The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Legendary Dodd will be honored at Kickoff

All-American QB for Vols became Tech’s Hall of Fame coach.

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

Tennessee fans honor Bobby Dodd as the All-American quarterbac­k of teams that were a combined 27-1-2 in his three seasons with the Volunteers. Linda Lay recalls a father who taught her how to fish and to walk on her hands.

Georgia Tech followers revere Dodd as the architect of the Yellow Jackets’ sustained run as a college football powerhouse. Bobby Dodd Jr. recalls a tennis doubles partner, punting instructor and a man he still calls “Daddy.”

Dodd, one of only three men in the College Football Hall of Fame inducted as both a player and a coach, will be honored at the Chickfil-A Kickoff game between Dodd’s two schools Monday night at the new Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

However, the recollecti­ons of football greatness, both on the field as a Volunteer and on the sideline with Tech, might not compare with those held by Alice and Bobby Dodd’s two children.

Dodd died in 1988, but his sweet hold on his children continues.

The man whom Tech players loved and feared was a “better father than a football coach,” Dodd Jr. said.

Said Lay, “He was really a good daddy.”

Lay’s recollecti­ons of her father are pure. Now living in Smyrna with her husband, John, Lay remembers a father who taught his two children to fish and shoot. He brought home a film projector from Tech — presumably one he used to dissect Yellow Jackets opponents — for screenings of “Felix the Cat.” He showed her how to do headstands and walk on her hands.

He a lso imparted his Christian faith, one that has shaped his daughter’s life. Lay, 79, was a Bible major at Emory and in her early 20s taught mentally challenged children at a Christian mission in Cabbagetow­n. She wanted to go into internatio­nal missions, but her father talked her out of it, reluctant to see his only daughter go far from home.

Beyond raising her children — she and her first husband, the late Joe Thompson, had three girls and a boy — a significan­t part of her life was leading Bible studies and teaching Sunday school classes.

“It’s my gift,” Lay said. “It’s something God did, not me.”

Lay and her father also connected through dancing. Bobby Dodd loved to dance with Alice at the posh Capital City Club and sometimes took Linda onto the floor. Her love for dancing led to her second marriage after her divorce from Thompson, a former player for her father. She met John Lay while square dancing. They went five nights a week for a long time, Linda said, circling left and passing through.

“You can’t tell dirty stories, you can’t cuss,” she said of square dancing. “It’s just good, wholesome, clean exercise.”

Linda’s memories speak of a man who lived what he preached. His three rules to his team were to go to church (or temple), go to class and do not drink, carouse or break curfew.

Linda’s three daughters — Deannie and twins Kelly and Lee — live in metro Atlanta. Son Joe is in Florida. She has seven grandchild­ren, a garden of flowers and 17 chickens. “Nobody’s in jail, nobody’s in the hospital,” she said. “I think we’re doing pretty good.”

Bobby Dodd Jr., 75, lives in Milledgevi­lle, having moved from Atlanta about a year ago. Like his father, Dodd Jr., known to family and friends as Brother, was a natural athlete. He played defensive back at Florida under former Dodd assistant Ray Graves, as father and son had agreed it would be wiser if he did not play at Tech.

The younger Dodd recalled how his father took a handsoff role with his football, not wanting to overstep his bounds with his coaches. He did, though, help his son with his punting, a skill for which Dodd was legendary even after he became a coach.

And though his father died 29 years ago at the age of 79, the love and loyalty that Bobby Jr. feels is tangible even over the phone.

Asked if he still misses him, Dodd responded, “Oh, God, yeah. Every day. I had to reorganize my life when Daddy passed away. We did so many things together. The best years of my life.”

Dodd Jr. is retired after a profession­al career in which he first worked as an attorney

and then switched tracks in 1988 and made his passion for collecting 18th century furniture his vocation, opening Bobby Dodd Antiques in Atlanta.

With his then-wife Margie, Dodd had a successful business by his counting. Margie’s troublesom­e back necessitat­ed their getting out of the business in 2008, just before the antiques market began to collapse. It was perhaps another instance of the famed Dodd luck that often favored the Jackets.

With Margie, from whom he is amicably divorced, Dodd has two daughters. Renee lives in Milledgevi­lle, and Alice, named for her grandmothe­r, resides in Los Angeles. “Brother” has two grandchild­ren.

Until recently, the two Dodd children continued to attend games together at the stadium that bears their father’s name, but Bobby Jr.’s health complicati­ons made it difficult for him to attend.

For many fans of Tech — and Tennessee — time has rendered Bobby Dodd not much more than a hallowed name. Where Linda was once self-conscious about her father’s prominence, “now it’s always a surprise when people remember him.”

Her father the football legend will be celebrated Monday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Linda will be there, as will many of Alice and Bobby Dodd’s grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren. They will themselves be a testament to the success of the more private life of a legendary coach and his wife.

Said Linda Lay, “They were really, really good parents.”

 ?? 1966 FILE ?? Left: Bobby Dodd, Yellow Jackets coach from 1945-1966, during which he compiled a 165-64-8 record.
Above: In a family vacation photo from the late 1950s, Bobby Dodd (back row, center) poses with his wife, Alice, and children Bobby Dodd Jr. and Linda....
1966 FILE Left: Bobby Dodd, Yellow Jackets coach from 1945-1966, during which he compiled a 165-64-8 record. Above: In a family vacation photo from the late 1950s, Bobby Dodd (back row, center) poses with his wife, Alice, and children Bobby Dodd Jr. and Linda....
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 ??  ?? MONDAY’S GAME Georgia Tech vs. ennessee (at Mercedesen­z Stadium), p.m., ESPN, 1.1
MONDAY’S GAME Georgia Tech vs. ennessee (at Mercedesen­z Stadium), p.m., ESPN, 1.1

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