Frank W. Johnson Sr. (April 23, 1911 â June 27, 1994) was an American college football and college basketball player and coach. He served as the head basketball coach at University of Georgia for part of the 1937âÂÂ38 season, the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) for one season, in 1938âÂÂ39, and two stints at the University of South Carolina, from 1940 to 1943 and 1946 to 1958. Johnson played football, basketball, and baseball at Georgia, earning all-conference honors in football and twice captaining the Georgia Bulldogs basketball team.
A native of Rockford, Illinois, Johnson graduated from Rockford High School in 1930. He attended the University of Georgia, where he starred in football and basketball. He was co-captain of the Georgia Bulldogs basketball team for the 1934âÂÂ35 and 1935âÂÂ36 seasons.
In 1936, Johnson was appointed assistant freshman football coach for Georgia. In January 1938, Georgia's athletic board named Elmer A. Lampe of Carroll College in Waukesha, Wisconsin as the school's new head basketball coach and ends coach for the football team. But since Lampe was not scheduled to come to Georgia until February, at which time he would be occupied with spring football training, Johnson was given charge of the 1937âÂÂ38 Georgia Bulldogs basketball team. Johnson left Georgia on February 20, following Harry Mehre, who had been head coach of Georgia's football team since 1928, to the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss). Lampe then took the reins of the Georgia basketball team.
At Ole Miss, Johnson served as line coach for the football team for two years, and was head basketball coach for one season, in 1938âÂÂ39. In early 1940, he left Ole Miss to go to the University of South Carolina as head basketball coach and freshman football coach, reuniting with Rex Enright, South Carolina's head football coach who had been Georgia's backfield coach in football and head basketball coach during Johnson's playing days. Johnson's tenure at South Carolina was interrupted by service in the United States Navy during World War II. He stepped down as head coach of the South Carolina Gamecocks men's basketball team in May 1958, but remained at the school as athletic business manager. In 14 full seasons plus parts of two additional seasons as head basketball coach for the Gamecocks, Johnson compiled a record of 174âÂÂ175. His 174 wins are second only to Frank McGuire's 283 in team history.
Johnson died of pneumonia, on June 27, 1994, at a nursing home in Columbia, South Carolina.