Miami Herald

Jim Cox, a fixture in South Florida sports, dies at 69

- BY WALTER VILLA Miami Herald Writer

Armed with a master’s degree, a love for people and a passion for sports, Jim Cox could have traveled across the country with dreams of becoming an athletic director at an NCAA powerhouse.

But he didn’t.

Instead, he stayed in Miami with his wife, Jan, and their three daughters and seven grandchild­ren.

“He wanted to be where he could make the biggest impact on people,” said Jan, his wife of 45 years. “He wanted to stay in Miami with his family.”

Cox, the former athletic director at Miami Dade College and an almost constant presence as a leading statistici­an at Miami Heat, Miami Dolphins and Miami Hurricanes games, died Sunday morning after suffering a massive heart attack the previous day.

He was 69.

“Within hours of his passing, there were already a couple of dozen people posting on Facebook, saying that Jim was the reason they started working in sports,” said Dennis Jezek Jr., Barry University’s director of athletic communicat­ions. “There was definitely a ‘Jim Cox tree,’ and it was pretty tall, and it had a lot of branches.

“He was a huge influence on me — a big mentor.”

After leaving MDC, Cox became an associate athletic director for facilities at Barry, where Jezek and others were amazed by his versatilit­y.

For starters, Cox had skills as a journalist, serving as a Miami

News copy editor from

1972 to 1974. Decades later, he covered high school football for the

Miami Herald from

2010 to 2014.

At Barry, he ran the scoreboard, he grabbed the microphone and did the

P.A., he did the scorebook, and he did some radio broadcasti­ng.

“Jim could fill in anywhere,”

Jezek said. “That’s because he was good at everything.”

If he struggled at anything, it was getting Jan to marry him.

That took some doing.

Jim and Jan were high school sweetheart­s at Carol City High. Jim wanted to marry her, but Jan was content living with her grandmothe­r at the time.

“She would iron my clothes,” Jan said. “When I got home, my food was on the table.

“But, one day, I just realized that Jim was the one. I called him and told him I wanted to get married.”

They were happily wed for 45 years, and they raised Jennifer Michelle; Jonelle Melissa; and Juliann Megan.

Cox, a native of Miami, was essentiall­y a sports fan from birth, attending the Dolphins’ first ever game in 1966. Cox also played football, basketball, baseball and golf at Carol City.

But after one year at Western Carolina University, Cox came back to Miami, earning his associate’s degree from MDC. He then got his bachelors and masters degrees from St. Thomas University.

In fact, Cox was part of the first graduating class of STU’s well-regarded sports-administra­tion program.

 ?? ?? Jim Cox played football, basketball, baseball and golf at Carol City High.
Jim Cox played football, basketball, baseball and golf at Carol City High.
 ?? JARED LAZARUS Miami Herald | April 19, 2005 ?? Jim Cox ‘calls’ the game as Sherry Furnari inputs the stats from his calls into a computer during a Miami Heat game. Cox was a leading statistici­an at Miami Heat, Miami Dolphins and Miami Hurricanes games.
JARED LAZARUS Miami Herald | April 19, 2005 Jim Cox ‘calls’ the game as Sherry Furnari inputs the stats from his calls into a computer during a Miami Heat game. Cox was a leading statistici­an at Miami Heat, Miami Dolphins and Miami Hurricanes games.

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