John Hayden Fry (born
February 28, 1929)
was a National
Collegiate Athletic Association Division I-A college football coach from 1962 to 1998 at
SMU
, North Texas
, and the University of Iowa
. He compiled a record of 232 wins, 178 losses,
and 10 ties during his 37 year career as a head coach and has been
inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame
.
Background
Born in
Eastland,
Texas
, Hayden Fry was descended from one of the Texas
First Families; his great-great-grandfather fought beside General
Sam Houston in the Mexican War. Fry's family moved to
Odessa,
Texas
, when he was eight years old.
Fry worked multiple jobs as a child to help his family through the
Great Depression. He also played
sports, partly to stay out of trouble. Hayden played basketball,
football, and track, but he most loved and was most successful at
football, and Odessa was a football town.
When Fry played safety and quarterback for Odessa High School in
the 1940s, their stands routinely had sellout crowds. In Fry's
senior year, Odessa won 14 straight games, scoring almost 400
points and allowing about 50. Odessa did not commit a single
turnover all season. The Texas state playoffs placed every school
into a single bracket. At the end of the year, Hayden Fry
quarterbacked Odessa to the Texas state high school championship in
1946.
Fry then
played at Baylor
University
from
1947-1950. Baylor had a 26-13-2 record during Fry's four
years there. Fry started a few games as an upperclassman at Baylor,
but he could never win the full-time starting quarterback job. He
graduated from Baylor with a degree in
psychology in 1951.
Fry was an American history teacher and assistant football coach at
Odessa High School for a year in 1951 before joining the
U.S. Marine Corps in 1952. During his
time in Odessa, Fry met and befriended a young
George H. W. Bush,
who would become the 41st President of the United States.
Fry served in the
U.S.
Marine Corps from
1952-1955. He played with the Quantico Marines football team in
1953, winning the Marine Corps championship and playing in the
Poinsettia Bowl. Fry also coached a
six man football team while in the Marines, and the unique style of
play allowed Fry to innovate and invent new creative schemes. He
became friends with
Al Davis, who was
coaching a rival military team; Davis would later become the famous
owner of the
Oakland Raiders. Fry's
time coaching and serving in the Marines were an asset as he began
his coaching career. Fry was discharged from the Marines in
February 1955 with the rank of captain.
High school and assistant coach
In 1955, Hayden returned to Odessa as a teacher and assistant
football coach.
The following season, Odessa head coach and
former Texas
A&M
freshmen varsity coach Cooper Robbins was promoted to athletic
director, and Hayden Fry took his first head coaching job.
At 26 years old, he was coaching the high school he had led to the
state title less than 10 years earlier.
He served as Odessa's head football coach for three years. During
that time, he first met and befriended the head coach at Texas
A&M,
Bear Bryant. Fry also continued
as a history teacher at Odessa, and one of his students,
Roy Orbison, later became a musical star.
After the 1958 season, the new head football coach at Baylor hired
Hayden Fry as an assistant coach. Fry spent two years at Baylor
coaching the defensive backs.
In 1960, Baylor had an 8-2 record in the
regular season and finished the year with a one point loss to
Florida
in the Gator Bowl.
That season, Fry's defensive secondary helped Baylor lead the
nation in pass defense.
Fry left
Baylor to become an assistant coach at Arkansas
under Frank
Broyles. Broyles had been Fry's position coach when Fry
played at Baylor. Fry was the offensive backfield coach at Arkansas
in 1961.
Arkansas won the Southwest Conference co-championship
with an 8-2 record and narrowly lost the Sugar Bowl to Bear Bryant's Alabama
squad. After one year at Arkansas, Southern
Methodist University
tabbed Fry as their next head football coach for
the 1962 season.
Head coaching career
The
SMU
Mustangs were members of the Southwest Conference at the
time. Fry won the conference coach of the year award in his
first season. In 1963, SMU opened the season with a 27-16 loss to a
Michigan team coached by
Bump Elliott,
Fry's future boss at Iowa.
SMU lost to Oregon
in the 1963 Sun Bowl,
21-14. After the season, Fry was also appointed as SMU's
athletic director.
