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| Cotton Warburton | |
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Position: Quarterback |
| Member Biography | |
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At 5-7 and a scant 145-pounds, Irvine "Cotton" Warburton
might have been overlooked as a collegiate back. In fact,
that's exactly what happened. The Southern Cal quarterback
spent most of his Saturdays eluding enemy tacklers. Obviously,
his mastery of elusion led to a mastery of illusion in later life.
"Cotton" became a successful Hollywood film editor and won
an Oscar for his work on the box office hit "Mary Poppins."
Small but mighty, Warburton became the most publicized
open-field runner of the 1930s, leading USC through a pair of
smash gridiron hits in 1932 and 1933, earning All-America
laurels in the latter year. During those two campaigns, the
Trojans won 20 games, lost but one (13-7 to Stanford) and
tied one (0-0 against Oregon State). Warburton's contribution
to those triumphs included team leadership in rushing and
scoring. His career average gain was over four yards per
carry. There was a good reason for his ground-gaining
accomplishments. The San Diego, California, native brought
state championship speed to USC after winning the California
schoolboy quarter-mile in 1930. Somebody had to open the
holes, however - even for the elusive "Cotton." It was Hall of
Fame guard Aaron Rosenberg who also made it big in the
movies as a director and producer.
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