Donald Gordon Zimmerman Jr. was born on January 19, 1913, in Texas to Donald G. and Madeline Zimmerman. Don, Jr. grew up in Lake Charles, Louisiana.[1]
The 1931 team lost only to national champion USC 21 to 12 in the Rose Bowl in which Zimmerman threw a touchdown to Vernon Haynes.[3] Down 21 to 0 in the third quarter, Zimmerman led a running attack which ended with a 6-yard pass to Haynes for the score. Tulane's other score was a run by Wop Glover set up by 11 and 15 yard passes from Zimmerman to Dalrymple.[4] Tulane still managed a Rose Bowl record for yardage gained.[5] Zimmerman eclipsed 100 yards rushing in both the Auburn and LSU games that year.
1932
The 1932 team saw Zimmerman get then school records with 1,885 yards total offense and a 5.5-yard rushing average.[3] The latter mark still ranks second.[6] Zimmerman was one of three consensus All-Americans from Southern teams in '32, along with Pete Gracey of Vanderbilt and Jimmy Hitchcock of Auburn. Tulane was tied 6 to 6 by Vandy, breaking a Southern Conference winning streak two weeks away from lasting four years. The only score for Tulane came on a 55-yard punt return for a touchdown from Zimmerman.[7] Tulane lost to Auburn, and then lost to LSU in the final game of the year with Zimmerman and several other regulars sidelined by a flu epidemic.[3] "Zimmerman is probably the finest open field runner the South has seen in the past decade" wrote Henry McLemore announcing the United Press All-America team.[3]
He ended his Tulane career as the Green Wave's all-time leader in total offense (4,657 yards on 764 plays, an average of 6.1 yards per play) and pass interceptions, setting records that lasted for 40 years (12).[8] He also ranks fifth in career rushing yards with 2,369.[2][6] Zimmerman is a member the Tulane Athletics Hall of Fame and was elected to the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame in 1975.[9]
^1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Year: 1930; Census Place: Lake Charles, Calcasieu, Louisiana; Roll: 788; Page: 9B; Enumeration District: 0011; Image: 934.0; FHL microfilm: 2340523