When Fry took the job at SMU, he was promised that he would be
allowed to recruit black athletes. Fry and the school wanted to
make certain that the player they recruited was not only a good
athlete but also a good student and citizen and someone with the
mental toughness to be the first black player in conference
history. Fry found that player in
Jerry
LeVias. LeVias was a great player, an exceptional student, and
mentally tough. He had never had discipline problems and was deeply
religious. LeVias was the perfect player for SMU.
Jerry LeVias had many other scholarship offers to good integrated
schools, but he chose to attend SMU. In 1966, LeVias became the
first black player in the
Southwest
Conference. Fry received abuse for recruiting a black player to
SMU in the form of hate mail and threatening phone calls, but he
downplayed the treatment, because the harassment of LeVias was
much, much worse.
SMU had an 8-2 record in 1966 and won its first Southwest
Conference title in 18 years. LeVias was named to the
all-conference team and handled the racial incidents well.
SMU lost
in the Cotton Bowl Classic to
Georgia
but finished the year ranked #10 in the
nation. SMU had a down year in 1967, but LeVias was again an
all-conference selection.
In 1968,
SMU went 7-3 and defeated Oklahoma
in the Bluebonnet
Bowl. LeVias was selected as an all-conference player as
a senior for the third time. Fry's Mustangs then had just a 12-20
record over the next three years from 1969-1971. That put Fry's job
in jeopardy, and rumors started to swirl after Fry's Mustangs
started the 1972 season at 4-4. Not even a three game winning
streak could save Fry now. After a 7-4 season in 1972, Fry was
fired at SMU, which robbed the Mustangs of a bowl berth.
Hayden Fry compiled a 49-66-1 record in 11 seasons at SMU—including
the school's only three winning seasons since the late 1940s. In
Fry's autobiography, Fry stated that he believed his firing was
related to several boosters' desire to start a
slush fund to pay players and recruits. SMU was
the second-smallest school in the Southwest Conference, and had
found it difficult to compete over the last two decades against
schools double its size or more. When he refused to go along with
the plan, Fry said, the boosters pressured the school's new
president to fire him. As it turned out, SMU would be hit with NCAA
sanctions five times after Fry's departure before having its
program
completely shut down
for the 1987 season due to
a massive litany
of misconduct. Most of the violations were related to the slush
fund Fry had opposed several years earlier.
Hayden
Fry was hired as the coach and athletic director at North Texas
State University (now the University of North Texas
) before the 1973 season. North Texas
appeared to be on the verge of dropping from Division I football or
even ending the sport altogether. In 1973, North Texas won a share
of the
Missouri Valley
Conference title. However, North Texas left the conference
after the year in hopes of joining a more football-oriented
conference. While Fry was there, North Texas never did. He also
coached three of his sons while at North Texas.
Fry turned North Texas' program around, compiling a 40-23-3 record
over six seasons from 1973-1978. In his final four seasons, North
Texas had winning records, including a 10-1 mark in 1977 and a 9-2
record in 1978. Still, North Texas never received a bowl
invitation. Fry wanted to go to a school where he would be assured
of a bowl game with a solid record and where he did not need to
also serve as athletic director.
Iowa coaching career
Hayden Fry was hired as Iowa's 25th head football coach after the
1978 season. Fry had never been to Iowa, but he knew and liked
Bump Elliott, by this time the
university's athletic director. Iowa had had 17 straight
non-winning seasons, but Fry was impressed at the fan support for a
program that had struggled for so long.
Fry turned his attention to changing a losing attitude and starting
new traditions at Iowa. Hayden would not celebrate close losses or
moral victories. He hired a marketing group to create the
Tigerhawk, a logo to represent the University of Iowa's athletic
programs. Since both shared the colors of black and gold, Fry
gained permission from the
Pittsburgh Steelers, the dominant NFL
program of the time, to overhaul Iowa’s uniforms in the Steelers’
image. Fry had the team "swarm" onto the field together as they
left the locker room, holding hands in a show of solidarity. And
Fry had the visitors’ locker room painted pink. Fry, a psychology
major at Baylor, knew that pink is occasionally used in jails and
mental institutions to relax and pacify the residents, and Fry
claimed that it might have the same effect on the visiting team.
Principally, though, Fry hoped that the unusual color would
distract and fluster the opposing players and coaches.
