Elmore attended and played high school football at Pickens County High School in Reform, Alabama. He received Alabama All-State and Class A "Back of the Year" honors in 1956 when he served as the team's captain. Elmore earned three letters in football, basketball, and baseball.[1]
During his senior year in 1961, Elmore completed 50-of-84 passes (59.5 percent) for 741 yards and six touchdowns, and ranked second on team in rushing with 345 yards on 77 carries (4.5 average) with three touchdowns. He also recorded two pass interceptions for 76 yards, averaged 32.3 yards on 24 punts, returned one kickoff for 18 yards and averaged 6.5 yards on four punt returns.[1] In 1961, Elmore helped lead Ole Miss to a 9-2 record that season and was an All-America first-team selection. He received All-Southeastern Conference second-team honors from Associated Press and United Press International, and also earned Academic All-America and Academic All-SEC accolades in 1961. Following the season, Elmore played in the 1962 Coaches Association All-America Bowl.[1]
For his career, Elmore completed 82-of-139 passes for 1,216 yards and 11 touchdowns, and his 59.0 completion percentage still ranks fourth best in Ole Miss history. He had 1,827 career total offense yards (611 rushing, 1,216 passing) on 275 plays, averaging 6.64 yards per play. The 6.64 yard-per-play average still ranks fourth best all-time at Ole Miss. Elmore also accounted for 22 touchdowns.[1]
Elmore was an assistant coach for one year at Southeastern Louisiana University,[2] then was the vice president of Boyles Moak Brickell Marchetti Insurance, Inc.[1]
Personal
Elmore had a wife, Linda; a son, Jimmy; a daughter, Sharon Duncan; and four grandchildren.[1][2]