Coaching Series: Lou Holtz

Lou Holtz: The Coach Who Built Champions for Life Today, March 4, 2026, the college football world lost one of its greatest teachers. Lou Holtz, the legendary coach who led Notre Dame to the 1988 national championship and inspired generations with his no-nonsense wisdom, passed away at age 89 in Orlando, Florida. Notre Dame Football captured the moment perfectly in their tribute: “Remembering the life and legacy of Lou Holtz.” If you haven’t watched the video yet, pause and take it in—it’s a powerful reminder of the man who didn’t just win games; he changed lives. Remembering the life and legacy…

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Coaching Series: Hank Stram

Coaching Series: Hank Stram – The Innovator in the Red Vest Hank Stram wasn’t just a coach; he was a showman, a strategist, and a football visionary who turned the Kansas City Chiefs into a powerhouse and changed the game forever. If you’ve ever watched a sideline prowling with a coach in a sharp blazer, barking plays through a headset, or seen a team stack the line with a “Stack Defense,” you’ve brushed up against Stram’s legacy. He wasn’t the loudest name in football history, but he was one of the most influential-a man who brought flair, brains, and a Super…

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Coaching Series: Lou Saban

Lou Saban: The Unyielding Fire of a Genuine Soul Among football coaches, where legends like Vince Lombardi preached like prophets and Bill Belichick schemed like sorcerers, Lou Saban stands apart-not as the loudest voice or the most decorated, but as the most human. He was the nomad who wandered 21 coaching stops across five decades, from AFL champions in Buffalo to Division III rebuilds in North Carolina at age 80. His win-loss record? Respectable but not regal: 191 victories against 200 defeats and 11 ties. Yet, ask anyone who played for him, and they'll tell you Saban wasn't measured in stats.…

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Coaching Series: Norm Van Brocklin

The Dutchman: A Volatile Flame That Lit Football's Soul In the pantheon of football legends, few burn as brightly-or as erratically-as Norm Van Brocklin. "The Dutchman," born Norman Mack Van Brocklin in 1926 to Dutch immigrant parents in Eagle Butte, South Dakota, wasn't just a quarterback who etched his name in the NFL record books with a still-legendary 554-yard performance against the New York Yanks on September 28, 1951. He was a force of nature: a chain-smoking philosopher-coach whose gravelly wisdom and hair-trigger temper shaped a generation. Volatile? He'd explode at officials like a misfired shotgun, once fined $500 for chasing…

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