defeated South
Carolina, 14-3 in
the Peach Bowl.
“I really didn’t
consider playing
anywhere else
because I hadn’t
gone anywhere. I
never left the state
so I was a little
apprehensive about
leaving home,” said
Marbury.
He instead played at
West Virginia for
Bobby Bowden,
Carlen’s offensive
coordinator who took
the job just days
after Carlen left.
The running back
teamed with Harry
“Snake” Blake,
Bernie Kirchner and
Dave Jadgmann to
lead the WVU
freshman team to a
3-1 record in 1970.
Longtime Mountianeer
assistant coach
Donnie Young was
Marbury’s freshman
coach that season.
“I always felt that
Kerry had more
natural God-given
ability than any
other running back
at West Virginia
University,” said
Young, who
personally witnessed
the school’s top
five all-time
runners Amos Zereoue,
Avon Cobourne, Artie
Owens, Robert Walker
and Robert
Alexander.
Marbury weighed 165
pounds at the most,
but he possessed
world class speed
and was once clocked
at 9.6 seconds in
the 100-yard dash.
“Kerry could go from
a standstill to a
full sprint quicker
than anyone I’d ever
seen,” said Young.
In 1971 Marbury
teamed with Pete
Wood in the
backfield to give
West Virginia a
formidable rushing
duo. Marbury
produced his first
100-yard game
against Richmond in
the third game of
the season, and
added a 144-yard
effort against
William & Mary two
weeks later.
Against Temple on
Oct. 23, 1971, he
had the finest
rushing performance
in school history.
Kerry scored on
touchdown runs of
three, 83 and four
yards and finished
the afternoon with
291 yards rushing on
just 22 carries. He
had 200 yards by
halftime and if not
for suffering a leg
injury that forced
him to miss part of
the third quarter,
he would have easily
had more than 300
yards. Some think he
might have gotten
400 that day.
Marbury had five
runs covering more
than 30 yards -- all
on trap plays.
“I always felt like
I could run the trap
well,” said Marbury.
“If you could get
past the line of
scrimmage and you
had any speed at all
you had an
opportunity to gain
a good deal of
yards.”
He finished the 1971
season with a
team-best 890 yards
and a 6.1 average
per carry to go
along with six
touchdowns.
In 1972, Marbury and
Blake teamed with
Danny Buggs to give
West Virginia one of
the nation’s fastest
teams. The
Mountaineers were
loaded at all of the
skill positions and
had a quarterback in
Bernie Galiffa who
could deliver the
ball downfield. West
Virginia’s only
weakness on offense
was an inexperienced
line.
“We didn’t have the
offensive line that
they have today,”
Marbury admitted. “I
think a lot of the
success we had was
due to our speed. We
probably had some of
the smallest linemen
that I had ever seen
play college
football.”
Marbury again led
the Mountaineers
with 775 yards
rushing and 16
touchdowns despite
missing parts of
three games with an
ankle injury. His 16
rushing TDs ranked
second in the
country to Ohio
State’s Harold
Henson (20). Marbury
produced a
season-high 175
yards in a 28-7
victory over
Richmond in the
second game of the
year.
West Virginia earned
a bid to face North
Carolina State in
the 1972 Peach Bowl
but the Mountaineers
were humiliated,
49-13 by the
Wolfpack. Marbury
managed 69 yards on
13 carries, but WVU
was only able to
generate 91 yards on
the ground for the
game. Marbury missed
the team’s final
regular season game
against Syracuse
because of a
severely sprained
ankle and wasn’t 100
percent for the bowl
game.
“We were expected to
win that game and we
ended up losing,”
said Marbury.
Bowden was
criticized for his
lack of discipline
down at Atlanta
before the bowl
game, so the coach
instituted a
get-tough approach
afterward.
Disciplinary
suspensions and team
meetings followed.
“When we got back he
immediately started
changing the rules
on everything,” said
Marbury. “I think he
may have overreacted
a little bit to the
loss.”
In defense to
Bowden, he was a
young coach who was
still feeling his
way around the
program. Two years
earlier in 1970 his
team blew a 35-0
halftime lead at
Pitt that ultimately
cost WVU a bowl
game. In just three
short seasons Bowden
had developed lofty
expectations and
fans were demanding
more than just
winning seasons.
Bowden was a
committed Christian
and criticism of his
team’s misbehavior
stung him. Therefore
he decided to
institute more
stringent rules and
regulations for his
players to abide by.
Marbury took
exception to one of
his friends being
kicked off the team,
and decided that he
no longer wanted to
play at West
Virginia. His
disagreement with
Bowden snowballed
into something
neither party
completely
comprehended and
Marbury decided to
skip his senior
season and signed a
professional
contract to play for
the Toronto
Argonauts of the
Canadian Football
League.
