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Hayden Fry, 90, Passes AwayHayden Fry, 90, Passes Away
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Hayden Fry, 90, Passes Away

Hayden Fry, who inherited a struggling University of Iowa football program and returned it to national prominence during his 20 seasons as head coach, died Tuesday at 90 years of age.

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IOWA CITY, Iowa — Hayden Fry, who inherited a struggling University of Iowa football program and returned it to national prominence during his 20 seasons as head coach, died Tuesday at 90 years of age.
 
The Hawkeyes struggled through 17 consecutive non-winning seasons when Director of Athletics Bump Elliott hired Fry from North Texas to replace Bob Commings following the 1978 season.
 
It took the native Texan just three seasons to engineer one of the most dramatic turnarounds in college football history. In 1981, Iowa won a share of the school’s first Big Ten title since 1960 and earned its first Rose Bowl berth since the 1958 season. The 8-4 record marked the Hawkeyes’ first winning season since 1961. Iowa finished the year ranked for the first time since 1960, landing 18th in the final Associated Press poll.
 
That was just the beginning of the success for Fry at Iowa. In his final 18 seasons, his teams posted 13 winning records. To put that in perspective, the Hawkeyes had enjoyed just 13 winning seasons since 1933 before he arrived.
 
Fry’s teams went to 14 bowl games, won a share of three Big Ten championships and finished 10 of those seasons ranked. Fourteen of his teams finished in the first division of the Big Ten.
 
Fry’s 1985 team, led by Heisman Trophy runner-up Chuck Long and All-America linebacker Larry Station, spent five weeks ranked No. 1, never left the Top 10, and won the school’s first outright league crown since 1960.
 
Fry coached three teams in the Rose Bowl and was a three-time Big Ten Coach of the Year (1981, 1990, 1991).
 
Fry’s 1990 team also won a share of the Big Ten title. Three times, his teams enjoyed 10-win seasons — 1985 (10-2), 1987 (10-3), and 1991 (10-1-1).
 
The Hawkeyes were ranked in the AP poll for at least two weeks in 14 different seasons under Fry. Eight of those teams spent time in the Top 10. Overall, Fry’s teams spent 133 weeks in the AP poll, including 39 weeks in the Top 10.
 
Coaching with a “scratch where it itches” philosophy that played to his team’s strengths and took advantage of an opponent’s weaknesses, Fry retired after the 1998 season as Iowa’s winningest coach and the dean of Big Ten coaches. He was 143-89-6 at Iowa, including a 96-61-5 mark in the Big Ten. Fry, who coached previously at SMU and North Texas, was 233-177-10 overall. He ranks 16th all-time in victories among Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) coaches.
 
Elected to the National Football Foundation College Football Hall of Fame in 2003, Fry is one of seven men to hold a head coaching job in the Big Ten for at least 20 years. That elite list includes Amos Alonzo Stagg (Chicago, 37 years), Bob Zuppke (Illinois, 29 years), Woody Hayes (Ohio State, 28 years), Henry Williams, Minnesota (22 years), Bo Schembechler (Michigan, 21 years), and Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz (1999-present).
 
Fry is sixth all-time in victories at a Big Ten school, and fifth in Big Ten victories. His six bowl victories ties for third among all Big Ten coaches.
 
The growth of Iowa football under Fry was seeded by improved facilities, a top-notch coaching staff, a fast-paced offense, rock-solid defense, and a new look. Fry changed the uniforms to a style similar to the Pittsburgh Steelers, and he introduced the Tigerhawk that is now one of the most recognizable logos in college sports. One reason for the popularity was Fry’s success on the field and the exposure it generated. Fifty-three games in his final six seasons were televised.
 
Born in Eastland, Texas, Fry’s family moved to Odessa when he was 8-years old. He quarterbacked Odessa High School to a state title in 1946. He was also a quarterback at Baylor (1947-50), and earned a degree in psychology in 1951.
 
Known as a master psychologist and motivator, Fry was named to the Baylor Wall of Honor in 2003. He went on to be a player-coach with the Quantico Marines, and reached the rank of captain. He was a head coach in his hometown of Odessa from 1956-1959, then was a college assistant at Baylor (1960) and Arkansas (1961) before becoming the head coach at SMU. During his time there (1962-1972), Fry was best known for signing Jerry LeVias, who became the first African-American football player in the Southwest Conference. Fry was a four-time SWC Coach of the Year.
 
He took over as football coach and director of athletics at North Texas in 1973, and was there until Elliott hired him as Iowa’s 25th football coach in December, 1978.

Fry had his team take the field together in what has become known as the Swarm, a unified tradition that continues today.  He turned the Hawkeyes into a Big Ten contender with the help of a coaching staff that included legendary defensive coordinator Bill Brashier and assistant Carl Jackson, and future Division I head coaches Bill Snyder (Kansas State), Ferentz (Iowa), Barry Alvarez (Wisconsin), Dan McCarney (Iowa State, North Texas), Don Patterson (Western Illinois), and Bob Stoops (Oklahoma).
 
