It seems like roughly one out of three entries into this series feature a Harold "Bud" Elliot coached team. Half of this year's entries will. He coached ten of the 27 years UTA played as a four-year school, three more than second place Claude "Chena" Gilstrap (though Coach Gilstrap did coach an additional six years when UTA was a junior college). A lot of what UTA football is remembered for today happened due to his results. Unfortunately, that equated to mediocrity many times, some in his control, some not.
The 1983 season was the start of his tenth (hint to the significance of this season) season on the Maverick sideline. UTA finished 3-8 the year prior, the second time in three years the Mavericks attained that mark. Injuries were much to blame, but there certainly were bright spots, which I'll detail momentarily. Those bright spots had the coaches pick UTA third in the preseason poll, just a smidge behind Arkansas State (UTA got more first place votes than the then-Indians did) and second in the SID poll, again attaining the second most first-place votes. Louisiana-Monroe (known as Northeast Louisiana until much later) was number one in both (and would finish in a tie for first. Expectations were at their highest level since 1979.
And for good reason. Despite eight losses the year prior, with only two losses within a touchdown, Scotty Caldwell ran all over the field in 1982. The junior running back gained 1,216 yards and twelve touchdowns on the ground, while catching 26 passes for 336 yards and another score. He led the Southland Conference in rushing, all-purpose yards and scoring. Had he played on a team that was better than 1-4 in conference, he would have been player of the year. He'd end up UTA's all-time second leading rusher, first in rushing and total TD's and second in overall scoring behind kicker Skip Bulter.
But he wasn't the only returner who contributed mightily in years prior.