Current:Home > reviewsDartmouth football coach Buddy Teevens, an innovator and the school’s winningest coach, dies at 66 -Blueprint Money Mastery
Dartmouth football coach Buddy Teevens, an innovator and the school’s winningest coach, dies at 66
View
Date:2025-04-18 16:16:41
Buddy Teevens, the successful and innovative Ivy League football coach who brought robotic tackling dummies to Dartmouth practices and strived to make the game safer, died Tuesday of injuries he sustained in a bicycle accident in March. He was 66.
School president Sian Leah Beilock and athletic director Mike Harrity announced Teevens’ death in a letter to the Dartmouth community.
“Our family is heartbroken to inform you that our beloved ‘coach’ has peacefully passed away surrounded by family. Unfortunately, the injuries he sustained proved too challenging for even him to overcome,” the Teevens family said in a statement. “Throughout this journey, we consistently relayed the thoughts, memories and love sent his way. Your kindness and letters of encouragement did not go unnoticed and were greatly appreciated by both Buddy and our family.”
Teevens, the winningest football coach in Dartmouth history, had his right leg amputated following the bicycle accident in Florida. Teevens and his wife, Kirsten, were riding on a road in the St. Augustine area when he was struck by a pickup on March 16.
Kirsten Teevens said her husband also suffered a spinal cord injury in the accident. The couple had moved to Boston to continue his rehabilitation closer to loved ones.
Buddy Teevens’ longtime assistant, Sammy McCorkle, has been leading the Dartmouth football team this season as interim coach. The Big Green opened the season last weekend with a loss to New Hampshire.
The school said McCorkle informed the team of Teevens’ death Tuesday, and the Big Green planned to play its home opener Saturday against Lehigh. There will be a moment of silence before the game and a gathering of remembrance afterward.
Teevens was a former star Dartmouth quarterback who went on to become the school’s all-time leader in wins with a 117-101-2 coaching record in 23 seasons. He coached the Big Green from 1987-1991 and returned in 2005. His teams won or shared five Ivy League championships.
In 1978, Teevens was the Ivy League player of the year, leading Dartmouth to a league title. He also was a member of the school’s hockey team.
He began his coaching career at Maine and in between his stints at Dartmouth he served as head coach at Tulane and Stanford. He was also an assistant at Illinois and at Florida under Hall of Fame coach Steve Spurrier.
But Teevens’ lasting legacy will be in his efforts to make football safer.
He reduced full-contact practices at Dartmouth in 2010 by focusing on technique, while still leading winning teams.
He also led the development by Dartmouth’s engineering school of the the Mobile Virtual Player, a robotic tackling dummy that has also been used by other college programs and NFL teams.
“Either we change the way we coach the game or we’re not going to have a game to coach,” Teevens told the AP in 2016 after Ivy League coaches voted to eliminate full-contact practices during the regular season.
Teevens also tried to create more opportunities for women in college football, hiring Callie Brownson to be an offensive quality control coach for the Big Green in 2018. She was believed to be the first full-time Division I female football coach.
“Buddy was a Dartmouth original,” Beilock and Harrity said in their letter. “He will be greatly missed and dearly remembered by so many members of the community whose lives he touched and changed for the better.”
Teevens, who was born in Massachusetts, is survived by his wife, their daughter, Lindsay, and son, Buddy Jr., along with four grandchildren.
___
AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll
veryGood! (79937)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Olympic Runner Noah Lyles Reveals He Grew Up in a “Super Strict” Cult
- Iowa proposes summer grocery boxes as alternative to direct cash payments for low-income families
- Rhode Island files lawsuit against 13 companies that worked on troubled Washington Bridge
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Taylor Swift drops 'Tortured Poets' song with new title seemingly aimed at Kanye West
- TikTok compares itself to foreign-owned American news outlets as it fights forced sale or ban
- US prosecutors aim to try Mexican drug lord ‘El Mayo’ Zambada in New York, then in Texas
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Sofia Richie Shares Special Way She’s Cherishing Mom Life With Baby Eloise
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- New Jersey governor’s former chief of staff to replace Menendez, but only until November election
- Police arrest 4 in killing of 'General Hospital' actor Johnny Wactor
- Cardinals superfan known as Rally Runner gets 10 months in prison for joining Jan. 6 Capitol riot
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- College hockey games to be played at Wrigley Field during Winter Classic week
- Thousands of Disaster Survivors Urge the Department of Justice to Investigate Fossil Fuel Companies for Climate Crimes
- Ohio deputy fired more than a year after being charged with rape
Recommendation
Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
Jewish groups file federal complaint alleging antisemitism in Fulton schools
Trans teens file lawsuit challenging New Hampshire law banning them from girls’ sports
Luke Goodwin, YouTuber Who Battled Rare Cancer, Dead at 35
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
Alabama election officials make voter registration inactive for thousands of potential noncitizens
A planned float in NYC’s India Day Parade is anti-Muslim and should be removed, opponents say
TikTok is obsessed with cucumbers. It's because of the viral 'cucumber boy.'