Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Former Notre Dame coach Parseghian dies at 94

- By Tom Coyne

Ara Parseghian, who took over a foundering Notre Dame football program and restored it to glory with two national championsh­ips in 11 seasons, has died. He was 94.

Ara Parseghian, who took over a foundering Notre Dame football program and restored it to glory with two national championsh­ips in 11 seasons, has died. He was 94.

University of Notre Dame President Rev. John Jenkins announced in a statement that Parseghian died at home at 1:30 a.m. Wednesday.

Parseghian had recently returned to his home in Granger, Indiana, after spending more than a week in a nursing care facility in South Bend, Indiana. He was treated for an infection in his surgically repaired hip, and was still receiving round-the-clock care at home.

“Among his many accomplish­ments, we will remember him above all as a teacher, leader and mentor who brought out the very best in his players, on and off the field,” Jenkins said. “He continued to demonstrat­e that leadership by raising millions of research dollars seeking a cure for the terrible disease that took the lives of three of his grandchild­ren. Whenever we asked for Ara’s help at Notre Dame, he was there.”

Parseghian and the Irish won titles in 1966 and 1973, but he abruptly retired after the 1974 season at age 51 with a record of 95-17-4. He said he was worn out and ready for a change.

Parseghian, Knute Rockne and Frank Leahy are the only Irish coaches to lead the storied program to more than one national championsh­ip. His .836 winning percentage puts him third on Notre Dame’s coaching list behind fellow College Football Hall of Famers Rockne (.881) and Leahy (.855). Only Rockne (105, 1918-30) and Lou Holtz (100, 1986-96) won more total games at Notre Dame.

Parseghian’s Irish also finished No. 2 in 1970, No. 3 in 1964, were ranked in the top 10 in nine times and never finished ranked lower than No. 14. The Irish never lost back-to-back regularsea­son games under Parseghian.

Parseghian started his coaching career at Miami University, his alma mater, and then spent eight seasons leading Northweste­rn. He came to Notre Dame in 1964, with the Irish having gone five seasons without a winning record. Parseghian didn’t just revive Notre Dame football. He made Fighting Irish fans believe in the program again. He later became a powerful advocate and fundraiser in the fight against rare diseases.

Parseghian led Notre Dame to national championsh­ips in two different decades, restoring the luster to what had been college football’s most glamorous franchise in one of its most important eras. He began his tenure in South Bend with an impromptu pep rally that drew 2,000 students to the steps of a residence hall and eventually persuaded Notre Dame to end its longstandi­ng policy against playing in bowl games.

Parseghian was so beloved by students that when the weather turned bad, chants of “Ara, stop the rain!” or “Ara, stop the snow” cascaded down from the grandstand­s.

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 ?? FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this file photo, Navy head coach Rick Forzano, left, and Notre Dame head coach Ara Parseghian talk on the sideline during a football game in Philadelph­ia. Notre Dame defeated Navy 56-7. Parseghian died Wednesday at his home in Granger, Ind. he was 94.
FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this file photo, Navy head coach Rick Forzano, left, and Notre Dame head coach Ara Parseghian talk on the sideline during a football game in Philadelph­ia. Notre Dame defeated Navy 56-7. Parseghian died Wednesday at his home in Granger, Ind. he was 94.

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