Bill McCartney

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Bill McCartney

Title Retired Head coach
Sport College Football
Born August 22, 1940 (1940-08-22) (age 67)
Place of birth Riverview, Michigan
Career highlights
Overall 95-55-5
Bowls 3-6
Coaching stats
College Football DataWarehouse
Awards
1990 National Championship
1989 National Coach of the Year
1985, 1989, 1990 Big Eight Coach of the Year
1990 UPI Coach of the Year
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1982-94 Colorado

William Paul McCartney (born August 22, 1940 in Riverview, Michigan) is the founder the Promise Keepers men's ministry and a former college football coach. Currently he is the founder and chairman of Road to Jerusalem ministry.

Contents

[edit] Coaching

After receiving his BA in education from the University of Missouri (1962), McCartney was named as an assistant football coach under Tom McCartney, his older brother, in the summer of 1965 at Detroit Holy Redeemer High School. He was also the head basketball coach at Redeemer (1965-1969), taking the school to the Detroit City Championship during the 1968-1969 season. He was also a successful football and basketball coach at Divine Child High School in Dearborn, Michigan before becoming the only high school coach ever hired by University of Michigan coaching legend Bo Schembechler. After nine years as an assistant, McCartney was hired to replace Chuck Fairbanks as head coach at the University of Colorado. In his first season the Colorado Buffaloes compiled a record of 2-8-1. But McCartney began rebuilding Colorado in the early 1980s by pointing to the success of Big Eight rival Nebraska Cornhuskers. McCartney stated that it would take five years to turn the Buffaloes into a winning program. After a disastrous 1-10 season in 1984, McCartney signed a contract extension. In only his fourth season, the Buffaloes were invited to the Freedom Bowl against the Washington Huskies. The following year, 1986, saw McCartney's team win its first game against Nebraska in over two decades. After moderately successful seasons in 1987 and 1988, McCartney moved his team into national prominence.

In 1988, the Buffaloes star quarterback, Sal Aunese, was diagnosed with stomach cancer. Aunesse died in the middle of the 1989 season. They beat every regular season opponent including ranked teams Washington, Illinois, Nebraska, and Oklahoma. When the final regular season poll for 1989 was released, the Colorado Buffaloes had taken only seven years to go from 110th to number one in the country. They played in the Orange Bowl against Notre Dame on January 1, 1990. They lost to Notre Dame, 21-6, and ended the year number four in the nation.

Big things were expected in 1990, and McCartney took the step of adding an extra game, the inaugural Disney Kick-Off Classic, to the schedule. Beginning the year ranked number four, the Buffaloes tied with the Tennessee Volunteers, 31-31. A comeback win against Stanford and a loss to Illinois made the Buffs 1-1-1. The tide turned with a win over Texas and they went undefeated the rest of the season. But the controversy that was to cast a pall over the Buffs' 1990 success came on October 6, 1990 against Missouri. The referees accidentally allowed the Buffaloes an additional play that wound up being the difference between victory and defeat. The game, known as the Fifth Down Game, had major repercussions for the rest of the year.

As the teams in front of them lost, Colorado continued to climb in the rankings. They beat nationally ranked opponents Washington, Oklahoma, and Nebraska. The win against Nebraska combined with the other events of November 3, 1990 put the Buffaloes in the number one spot. If they won their remaining games, they would win the national championship. Once again, the Buffaloes faced off in the Orange Bowl against Notre Dame. A sensational game unfolded that seemingly ended with another Notre Dame victory. Colorado punter Tom Rouen punted to Raghib Ismail with 65 seconds left. Ismail returned the punt 91 yards for the game-winning touchdown, only to have it called back due to a controversial clipping penalty. Colorado hung on for a 10-9 win and a share of the 1990 National Championship. Colorado was voted #1 by the AP Poll and split the title with Georgia Tech who was voted #1 by the Coaches Poll.

