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Don James’ Proteges Pinkel, Saban Square Off in SEC Championship

Peter Tormey, author of "The Thursday Speeches: Lessons in Life, Leadership and Football from Coach Don James."

Peter Tormey, author of “The Thursday Speeches: Lessons in Life, Leadership, and Football from Coach Don James.”

Missouri Coach Gary Pinkel and Alabama Coach Nick Saban, both proteges of Don James, will square off Saturday for the Southeast Conference Football Championship. As described in the best-selling new book, The Thursday Speeches: Lessons in Life, Leadership, and Football from Coach Don James, James had enormous impact on both coaches.

James led the Golden Flashes to the 1972 Mid-American Conference Championship and a berth in the Tangerine Bowl against the Tampa Spartans. The Spartans won 21-18 and were coached by Earle Bruce, like James, an eventual College Hall of Fame member.  Among the Kent State players in that game were Saban, Pinkel and Jack Lambert, who went on to become a Pro Football Hall of Fame linebacker for the Pittsburgh Steelers. Tampa players in the game included John Matuszak, selected by the Houston Oilers in 1973 as the NFL’s No. 1 draft pick. In four years at Kent State, from 1971-1974, James compiled a 25-19-1 record and built a reputation as one of the most promising young head coaches in the land.

Pinkel coached for James as a graduate assistant at Kent State and as an assistant coach at Washington. At James’ memorial service at the University of Washington on Oct. 27, 2013, Pinkel said words fail to adequately describe the impact James had on his life.

“I met him when I was 18 years old. He had a profound impact on my life. Coach James was a huge influence in my life, personally and professionally; I wanted to coach because of Don James. He was my idol. He was my mentor,” Pinkel said. “The values he taught included hard work, ethics, determination, perseverance, integrity, teamwork, and he was one of the most successful men with the most humility that I’ve ever met in my life. There were invaluable lessons that applied to my life when coaching kids for the last 36 years.”

Pinkel, who was head coach at the University of Toledo before moving on to Missouri, said the program he and others built at Toledo and at Missouri is the Don James program.

I have responsibility to pass on his coaching legacy. The foundation of Don James’ program is meticulous organization, discipline, you play like you practice, and attention to detail,” Pinkel said. “Coach was big on the (final) 48 hours of preparation. When that Thursday practice was over, we didn’t practice on Friday, we played Saturday and we had 48 hours locked in.”

Saban, a graduate assistant coach for James at Kent State, also spoke at James’ memorial service via a taped presentation.

Coach James was my coach, my mentor, and my friend and there probably isn’t anyone who influenced my life more than he did because of his leadership and the example that he set but also professionally as a coach. Our program today still reflects many of the things that we did and that I learned from Coach James when I first got into this profession, which he inspired me to get into this profession by asking me to be his graduate assistant at Kent State,” he said.

Saban said he didn’t know what James saw in him, but said he can never have enough appreciation for James helping him get into a profession that he loves and in which he has become so successful.

There is really only one word that I can come up with to describe Coach James and that’s ‘class.’ There is nobody that I look up to more because of how he cared about people. He was concerned that you were successful personally and that you would be more successful in life because you were involved in the program, and individual character development, academic success, how you competed as a football player—all of those things would contribute to that,” Saban said.

Saban added that Coach James’ spirit lives through the many people whose lives he touched and changed.

The lessons that we learned, the leadership that he provided, and the influence that he had impacted all of our lives tremendously,” Saban said. “It was certainly a privilege to know this great man.”

THE THURSDAY SPEECHES: Lessons in Life, Leadership & Football from Coach Don James

Buy the book!

Learn more about what made Don James — and his proteges — so successful in the new book, THE THURSDAY SPEECHES: Lessons in Life, Leadership and Football from Coach Don James, which is available as a 6-by-9-inch paperback and ebook. The book includes the best of Coach James’ pre-game motivational speeches to his teams over the course of his legendary 18-year-career at UW along with new insights into his coaching.

 

Prologue to ‘THE THURSDAY SPEECHES’

PROLOGUE

The 1978 Rose Bowl team.

The 1978 Rose Bowl team.

Two days before Christmas 1974, Don James seized the reins of a University of Washington football program in disarray.  He immediately set a goal of going to the Rose Bowl. This objective catalyzed the Huskies to reach the 1978 Rose Bowl, in James’ third season, and beat the heavily favored Michigan Wolverines. Had it not been for this team, James said, everything he subsequently achieved at Washington might never have happened as he was in the third year of a four-year contract.

The 1978 Rose Bowl changed everything for James and the Huskies — guaranteeing him and his staff the time to develop what would become one of the most successful college football programs in the nation.

Most Successful Footbal Coach in UW, Pac-12 History

In his 18 years at Washington, James compiled a 153-57-2 record en route to becoming the most successful football coach in Washington history.  His 99 Pacific-10 victories are the most in league history.  James took his teams to 15 bowl games (10-5) including nine straight from 1979-87.  He guided the Huskies to six Rose Bowls and is one of only four coaches to win four Rose Bowl games. His 1991 team finished the season 12-0, beat Michigan in the Rose Bowl, and was named National Champion by USA Today/CNN, UPI, the Football Writers, Sports Illustrated and several computer rankings.

Coach James with the National Championship trophy.

Coach James with the National Championship trophy.

President of the American Football Coaches Association in 1989, James was National College Coach of the Year twice. Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1993, James entered the College Football Hall of Fame in 1997. As but one measure of his coaching skill, Sports Illustrated once named the three best colleges football coaches in the country: No. 1, Don James; No. 2, Don James; No. 3, Don James.

As a player in James’ second recruiting class at Washington, I was fortunate to have been part of what James would later describe as “the cornerstone” of his program.  In summer training camp before my freshman season, Coach James told us we were there to fulfill our destiny, to become Rose Bowl champions. We believed him, worked very hard, and it came to pass.

Under James’ leadership, our teams beat Michigan in the 1978 Rose Bowl, Texas in the 1979 Sun Bowl and helped establish Washington as a perennial powerhouse for nearly two decades. With James as our coach, we knew we had a chance to beat any team, any day.

James’ Legacy, Wisdom Live On

Although Coach James died of pancreatic cancer on Oct. 20, 2013 at age 80, his legacy and wisdom live on through the countless lives he touched and changed.

He lived his life based on strong values, faith and an unmatched work ethic he learned as a child growing up in Massillon, Ohio during the Great Depression – one of four sons of Florence and Thomas James.  Don’s father held two jobs to ensure the James boys could go to college.  For his part, Don began carrying bricks for pay at age 9 – in the summer for his uncle’s construction company – and became determined to go to college. Education, he knew, was one key to his future; the other was hard work.

He played quarterback and defensive back for two state championship teams at Massillon High, idolized his coaches, and decided then and there to become a football coach. He went on to play quarterback at the University of Miami where he set five school passing records and married the love of his life, Carol Hoobler.

At Washington, Coach James used words and stories to motivate the Huskies to slay the football giants of his day. My 6-by-9-inch paperback book, “THE THURSDAY SPEECHES: Lessons in Life, Leadership, and Football from Coach Don James,” is now available. The book, also available as a Kindle version, will put you in the seat of the Huskies — an insider’s view of the exact words James used to inspire the Huskies to the pinnacle of American college football.

“THE THURSDAY SPEECHES” contains valuable advice for everyone living in our competitive world, especially coaches, athletes, and leaders in all fields of endeavor.