On the field, Hayden assembled a terrific coaching staff, bringing
his assistant coaches with him from North Texas, including Bill
Brashier, his defensive coordinator and a childhood friend from
Eastland, Texas, and
Bill Snyder, his
offensive coordinator. Fry retained some of the Iowa coaches from
the previous staff, including
Dan
McCarney and Bernie Wyatt. Finally, Fry hired the head coach at
Mason City High School,
Barry Alvarez.
Fry would later add
Kirk Ferentz as his
offensive line coach and hire his former players
Bob Stoops,
Mike
Stoops,
Chuck Long, and
Bret Bielema as assistant coaches. Fry also
gave USF Head Coach
Jim Leavitt one of
his first breaks in college football, making him a graduate
assistant coach at Iowa in 1989.
Big Ten Title (1979–1981)
Fry brought a wide-open passing game to the Big Ten for the first
time. He had his tight ends stand at the line of scrimmage at the
snap, creating an unusual and unique looking offensive formation.
He tried a number of trick plays, or "exotics", to keep the
opposition on its toes. All this did not immediately translate into
wins. Iowa had losing seasons in 1979 and 1980, and some began to
wonder if Fry would suffer the same fate as the four coaches before
him, who had left Iowa after failing to produce a winning
season.
But the team broke through in 1981, a magical season for Hawkeye
fans.
Iowa began the year by upsetting sixth
ranked Nebraska
, a team that had defeated Iowa 57-0 the previous
season. Two weeks later, Iowa defeated sixth ranked
UCLA
to give Fry win #100 in his career.
Later
that season, Iowa defeated Michigan
in Ann Arbor for its first victory over the
Wolverines in 19 years. A victory over Purdue
in 1981 snapped a 20 game losing streak to the
Boilermakers and clinched Iowa's first winning season in 19
years.
In the
final game of the 1981 regular season, Iowa's win over Michigan
State
, coupled with an Ohio State
upset of Michigan in Ann Arbor, gave Iowa a share
of the 1981 Big Ten title. Either Michigan or Ohio State had
gone to the Rose Bowl in each of the last 12 seasons, prompting
critics to nickname the Big Ten the "Big Two and Little Eight".
In 1981,
Hayden Fry altered the balance in the league by leading the
Hawkeyes to a share of the league title and a berth in the 1982
Rose
Bowl
.
Three more bowls (1982–1984)
Iowa started the 1982 season with an 0-2 record, but the Hawkeyes
compiled a 6-2 record in the Big Ten to earn a berth in the
Peach Bowl.
The Hawkeyes defeated
Tennessee
in the 1982 Peach Bowl to earn Iowa's first bowl
victory since 1959.
In 1983, Fry's Hawkeyes had a 9-2 record overall and a 7-2 mark in
the Big Ten as the Hawks earned an invitation to the Gator Bowl.
Iowa's seven Big Ten wins set a school record, and Iowa's nine wins
overall tied the school record for wins in a single season set in
1903. Iowa was ranked in the top ten in the country before losing
in the Gator Bowl to Florida.
A five game conference winning streak in 1984 helped put Fry and
Iowa in contention for the league title, but injuries contributed
to Iowa's 0-2-1 finish to the conference schedule.
Iowa carried a 7-4-1
record into the 1984 Freedom Bowl
against Texas
. It was Fry's first game against a Texas
school since leaving the state in 1978. The Hawkeyes set the stage
for the 1985 season by routing Texas, 55-17. It was the most points
scored against Texas in eighty years and the second most points
ever allowed by the Longhorns.
Another title and more bowls (1985–1987)
1985 was arguably Fry’s best season at Iowa. Iowa was ranked #1 in
AP poll for the first time in 24 years and remained there for 5
weeks. During that time, the Hawkeyes scored two thrilling,
last-minute victories as America's top team.
Iowa quarterback
Chuck Long scored a last minute touchdown
on a bootleg run to clinch a 35-31 victory over Michigan
State
. Two weeks later, one of the most celebrated
games in Iowa history was set to be played.
The Michigan Wolverines came into Iowa City with a perfect 5-0
record and the #2 ranking in the AP poll. It was just the 12th time
in college football history that the #1 and #2 ranked teams in the
AP poll would meet for a regular season game. It was the first such
meeting where the victor scored the winning points on the game's
final play.
