Difference between revisions of "LaVell Edwards"
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He was born on October 11, 1930, in Orem, Utah. In 1984 he led BYU's football team to the number 1 spot in the BCS rankings, going 13-0 for the national championship. In 1984, he was named National Coach of the Year. Following the 1984 national championship, Edwards was offered the head coaching positions with the Detroit Lions as well as the University of Texas at Austin, which he declined. | He was born on October 11, 1930, in Orem, Utah. In 1984 he led BYU's football team to the number 1 spot in the BCS rankings, going 13-0 for the national championship. In 1984, he was named National Coach of the Year. Following the 1984 national championship, Edwards was offered the head coaching positions with the Detroit Lions as well as the University of Texas at Austin, which he declined. | ||
− | He is considered the founder of the spread formation passing attack, and one of the most influential and innovative minds in college football history. His career wins/losses are 257-101-3. He started coaching in an era when college football offenses were dominated by strong running attacks, but his style was passing-dominated. All-star quarterbacks flourished under his leadership, including Gary Scheide, [[Gifford Nielsen]], [[Marc Wilson]], Jim McMahon, [[Steve Young]], Robbie Bosco, [[Ty Detmer]], Steve Sarkisian, and [[Brandon Doman]]. His quarterbacks threw over 11,000 passes for more than 100,000 yards and 635 touchdowns. | + | He is considered the founder of the spread formation passing attack, and one of the most influential and innovative minds in college football history. His career wins/losses are 257-101-3. He started coaching in an era when college football offenses were dominated by strong running attacks, but his style was passing-dominated. All-star quarterbacks flourished under his leadership, including [[Gary Scheide]], [[Gifford Nielsen]], [[Marc Wilson]], Jim McMahon, [[Steve Young]], Robbie Bosco, [[Ty Detmer]], Steve Sarkisian, and [[Brandon Doman]]. His quarterbacks threw over 11,000 passes for more than 100,000 yards and 635 touchdowns. |
Prior to Edwards' final game, the football stadium at Brigham Young University was renamed LaVell Edwards Stadium in his honor (it was formerly Cougar Stadium). At the time of his retirement, he ranked sixth in all-time victories. Edwards received the Amos Alonzo Stagg Award, presented by the American Football Coaches Association, in 2003. | Prior to Edwards' final game, the football stadium at Brigham Young University was renamed LaVell Edwards Stadium in his honor (it was formerly Cougar Stadium). At the time of his retirement, he ranked sixth in all-time victories. Edwards received the Amos Alonzo Stagg Award, presented by the American Football Coaches Association, in 2003. |
Revision as of 12:37, 21 March 2022
LaVell Edwards was the head football coach at Brigham Young University from 1972 to 2000. In 2019, ESPN released its list of the 150 greatest college football coaches ever and Edwards was listed as #22.
- Edwards did more than lead the Cougars to 19 conference titles, 10 10-win seasons and that incredible run to the 1984 national championship. He did more than take the vertical passing game and use it as a cudgel to bash down the door to the national elite -- although grooming five first-team All-American quarterbacks is pretty cool. Edwards used college football to take a regional religious institution and turn it into a brand. BYU became known for exciting, entertaining, edge-of-the-seat college football, and it proved that three yards and a cloud of dust wasn't the only way to win games. It was just the old-fashioned one.[1]
He was born on October 11, 1930, in Orem, Utah. In 1984 he led BYU's football team to the number 1 spot in the BCS rankings, going 13-0 for the national championship. In 1984, he was named National Coach of the Year. Following the 1984 national championship, Edwards was offered the head coaching positions with the Detroit Lions as well as the University of Texas at Austin, which he declined.
He is considered the founder of the spread formation passing attack, and one of the most influential and innovative minds in college football history. His career wins/losses are 257-101-3. He started coaching in an era when college football offenses were dominated by strong running attacks, but his style was passing-dominated. All-star quarterbacks flourished under his leadership, including Gary Scheide, Gifford Nielsen, Marc Wilson, Jim McMahon, Steve Young, Robbie Bosco, Ty Detmer, Steve Sarkisian, and Brandon Doman. His quarterbacks threw over 11,000 passes for more than 100,000 yards and 635 touchdowns.
Prior to Edwards' final game, the football stadium at Brigham Young University was renamed LaVell Edwards Stadium in his honor (it was formerly Cougar Stadium). At the time of his retirement, he ranked sixth in all-time victories. Edwards received the Amos Alonzo Stagg Award, presented by the American Football Coaches Association, in 2003.
Prior to coaching for BYU, Edwards played football for Utah State University and earned a master's degree at the University of Utah. While head football coach at BYU, Edwards also earned a doctorate. He and his wife, Patti, served an 18-month mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in New York City during 2002–2003.
In 2009 the National College Football Awards Association announced that legendary BYU football coach LaVell Edwards is the 2009 recipient of the NCFAA Contributions to College Football Award.
Edwards served as a National Advisor to ASCEND: A Humanitarian Alliance. This nonprofit organization plans expeditions to African and South American countries to provide life skills mentoring with sustainable solutions in education, enterprise, health and simple technology.
He passed away on December 29, 2016.
- For more about Coach Edwards, go to Wikipedia.org.