Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Ara Parseghian

ARA PARSEGHIAN May 21, 1923 - Aug. 2, 2017

- Ralph D. Russo

Former Notre Dame coach dies at 94. He’s remembered for building a legacy of hope for the Fighting Irish. Obituary,

Ara Parseghian reached the pinnacle of his profession at Notre Dame and endured the most painful personal losses as a father and grandfathe­r.

He walked away from coaching at the age of 51 after winning two national championsh­ips, but never really left Notre Dame. He built a legacy through philanthro­py that he hoped would be far more meaningful than any of his many victories.

Mr. Parseghian died Wednesday at his home in Granger, Ind., where he lived with Katie Parseghian, his wife of 68 years. He was 94.

Mr. Parseghian recently had returned home after spending more than a week in a nursing care facility in South Bend, Ind. 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,” Notre Dame president Rev. John Jenkins said in statement. “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.”

Mr. Parseghian took over at Notre Dame in 1964 when the Fighting Irish were down. They hadn’t had a winning season in five years and had gone 2-7 in 1963. He quickly restored the Golden Dome’s luster and led the Irish to national titles in 1966 and 1973. He abruptly retired after the 1974 season, saying he was worn out and ready for a change. Despite offers from other colleges and NFL teams he never returned to coaching.

His .836 winning percentage puts him third on Notre Dame’s coaching list behind fellow College Football Hall of Famers Knute Rockne (.881) and Frank Leahy (.855). At Notre Dame, they are considered the “Holy Trinity” of coaches. Only Rockne (105, 1918-30) and Lou Holtz (100, 1986-96) won more total games at Notre Dame than Mr. Parseghian.

“When you find any successful coach there’s always a portion of the players who didn’t like him. From the top All-American to the guy who never got to see the field, everybody loved Ara,” former Notre Dame quarterbac­k and Butler native Terry Hanratty said. “That’s a really great human being.”

Mr. Parseghian replaced Woody Hayes as head coach at Miami University, his alma mater, in 1951. After four seasons there, he spent eight seasons leading Northweste­rn.

Former Northweste­rn captain and center Jay Robertson recalled Mr. Parseghian’s attention to detail, and how he would get down on his hands and knees to coach the quarterbac­ks on how to properly take a snap.

“That great desire that he had to win and to do everything perfect did not include anything that would embarrass himself or the team or the university,” Mr. Robertson said. “I don’t remember ever him preaching to us about anything. He just lived it and we followed it.”

Mr. Parseghian didn’t just revive Notre Dame football. He made Fighting Irish fans believe in the program again. 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.

Mr. 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.

“As a student, I enjoyed the thrill of being on campus for Ara’s last three years as head coach, including the 1973 championsh­ip, and saw firsthand the profound impact that he had on my classmates who played for him,” Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick said in a statement. “When I returned many years later as athletics director, Ara was unfailingl­y generous with his time, and his counsel proved to be invaluable.”

After stepping down, Mr. Parseghian went into television and spent more than a decade calling games on ABC and CBS.

In 1994, his family was hit with devastatin­g news. Three of his son Mike’s children were found to have Niemann-Pick disease type C. Mr. Parseghian helped create the Ara Parseghian Medical Foundation in response.

“When I first started out, I wanted a silver bullet,” Mr. Parseghian told the South Bend Tribune in 2016. “I wanted that cure that could help the children immediatel­y. But research doesn’t work that way. You’ve got to go step by step by step.”

He already had been active in the National Multiple Sclerosis Society after his daughter, Karan, was diagnosed decades earlier.

The Parseghian­s lost three grandchild­ren between the ages of 9-16 to Niemann-Pick disease from 1997-2005. The foundation has raised more than $45 million for research on the disease.

In 2014, Mr. Parseghian’s daughter, Karan Burke, died at 61.

“As you move through life, it’s not going to be a bright sunshiny day every day. You’re going to have disappoint­ments. But how you handle those disappoint­ments is the important thing for you and everybody that’s around you. That’s what I found from being not only a player, but also a coach,” Mr. Parseghian said in 2012, when he was honored by the National College Football Awards Associatio­n.

He received an honorary doctorate from Notre Dame in 1997. In 1980, he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. In 2007, Notre Dame unveiled a statue of Mr. Parseghian outside Notre Dame Stadium.

Mr. Parseghian often tailgated before games outside Notre Dame Stadium, and then went home to watch the game on TV. He was worried that people at the stadium might misinterpr­et his reactions. And he wanted to watch the game without being interrupte­d.

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Ara Parseghian, 1966

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