Walter Horner Lemm (October 23, 1919 β October 8, 1988) was an American football coach at the high school, collegiate and professional levels and achieved his greatest prominence as head coach of the American Football League's Houston Oilers and the National Football League's St.
Louis Cardinals.
Lemm graduated from Carroll College, in Waukesha, Wisconsin, in 1942 after playing football for head coach John W.
Breen.
After service in World War II during the next two years, Lemm served as an assistant coach at the University of Notre Dame under Hugh Devore in 1945.
Lemm returned to Carroll as an assistant coach with the school's football team the following year, then became a head coach for the first time, accepting the top job for Waukesha High School in 1948.
Following Lemm's one year at Waukesha, Carroll's former coach, Breen, took the head coaching position at Lake Forest College.
Lemm served under his leadership for the next three years, while also working as the school's head basketball coach, then replaced Breen in 1952.
During his two seasons, he compiled an 11β4β1 record before leaving to accept the head coach position at Montana State University.
An 8-1 season in 1954 was followed the next year by a 4β4β1 campaign.
On May 14, 1956, he reached the National Football League (NFL) when he accepted a defensive assistant position with the Chicago Cardinals.
Lemm spent just one season before resigning to again accept the head coaching position at Lake Forest.
During the next two years, he nearly matched his previous stint at the school with an 11β5 record, winning District Coach of the Year accolades in 1957 from the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA).
On February 21, 1959, he returned to an assistant's role with the Cardinals, and would remain at the professional level for the remainder of his career.
After again spending a single season with the Cardinals, Lemm resigned on January 12, 1960 to accept an assistant coaching position with the Houston Oilers of the seminal American Football League.
During the first season of play, the Oilers captured the league's first-ever title, but Lemm resigned after the season, returning to Libertyville, Illinois to work in the sporting goods industry.
However, after a slow start to the 1961 season that saw the team with a 1β3β1 record, Oilers' head coach Lou Rymkus was fired.
Lemm was offered the position by his former coach John Breen, the Oilers' Director of Player Personnel, and proceeded to lead the team to nine straight victories.
The team then won its second straight title with a 10β3 win over the San Diego Chargers on December 24, 1961, and Lemm was named AFL Coach of the Year for his efforts.
After orally agreeing to a contract for the next season, Lemm instead resigned on February 22, 1962 to take the top spot with the Cardinals, citing the proximity of St.
Louis to his home in Lake Bluff, Illinois.
He replaced Pop Ivy at St.
Louis, and Ivy replaced Lemm at Houston.
After a 4β9β1 record in his first year, Lemm came close to capturing the NFL's Eastern Conference title with a 9β5 season in 1963 and a 9β3β2 mark the following year.
After signing a contract with a huge pay increase, the Cardinals crashed in 1965 with a 5β9 mark, with Lemm seemingly having job security.
However, after Lemm was asked to stay in St.
Louis as a full-time coach, he resigned on January 10, 1966, again citing family considerations.
Oddly, he then accepted the head coaching job with his former team in Houston 19 days later.
The Oilers struggled in 1966 with a 3β11 record, but bounced back in 1967 with a 9β4β1 record and a spot in the AFL Championship game.
After a 40β7 thrashing at the hands of the Oakland Raiders, the Oilers again reached the postseason in 1969 compiling a mediocre 6β6β2 record and were again dismantled by the Raiders, 56β7, in the AFL's oddly constructed one year playoff system.
For that season the first place team of the West played the second place team of the East and vice versa.
The team's first year in the post-merger NFL, 1970, finished with a disastrous 3β10β1 mark.
Following a 44β0 loss to his former team in St.
Louis on November 1, 1970, Lemm announced he would be retiring at the conclusion of the year, this time citing health issues.
Lemm's final game came on December 20 of that year, a 52β10 loss to the Oilers' Lone Star State rivals, the Dallas Cowboys.
Lemm died on October 8, 1988 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin after a college reunion.