Eighteen of Fry’s former assistants or players became college football head coaches, forming what is reportedly the largest coaching tree in the history of college football. Another former player, Bo Porter, became a major league baseball manager with the Houston Astros.
 
Fry coached eight consensus All-Americans at Iowa — Andre Tippett (1981), Reggie Roby (1981), Station (1984, 1985), Long (1985), Marv Cook (1988), LeRoy Smith (1991), Tim Dwight (1997), and Jared DeVries (1998). He also had 62 different players earn first-team All-Big Ten laurels during their careers.
 
Fry’s resume includes a long list of other prestigious awards. They include the Amos Alonzo Stagg Lifetime Achievement Award (1996), the University of Iowa Athletics Hall of Fame (2004), the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame (2010), the United States Marine Corps Sports Hall of Fame (2011), and the American Heart Association Paul Bear Bryant Lifetime Achievement Award (2012). He also was awarded the Robert R. Neyland Memorial Trophy, the Johnny Vaught Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Grant Teaff Lifetime Achievement Award.
 
Fry was the father of four sons — Randy, Zach, Kelly and Adrian — and a daughter, Robin. Randy, Zach and Kelly played for him at North Texas. His wife, Shirley, has two children, Bryan and Jayme.

Fry Family on the passing of Hayden Fry:
“With our family at his side, Hayden Fry, beloved husband, father, and grandfather, passed away following a lengthy battle with cancer.  We are comforted in our faith and knowing that Hayden is no longer suffering and resides now in heaven with our Lord.  Hayden passed on Dec. 17, at the age of 90.
 
We are proud to know that our father’s life had a positive influence on so many people, the players, the coaches, and the fans who played for, worked with, and supported his long and successful coaching career. His legend will live forever with the people he touched and inspired, and the programs he led to greater heights.
 
Though Hayden was born in Texas and moved there more recently to be closer to our family, his love for the University of Iowa, his players and coaches, the people of Iowa, and the state of Iowa, is well known.  Hayden often shared, “I’ll Always Be a Hawkeye”.
 
Our family would like to pass along our heartfelt thanks to the caregivers who made Hayden’s comfort their priority.
 
We cannot thank everyone enough for their love and support. Your thoughts and prayers are truly appreciated.”
 
Memorial Services are pending and will be announced at a later date.   
 
Henry B. and Patricia B. Tippie Director of Athletics Chair Gary Barta statement on Hayden Fry:
“Our thoughts and prayers are with Shirley and the entire Fry family as we mourn the loss of Hayden Fry, a great leader, an outstanding coach, and a man as genuine and loyal as they come.
 
Iowa Athletics has lost an icon, a man that raised the bar for every Hawkeye program, and every member of our athletics department. Hayden was respected by everyone who knew him. His passing creates a void for all those who played for, coached with, and supported his successful tenure as our head football coach.
 
Iowa football reached new heights under Hayden Fry, and has continued that success under Kirk Ferentz, one of the many outstanding coaches who served as a member of his staff. Hayden’s legacy not only lives on through Iowa football, but also through the coaches and players who had the privilege to be associated with his teams.
 
Hayden represented all that is good in college athletics, and did it ‘his way.’ Iowa athletics, and college football, has lost a pioneer. He was a dedicated family man and he will be missed.”
 
Kirk Ferentz statement of condolences on the passing of Hayden Fry
“Hayden Fry is a college football icon and an Iowa legend. His Hall of Fame career is well known, but personally, he will always be the man who took a chance on me at the start of my coaching career. I was proud to coach with him and honored to succeed him when he retired. He has been a great mentor and a true friend. I am forever grateful to him.
 
Mary and I send our heartfelt condolences to his wife Shirley, their children, and the entire Fry family. We hope that Hayden’s legacy of integrity and high character will provide his family comfort during this difficult time.” 
 
Additional thoughts from Kirk Ferentz on Hayden Fry:
“There are two men who played large roles in my coaching career: One is my mentor, Joe Moore. The other is Hayden Fry.
 
Back in 1981, I sent three job applications out: one went to Appalachian State — I never heard back from them; I sent one to Hawaii, had a phone interview, but they needed someone who knew the west coast; the third went to Hayden Fry at Iowa. Coach Fry hired me based on coach Moore’s recommendation (and in spite of my lack of experience and local knowledge) and showed me how to build and maintain a winning program.
 
His vision included hiring coaches who would be forward thinking and challenge each other. If you look across college football, you will see a part of his legacy in the coaches who he hired and mentored — coaches like Barry Alvarez, Bill Snyder, Dan McCarney, Bob, Mike, and Mark Stoops, and many more.

Even before the Hawkeyes started winning on the field, coach Fry was beloved by the fans and trusted by his players. He had a charisma and leadership style that created a championship and winning program that continues today. In 20 seasons at Iowa, coach Fry showed us all that you can succeed at the highest level by playing by the rules.”

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