Chicago Sun-Times

Coached ’ 91 state baseball champs

- BY MAUREEN O’DONNELL Staff Reporter Email: modonnell@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ suntimesob­its

John Dunlop coached his high school athletes with endurance drills, tough love, positive visualizat­ion and a don’t- even- think- aboutit scowl they knew as “The Look.”

His Thornwood High School Thunderbir­ds won the Illinois state high school baseball championsh­ip in 1991. When he retired after 19 seasons at Thornwood, he had a record of 439 wins, 194 losses and four ties, said James Dye, the school’s athletic director.

“He was the winningest baseball coach at Thornwood,” said his son Jon.

His players — including three who went on to play Major League Baseball — say they never forgot the lessons “Mister D” taught them.

“You weren’t a star player to him,” said Cliff Floyd, who enjoyed a $ 290,000 signing bonus and a long pro career that started with the Montreal Expos in 1993 and ended with the San Diego Padres in 2009. “You were just a kid he wanted to turn into a man when you left high school and be successful in whatever you did. That’s one of the things I loved about him. He pushed us to be great men.”

He also coached future Major Leaguers Mark Mulder and Justin Huisman.

Mr. Dunlop, 71, died of a heart attack March 23 — as his family put it, he “slid safely home.” He was out for pizza with friends at Traverso’s in Orland Park when he collapsed, according to his son Steven.

In 1991, his Thunderbir­ds captured the state baseball title, capping a 64- game winning streak by beating the Edwardsvil­le Tigers.

“They were No. 1 in the country when we played them,” said Steven Dunlop, who played on the championsh­ip team with his brother Jon.

The same day, Thornwood’s girls softball team beat East Moline — the first time in Illinois that a boys baseball team and girls softball team from the same school won titles in the same year.

“Oh, it was great,” said retired athletic director Gary Lagesse. “South Holland was the baseball- softball capital of the world in the early ’ 90s.”

Young John grew up near 81st and Bennett, the baby in a family with three boys. He attended Horace Mann grade school and South Shore High, where he played baseball, football and basketball. His dad Hugh, a bricklayer, coached him but died when he was 18, said Jon Dunlop.

Mr. Dunlop discussed his father’s influence in a 1991 Chicago Sun- Times interview.

“I said a prayer before every game and summoned my father to guide me,” he said. “All the kids are my kids … That’s the greatest thing about coaching. You’re a father to them all.”

The coach’s father and older brothers instilled manners and sportsmans­hip, saying, “You don’t act like that. You’re a Dunlop.”

“He had such control over a bunch of kids, like I’d never seen,” Floyd said. “He would give you a look — and you pushed your mute button.”

If Floyd was late to practice, he said, “He used to make me run.” He learned not to be late.

When Mr. Dunlop taught racquetbal­l and other games to his own kids when they were young, he’d keep things interestin­g by spotting them 20 points. But his son Michael said, “He wouldn’t let you win a game. He would make you earn it.”

In grade school, John Dunlop met Susan Frook, who became his wife of 49 years. On dates, they’d go to movies at the Avalon and Jeffery theaters, then to Cunis and Mitchell’s ice cream parlors.

She was key to his success, according to Floyd, who said, “She was at every game. She pushed us. She made food for us. She drove us.”

Mr. Dunlop played baseball when he attended what’s now the University of Illinois at Chicago. He earned a bache- lor’s degree in physical education from the University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign. In the early 1970s, while earning his master’s at the university’s Chicago campus, he taught P. E. there and coached baseball. For a time, he also sold insurance, but “he was miserable because it didn’t have baseball,” his wife said.

At various times, she said, he helped coach baseball, football and basketball at the Latin School and at high schools including St. Francis de Sales, Thornton and Thornton Fractional North. He also taught English at Thornridge and Thornwood High Schools. In 1987, he became Thornwood’s baseball coach.

Almost all of his players from his champion 1991 team came to his visitation. He loved TV’s “NCIS,” so his family tucked a cap with the show’s logo into his casket.

Mr. Dunlop is also survived by six grandchild­ren. His ashes will rest on the mantle of his retirement home in northern Michigan, alongside the cremains of his two dogs, Sadie the golden retriever and a yellow Labrador retriever with a home run of a name: Round- tripper.

“HE PUSHED US TO BE GREAT MEN.”

CLIFF FLOYD, on his high school coach, John Dunlop

 ?? SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? Thornwood coach John Dunlop and his sons Steve ( left) and Jon ( right) after winning the 1991 state high school baseball championsh­ip.
SUPPLIED PHOTO Thornwood coach John Dunlop and his sons Steve ( left) and Jon ( right) after winning the 1991 state high school baseball championsh­ip.
 ?? | SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? John and Susan Dunlop on their wedding day.
| SUPPLIED PHOTO John and Susan Dunlop on their wedding day.
 ?? | GETTY IMAGES ?? Cliff Floyd, who enjoyed a long pro career, is among the major leaguers John Dunlop coached in high school.
| GETTY IMAGES Cliff Floyd, who enjoyed a long pro career, is among the major leaguers John Dunlop coached in high school.

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