The following year, the Buffaloes tied Nebraska for the Big Eight title and lost to Alabama in the Blockbuster Bowl. In 1992, they lost three games and the Fiesta Bowl to Syracuse. After coaching two more seasons, the last an 11-1 season including a bowl win over Notre Dame, McCartney retired from coaching to head the Christian men's group Promise Keepers. After many years he resigned as the head of Promise Keepers and founded an organization called The Road to Jerusalem.

[edit] Record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl Coaches# AP°
Colorado Buffaloes (Big Eight) (1982 – 1994)
1982 Colorado 2-8-1 1-5-1 T-6th
1983 Colorado 4-7 2-5 T-6th
1984 Colorado 1-10 1-6 7th
1985 Colorado 7-5 4-3 3rd L Freedom Bowl
1986 Colorado 6-6 6-1 2nd L Bluebonnet Bowl
1987 Colorado 7-4 4-3 4th
1988 Colorado 8-4 4-3 4th L Freedom Bowl
1989 Colorado 11-1 7-0 1st L Orange Bowl 4
1990 Colorado 11-1-1 7-0 1st W Orange Bowl 2 1
1991 Colorado 8-3-1 6-0-1 T-1st L Blockbuster Bowl 20
1992 Colorado 9-2-1 5-1-1 2nd L Fiesta Bowl 13
1993 Colorado 8-3-1 5-1-1 2nd W Aloha Bowl 16
1994 Colorado 11-1 6-1 T-2nd W Fiesta Bowl 3
Colorado: 93-55-5 58-29-4
Total: 93-55-5
      National Championship         Conference Title         Conference Division Title
Indicates BCS bowl game. #Rankings from final Coaches Poll of the season.

[edit] Honors

McCartney is the former head football coach of the University of Colorado. His team won a co-national championship in 1990. He has been inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame (1999) and the Orange Bowl Hall of Fame (1996) and has been honored as UPI Coach of the Year (1990), Big Eight Conference Coach of the Year (1985, 1989, 1990), and National Coach of the Year (1989). He serves on the board of directors of the Equip Foundation, Gospel to the Unreached Millions, and Concerts of Prayer International and has been honored with personal awards including: Humanitarian of the Year from the Syl Morgan Smith Colorado Gospel Music Academy (1999); the Evangelist Philip Award from the National Association of United Methodist Evangelists (1999); the Fire-Setters Award from Revival Fires Ministries (1997); Layperson of the Year from the National Association of Evangelicals (1996); ABC News Person of the Week (February 16, 1996); the Chief Award from Chief, Inc., Phoenix, Az. (1996); the Spectrum Award from Sports Spectrum magazine (1995); and the Impact America Award from Point Loma College (1995).

He is the author of 4th and Goal PlayBook (Audio CD) with Jim Weidmann, and the books Sold Out Two-gether with Lyndi McCartney , Sold Out and From Ashes to Glory.

McCartney holds the record for the most games coached as head coach at Colorado (153). He also holds the records for most wins (93) and conference wins (58) of any head coach at Colorado.[1]

[edit] March on Washington

On October 4, 1997, between 500,000 to one million Christian men gathered in Washington D.C. for a Promise Keepers rally called "Stand In The Gap." The entire convention was featured on C-SPAN and carried on other cable networks.

[edit] Personal

McCartney lives with his wife, Lyndi, in the Denver area. They have four children and ten grandchildren. The McCartneys attend Cornerstone Church, in Boulder, Colorado. He enjoys spending time with his family, golfing, and bike riding. Two of those grandchildren were fathered out of wedlock by two different players on McCartney's Colorado football teams.[2] [3]

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ 2006 Colorado Buffaloes Media Guide, Records section (PDF) (English). CUBuffs.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-05.
  2. ^ Henderson, John. The McCartney connection. Retrieved on 2008-04-10.
  3. ^ Hoffer, Richard. Putting His House in Order. Retrieved on 2008-04-10.
Preceded by
Lou Holtz
Paul "Bear" Bryant Award
1989
Succeeded by
Bobby Ross
Preceded by
Chuck Fairbanks
University of Colorado Head Coach
19821994
Succeeded by
Rick Neuheisel
Preceded by
Don Nehlen
Walter Camp Coach of the Year
1989
Succeeded by
Bobby Ross