Marbury was heavily
criticized by all of
the state’s
newspapers for his
decision to leave.
Some reporters
referred to him as
the state’s “most
famous drop out.”
“I didn’t have the
foresight to see all
of the politics
involved in sports,
especially at the
college level,” he
says. “I was just
going about it like
I did when I first
started when I was
five years old.
Gradually I began to
see all of the
politics and I
didn’t see where it
was all that
necessary. When I
left I was pretty
much blackballed.”
At the time, the NFL
did not accept
underclassmen so the
CFL was Marbury’s
only alternative. It
proved to be a big
mistake.
“It was very
confusing for me at
the time. If I had
known, or had had
better guidance, I
would have stayed
and finished
school,” he
admitted.
Injuries limited
Marbury to 153 yards
on 42 carries in
just three games
during his rookie
season in Canada. A
year later with the
Ottawa Roughriders
in 1974, Marbury had
only 94 yards in
four games.
Though he didn’t
experience a great
deal of success
playing in the CFL,
his time in Canada
was enlightening.
“The people in
Canada were
fantastic, I thought
it was just utopia,”
he said. “They
didn’t break it down
into
African-Canadians or
Italian-Canadians,
they were all
Canadians.”
He returned to the
United States in
1975 and played
briefly with the
Birmingham Vulcans
of the World
Football League
before it folded.
“That was awful,”
Marbury remarked.
“My appendix burst
during one practice
and they made me
scrimmage anyway. I
almost died because
of that.”
He was selected by
the New England
Patriots in the 16th
round of the NFL
draft the following
spring. Because
Seattle and Tampa
Bay were added to
the league that
year, Marbury was
picked in the
expansion draft by
the Cleveland
Browns. He was cut
during training
camp.
His football career
was over at age 24.
“I don’t regret it
because even if I
had played 10 years,
you’re just a number
in the NFL,” Marbury
said. “The most
important thing to
me is that people
are treated like
human beings.”
Disappointed and
discouraged, Marbury
drifted down a path
of drug use that
eventually led to a
short period in
prison. It was at
that point that he
decided to quit
blaming others for
his problems and
make something of
his life.
“Being in prison was
a result of me not
being able to come
to terms with
everything that was
going on in my
life,” he admitted.
“I tended to lean
toward drugs and
eventually ended up
in jail because of
it. That was a great
experience for me
because I was able
to determine that I
am somebody and
there is hope for
me.”
Once he got out
Marbury made the
most of his second
chance. He returned
to West Virginia and
received his
bachelor’s degree in
1990. A year later
he earned his
master's degree.
Today Marbury is a
full-time professor
at Fairmont State
College, where he is
teaching a class in
race, gender and
sexuality. He has
decided to make an
example of his life
in order to help
others avoid making
the same mistakes.
“I give them the
benefit of studying
my life, both the
good and the bad to
help them make
better choices in
their life,” he
said. “This has been
self-satisfying for
me. I don’t leave
anything out.”
An important part of
Marbury’s life has
been his athletic
career. Despite
playing just 20
games at WVU, he
managed to score 22
touchdowns and rush
for 1,665 yards. His
5.6 yards per carry
average still ranks
among the best in
school history.
For many years
Marbury harbored ill
feelings toward West
Virginia University,
Bowden, and his
assistant coaches.
He couldn’t bring
himself to watch
West Virginia games
on television and
had virtually no
contact with anyone
from the football
program.
His position toward
his alma mater has
since mellowed.
“I was more excited
this year than I
have ever been
because Rich
(Rodriguez) is the
coach,” Marbury
said. “I was so
happy because I
think Rich made it
the good,
old-fashioned way.
He was not given
something. He worked
very hard to get to
where he’s at. I
admire that in
anybody.”
Next March Marbury
turns 50. His
daughter Trevia has
a son Cameron, which
provides this
grandpa with a great
deal of joy. Time
has healed some of
his wounds -- many
of which were
self-inflicted.
Marbury also has
some unfinished
business with
Bowden. At some
point he would like
to see if they could
repair their
relationship.
“I would like for us
to come to terms,”
he said. “It’s sad
because I think in
the back of my mind
I hated him for not
talking to me and
trying to steer me
in the right
direction.”
Thirty years ago
Kerry Marbury was
probably ahead of
his time. The
passing game wasn’t
quite as
sophisticated then
and running backs
only ran the football,
catching very few
passes.
For those of you who
watched Marbury play
at WVU, can you
imagine him today
catching a screen
pass out of the
backfield, taking a
shovel pass from the
wing, or going
one-on-one with a
linebacker down the
middle of the field?
He would be, well,
just like Warrick
Dunn.