With two seconds remaining in the game and
Iowa trailing 10-9, kicker Rob
Houghtlin booted his fourth field goal of the day, this one
from 29 yards out, as time expired to give Iowa a dramatic 12-10
victory over Michigan at Kinnick Stadium
.
Iowa would finish the season with a 10-1 record, losing only in
Columbus to Ohio State. Still, Iowa would win its first outright
Big Ten title in 27 years and secure Fry's second Rose Bowl berth
and a top ten final ranking. The Hawkeyes set a new school record
for wins in 1985, and Long finished second to
Bo Jackson for the
Heisman Trophy by the narrowest margin in the
history of the award.
A win in
1986 over Iowa
State
was Fry's 53rd at Iowa, giving him more wins than
any coach in Hawkeye history. Iowa had an 8-3 record in 1986
and accepted an invitation to the
Holiday
Bowl. The Hawkeyes won the 1986 Holiday Bowl, 39-38, again on a
kick by Houghtlin as time expired.
In 1987, the Hawkeyes had a 9-3 record and returned to San Diego
for the Holiday Bowl. A second straight Holiday Bowl victory gave
Iowa another ten win season. Iowa's 62 victories from 1981-1987
were the most of any Big Ten team in that span, more than Michigan
or Ohio State. Fry had taken a team with 19 consecutive non-winning
seasons and turned them into one of the best teams in the Big Ten
conference.
Third Big Ten title (1988–1991)
The 1988 season marked the 100th season of Iowa football. It was
also Fry's tenth at the school, making him the first Iowa football
coach to lead the Hawkeyes for a full decade. Iowa compiled a 6-3-3
record and accepted its eighth consecutive invitation to a bowl
game by playing in the 1988 Peach Bowl.
In 1989, the television show
Coach debuted, starring
Craig T Nelson as "Hayden Fox". The title
character, created by Iowa alumnus Barry Kemp, was loosely based on
Hayden Fry (Fry later appeared in commercials for the
NCAA with the female lead of the TV series,
Shelley Fabares).
Iowa had a
disappointing season, however, as a season ending loss to Minnesota
cost Iowa a ninth straight bowl game and a Copper Bowl berth, as the Hawkeyes finished the
year 5-6.
The Hawks bounced right back in 1990, as Iowa started the season
with a 7-1 record. Iowa's final regular season game in 1990 was
against Minnesota, and Iowa entered the game with records of 8-2
overall and 6-1 in the Big Ten. Early in the game, results of other
Big Ten games gave Fry his third conference title and third Rose
Bowl berth in ten years more than any other Big Ten Conference
team.
Iowa's loss to Minnesota cost the Hawkeyes
the outright conference crown, but the Hawks finished tied atop the
Big Ten Conference standings with
Illinois
, Michigan, and Michigan State, all of which
compiled 6-2 league records. Iowa earned the trip to
Pasadena, since the Hawks had beaten all three teams during the
regular season, and all of them on the road. Although the Hawkeyes
lost in Pasadena for the third time under Fry, many fans expected
1991 to be an even better year.
The Hawks had a better record in 1991, posting a 10-1 record, but
the lone loss to Michigan cost Fry a fourth Big Ten title and Rose
Bowl berth. Iowa's season ending win against Minnesota in 1991 was
win number ten on the season, tying the school record for wins in a
season. The win over Minnesota was also Fry's 100th victory at
Iowa.
The
Hawkeyes accepted a third invitation to the Holiday Bowl, and the
13-13 tie with BYU
gave Iowa a 10-1-1 final record and a top ten
finish in the final AP rankings.
Iowa's winning percentage from 1981 to 1991 ranked second in the
Big Ten behind Michigan and ahead of Ohio State. The Hawkeyes
played in 10 bowl games in 11 years and won three Big Ten titles
during that span.
Winning two more bowl games (1992–1996)
As Fry got older and several assistant coaches departed for other
coaching jobs, Iowa had a down period from 1992-1994. A season
ending loss to Minnesota in 1992 gave Fry just his second losing
season in the last 12 years, as Iowa finished with a 5-7 record.
After starting the 1993 season at 2-5, the Hawkeyes rebounded with
four straight wins to garner an
Alamo
Bowl berth. Iowa's final win of the 1993 season over Minnesota
gave Fry the 200th victory of his coaching career.
