Legendary Arkansas Coach, Athletic Director Frank Broyles Dies at 92
He was not on the list.
Former Arkansas football head coach and athletic director
Frank Broyles died on Monday after complications of Alzheimer's Disease, his
family announced. He was 92 years old.
Broyles suffered a stroke in July.
As head coach of the Razorbacks, he led the team to seven
Southwest Conference titles, an undefeated season in 1964 and a shared national
championship for that season. He headed the athletic department and hired the
likes of John McDonald, who won 42 national titles with the track and field
team, as well as Nolan Richardson, who won the 1994 college basketball national
title.
Broyles retired in 2007. The Razorbacks' football field is
named in his honor.
The Broyles family issued the following statement through
the university:
“It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of
Coach Frank Broyles. He passed peacefully in his home surrounded by his loved
ones.
For 92 years John Franklin Broyles lived nothing short of a
remarkable life. To all who would listen, Frank Broyles was quick to proclaim,
in his unmistakable and infectious southern tone, that he was blessed to live
‘A Charmed Life’.
For more than five decades, he served the University of
Arkansas and all citizens of his adopted home state in his role as a coach,
administrator and goodwill ambassador for his beloved Razorbacks.
We wish to express our heartfelt gratitude to all those who
helped contribute to his charmed life. Whether you were one of his players,
coaches, colleagues or friends, a Razorback fan or fellow caregiver, you were
an integral part of his fairy tale story. To his family, he was quite simply,
our hero.
We take peace in knowing that his faith was the foundation
for the impact he made on the lives of others. From innumerable private moments
with his family and friends, to countless public interactions with millions in
his various roles, Coach Broyles shared his attitude of gratitude and
encouraged others to make a difference.
We know that this remarkable man does not want us to mourn,
but to celebrate the hope and inspiration he passed along to each of us. For
nearly two decades, he was a trailblazer for changing the stigma around dreaded
disease which took the life of his first wife, Barbara Day, and ultimately his
own. We will never know the impact that writing and publishing “Coach Broyles
Playbook for Alzheimer’s Caregivers” and establishing the Broyles Foundation
will have on families, but Coach considered it a win the first time it helped
one person.
He was the very definition of a difference maker. It will be
impossible to fill the void created by his passing. But even in our grief, our
hearts are overflowing with the love, gratitude and treasured memories of the charmed
life and lasting legacy of our beloved Coach.
We are planning a public celebration of his life. Once the
details are finalized we will share them with you.
Thank you for your continued thoughts and prayers.”
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