Chattanooga Times Free Press

Former Vandy AD David Williams dies

- BY TERESA M. WALKER

NASHVILLE — David Williams II, the first black athletic director in the Southeaste­rn Conference and an “incomparab­le leader” at Vanderbilt, died Friday, hours before his retirement party. He was 71.

He died at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, the university said. The cause was not disclosed. His last day as athletic director was Jan. 31.

“David Williams stood tall on this campus, in this city and in college athletics nationally as an incomparab­le leader, role model and dear friend to me and so many others,” school chancellor Nicholas Zeppos said in a news release. “We are devastated by this loss. His impact on our community is immeasurab­le and will be felt for generation­s to come.”

Williams was nicknamed the Goldfather — the school colors are black and gold — for his success at the school. He had been the SEC’s second-longest tenured athletic director behind Kentucky’s Mitch Barnhart when he announced his retirement last September. Malcolm Turner took over Feb. 1, and Williams stayed on as a full-time law professor. He also was establishi­ng a Sports, Law & Society program at Vanderbilt Law School.

“David authored a remarkable legacy at Vanderbilt, one defined by blazing trails and championin­g the student-athlete,” Turner said in the release.

Williams was vice chancellor of student affairs and a tenured law professor, general counsel and university secretary in 2003 when chancellor Gordon Gee dissolved the Vanderbilt athletic department. Williams’ job overseeing student affairs put him in charge of athletics, which he had worked in while at Ohio State.

He shed some jobs in 2012 when he took the athletic director title. During his stay, Vanderbilt won four national championsh­ips — in baseball (2014), women’s tennis (2015) and women’s bowling (2007, 2018) — and enjoyed its most football success in nearly a century.

The last bowl berth for the Commodores had been in 1982. Vanderbilt went to six bowl games during Williams’ time, starting in 2008 and most recently in December. It marked a huge turnaround for a program that ended the SEC’s longest bowl drought and a 25-year stretch without a winning record.

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