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Randy Walker dead at 52 https://mail.chicagofanatics.com/viewtopic.php?f=37&t=5669 |
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Author: | doug - evergreen park [ Fri Jun 30, 2006 12:36 pm ] |
Post subject: | Randy Walker dead at 52 |
from a heart attack.... EVANSTON, Ill. - Northwestern University football coach Randy Walker died of an apparent heart attack Thursday night. He was 52. Walker died after feeling chest pains around 10 p.m. at his suburban Chicago home, said Mike Wolf, the school's assistant athletic director for media services. "He will go down as a person who added a great deal to football," Northwestern president Henry Bienen said at a news conference Friday. Walker was the first Northwestern coach to lead the school to three bowl games. The Wildcats lost to UCLA 50-38 in the Sun Bowl last December. "He was a tough, demanding coach," athletic director Mark Murphy said. In October 2004, Walker checked himself into a hospital after experiencing chest pains. He was diagnosed with myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle; the condition is not a common ailment, and is usually caused by a virus. Walker was out of the hospital in two days, and said he was taking a new approach to his diet and work schedule. "I've really taken my doctor's orders to heart, because frankly, I want to see my grandkids someday," he said at the time. Two months ago, Northwestern gave Walker a four-year extension through the 2011 season. He joined the school in 1999 after nine years at Miami of Ohio. Walker's Wildcats posted 37 wins, going 7-5 last season. He led the team to three bowl games since 2000. Northwestern shared the Big Ten title in 2000 and went to the Alamo Bowl. The Wildcats also went to the 2003 Motor City Bowl. Walker was the first Wildcats coach to guide the team to four seasons with at least six wins since C.M. Hollister in 1899-1902. Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany said Walker will be sorely missed. "Not only was Randy a great friend to the conference, but to his players, his staff and fans," Delany said in a statement. "Randy accomplished a great deal at every institution he worked for, but most importantly he personified the values of intercollegiate athletics _ he was positive, resilient and honest." Indiana coach Terry Hoeppner, who worked with Walker at Miami of Ohio, said Walker's death left him in "absolute shock." "I lost a friend and someone I learned a lot from in our time together at Miami," Hoeppner said. "He is a great man, a great family man and a great person. Words cannot express how much I will miss him." Walker is survived by his wife, Tamara, and two children, Abbey, 28, and Jamie, 25, who is the school's football recruiting assistant. One of the most difficult times during Walker's tenure at Northwestern came in August 2001 when defensive back Rashidi Wheeler collapsed after participating in a conditioning drill and died. His parents sued the school, claiming officials did not give their son, an asthmatic, timely or adequate medical treatment. After years of court wrangling, the player's family was awarded a $16 million settlement. A judge approved the settlement last August. Walker was an assistant coach at North Carolina from 1978 to 1987 and then coached running backs at Northwestern in 1988 and 1989 before becoming head coach at Miami of Ohio, his alma mater. In nine seasons he compiled a 59-35-5 record, his .621 winning percentage the best in school history when he left. Walker's 1998 team at Miami went 10-1. A native of Troy, Ohio, Walker was a fullback at Miami of Ohio and graduated from there in 1976 with a degree in social studies education. Five years later he got a master's degree in education administration. During Walker's playing days, Miami compiled records of 11-0, 10-0-1 and 11-1 in the mid-1970s and won three Tangerine Bowls. Walker was inducted into the school's Hall of Fame in 1992. Walker was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals, and after a short stint returned to Miami as a graduate assistant. |
Author: | Dumhead [ Fri Jun 30, 2006 4:35 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
This is very sad news... for his family and for Northwestern athletics. Considering the academic restrictions that coaches face at NU, it is amazing that he took three teams to bowl games. Sure they lost in all of them, but this is a team that is undersized, slower, and just not as athletic as the big guns of the Big Ten. But most years, Walker kept that team competative against Big Ten powerhouses. He will be missed. |
Author: | My_name_1s_MUD [ Fri Jun 30, 2006 7:02 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
I got this note today. I think it really sums everything up nicely. Also we are getting some really nice responses from ALOT of colleges around the country: http://northwestern.rivals.com/forum.asp?sid=901&fid=57&style=2 COACH. WALKER. When a coach performs the impossible, you begin to think he is untouchable. Randy Walker's death is a stunner -- and that reaction shouldn't be limited to super-intense Northwestern football fans like me. (Frankly, I'm devastated.) Winning football at Northwestern used to be the biggest oxymoron in sports. Gary Barnett broke through; Walker took it to the next level: Consistency. By the end of last season, when Walker led Northwestern to its third bowl appearance under his 7-year tenure, one stat stood out: He was the first NU coach to lead the program to four seasons with at least six wins since the turn of the century -- the 19th Century. That might not sound like much to a fan of Notre Dame or USC or Oklahoma or Penn State, but to long-suffering Northwestern fans, simply being a perennial contender for bowl eligibility was like becoming a national power. After the high of Barnett's tenure, Walker delivered year-over-year stability, even as he imported a wild, high-octane spread offense that produced endless dramatic, you-never-know finishes. That offense was showcased in one of the most entertaining games of the last decade (2000: NU 54, Michigan 51); in the 2nd-best bowl game last season (Sun Bowl: UCLA 50, NU 38); and was even analyzed by some of the top programs in the country (Urban Meyer has called it an influence). Year after year, Walker had college football's longtime laughingstock in the hunt for a bowl game; week after week, he kept the team IN games. How does a coach whose heart carried a historically horrible program to the fan's bliss of weekly competitiveness die of a heart attack? It's a result as impossible as his on-field accomplishments. |
Author: | My_name_1s_MUD [ Fri Jun 30, 2006 7:05 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
Here's an excellent article written just before he died: http://www.sportingnews.com/yourturn/viewtopic.php?t=103616 |
Author: | The Irish Warrior [ Sun Jul 02, 2006 12:36 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
Danny Mac wrote a nice article in Sunday's edition for his paper about Walker. I think the link is NWItimes.com. There's a link from their website if that isn't right. |
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