However, Iowa lost the inaugural Alamo Bowl to
California, 37-3. The Hawkeyes then
struggled to a 5-5-1 record the following year in 1994, and some
critics wondered if Fry's coaching career was at an end.
But Fry had one last run of winning seasons.
In 1995, the Hawkeyes
had a 7-4 record and played Pacific 10 Conference co-champion
Washington
in the Sun Bowl. Fry
got a measure of revenge against Washington, who had defeated Iowa
in two of their three trips to the Rose Bowl under Fry, by
defeating the heavily favored Huskies, 38-18. The Hawks then had an
8-3 record in 1996 and ended the year by recording the first bowl
shutout in school history with a 27-0 victory over
Texas Tech in the
Alamo Bowl.
Retirement (1997–1998)
In 1997, the Hawkeyes were expected to again challenge for the Big
Ten title. Instead, Iowa settled for a disappointing 7-5 record.
Although
Iowa defeated Iowa State for the 15th consecutive time, Wisconsin
defeated Iowa for the first time in 20
years. Iowa also led eventual national champion Michigan at
halftime, 21-7, before falling in Ann Arbor, 28-24.
The Hawkeyes ended
the disappointing year in fitting fashion, losing in the Sun Bowl to Arizona State
.
The 1998 season marked Fry's 20th at the University of Iowa. It was
his worst season at Iowa, as the Hawks finished with a 3-8 record.
That season included a home loss to intrastate rival Iowa State
(Fry's first loss to Iowa State in 15 years). It would be his last
season at Iowa. Fry, who was secretly undergoing radiation
treatments for prostate cancer all year, announced his retirement
on November 22, 1998.
In 2002, Fry reportedly expressed an interest in the open head
coaching position at Baylor University (his Alma Mater) that
ultimately went to Guy Morriss.
Legacy and honors
It is difficult to overstate Hayden Fry's positive impact on Iowa
football. Fry coached two decades at Iowa, more than twice as long
as any coach before him. Hayden had a 143-89-6 record at Iowa and
led the Hawkeyes to three Big Ten titles, three Rose Bowl
appearances, and 14 bowl games. But more than that, Coach Hayden
Fry established a winning tradition at Iowa, on and off the field.
Iowa was no longer considered a coaching graveyard but rather, a
place where a great coach could excel. Several of Fry’s former
assistants followed Fry’s example in resurrecting other struggling
football programs.
Former Fry assistants or players who have taken over Division I-A
college football programs include:
- Kirk Ferentz, Iowa,
1999–present
- Bob Stoops, Oklahoma,
1999–present
- Mike Stoops, Arizona,
2004–present
- Bill Snyder, Kansas State,
1989–2005, 2009–present
- Barry Alvarez, Wisconsin,
1990–2005
- Bret Bielema, Wisconsin,
2006–present
- Dan McCarney, Iowa State,
1995–2006
- Chuck Long, San Diego State,
2006–2008
- Jim Leavitt, South Florida,
1996–present
- Bo Pelini, Nebraska, 2008–present
After
undergoing successful treatment for prostate cancer, Fry moved to Nevada
to live in
retirement. He was inducted into
the College
Football Hall of Fame
in 2003, alongside former SMU star Jerry LeVias. He received the
Amos Alonzo Stagg Award, presented
by the
American
Football Coaches Association, in 2005.
In 2009,
prior to the first football game of the Hawkeye's season, First
Avenue in adjoining Coralville
was co-named Hayden Fry Way in his honor.
This road
is one of the main routes that can be taken to Kinnick
Stadium
from Interstate
80.
Head coaching record
See also
References
-
http://www.coralville.org/mod.php?mod=news&op=getArticle&sid=433
- "Hayden Fry: End of an Era," special section, The
Gazette (Cedar Rapids, Iowa), November
24, 1998
- Brown, G., and Morrison, M. (eds.), 2002 ESPN Information
Please Sports Almanac. New York: Hyperion Press, 2001.
- Fry, H., and G. Wine, Hayden Fry: A High Porch Picnic
(ISBN 1-58261-033-9). Champaign, Illinois: Sports Publications,
1999.
External links