Danny
Ford, national champion Clemson University
former football coach and hero
Danny Ford led Clemson to its one and only national championship in football
in 1981, coaching a total of 11 seasons in Tigertown. He compiled a 96-29-4 (.760)
record at Clemson, including a 6-2 bowl record. He was the third winningest coach
in the country on a percentage basis after the '89 season. Ford also coached
21 All-Americans and 41 players who went on to play in the NFL.
After
graduating from Gadsden High School in 1966, Danny Lee
Ford was an All-SEC selection on the field and off the
field under Paul "Bear" Bryant at Alabama,
where he played in three bowl games. He received a bachelor's
degree in industrial arts in 1970 and later received a
master's degree in special education in Tuscaloosa in 1971.
After nine years as an assistant coach, Ford had an auspicious
beginning to his head coaching career. He debuted with
a 17-15 win over Ohio State in the 1978 Gator Bowl. The
30 year-old coach, youngest in Division I at the time,
also defeated a college football legend in a contest that
truly put Clemson football on the map, as he beat Woody
Hayes in the latter's last game.
"When Coach Ford was named coach at Clemson, there
were mixed emotions," recalls Jeff Davis, a Clemson
Ring of Honor member. "It was obvious that he had
so many things to offer. And what he lacked he made up
for in working harder than anyone else and communicating
his expectations to the players. He blossomed as well as
any coach could."
In 1981, Ford helped Clemson reach the summit of college
football by winning the National Championship, the first
by any Clemson team. His Tigers, who were unranked in the
preseason, downed three top-10 teams during the course
of the 12-0 season that concluded with a 22-15 victory
over Nebraska in the Orange Bowl. Ford, National Coach-of-the-Year
in '81, is still the youngest coach to win a national championship
on the gridiron. He also led Clemson to a 30-2-2 record
between 1981-1983, best in the nation.
Clemson
won three straight ACC titles under his guidance between
1986 and 1988. In '89, Clemson registered a 10-2 season
and top-12 national ranking for the fourth straight season.
Ford, who always wore a block "C" cap
on the sideline, closed his career with a 27-7 win over
West Virginia in the Gator Bowl. In the decade of the 1980s,
Clemson had the nation's fifth-highest winning percentage.
Davis
remembers how Ford influenced his life. "Coach
Ford had a unique way of conveying a message to his players.
He expected his players to have a great work ethic. Because
of that, he enabled me to go beyond what I thought I could
do. I was also able to effect many others in the same way."
Ford, 51, and his wife, Deborah, have four children, Jennifer,
Ashleigh, Elizabeth, and Lee.
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