In Memoriam - Rick Rasnick (1959-2019)In Memoriam - Rick Rasnick (1959-2019)

In Memoriam - Rick Rasnick (1959-2019)

            After two seasons as El Camino College as his team's Most Valuable Offensive Lineman, community college prospect Rick Rasnick weighed offers from San Jose State University and Fresno State to continue his college football career. He chose the Spartans, in part, because he wanted to be on the biggest possible football stage.
 
            Rasnick placed his stamp of focus, determination, skill, athleticism and knowledge of the game on a stage that resulted in 12 football seasons, many of them successful, at San Jose State, followed by four at the University of Utah (1991-94) and five as the Eastern Michigan University football head coach (1995-99).
 
            He used all of those traits and a trove of sports-related experiences in a five-plus year battle against Alzheimer's disease. The battle ceased on February 13, 2019 when Mr. Rasnick succumbed peacefully at age 59 surrounded by loved ones.


 
            Born in Las Vegas and raised in Southern California, Mr. Rasnick could run the 40-yard dash in 4.7 seconds – an extremely fast time for an offensive lineman back in his era. There actually was some question about his size, more specifically his listed playing weight, and whether he could deal with the constant contact of defensive players 20 to 50 pounds heavier than him.
 
"'Ras' was one-of-a-kind, 215-pounds soaking wet," remembered offensive tackle Max Hooper, Mr. Rasnick's Spartan teammate in 1979 and 1980 and a team captain in 1981.
 
Mr. Rasnick was listed at 225 pounds on the San Jose State roster for his two seasons. Hooper also recounted one story involving weigh-ins when he tried to help Mr. Rasnick weigh more than he actually did. The scheme didn't quite work, but a lot of things did as a starting center in the offensive line, team captain in 1980, undergraduate assistant, graduate assistant, offensive line coach, offensive coordinator and interim head coach during the 1990 spring prior to the appointment of Terry Shea as head coach.
 
• Played for San Jose State Sports Hall of Fame coach Jack Elway and coached with SJSU Sports Hall of Famer Claude Gilbert and Shea. His first game as a San Jose State player was a 48-48 tie with Utah State in Spartan Stadium, then the highest scoring tie in NCAA Division I-A history. The Spartans had winning seasons in 1979 and 1980 and knocked off #10-ranked Baylor, 30-22, in Waco, Texas on November 1, 1980, after trailing 15-0 in the second quarter.
 
"He told me Mike Singletary (Baylor's middle linebacker and Pro Football Hall of Fame member) was the best player he's ever seen on a football field and about the joy they going to Baylor (as a 28-point underdog) and beating them... I think he was joking around, 'He was so good, I never really touched him during the game because he was so fast and so good.' He would look up and see Mike Singletary six feet in front of him – the best player he's ever faced and trying to chase him down the whole game was kind of comical. That was one of his biggest thrills – beating Baylor," said younger brother Ryan Rasnick, a starting free safety for the Spartans during the 1986 through 1989 seasons.
 
• Beating Cal and Stanford in the same season twice in 1981 and 1987.  The "mythical Bay Area championship" eluded the Spartans until then.
 
During his San Jose State days, Mr. Rasnick experienced beating Stanford 6-of-12 times; Cal on four occasions; going 2-2 with Oregon and 2-0 at Washington State. The Spartans lost a pair of seven-point games at Arizona State and lost nail-biters at Washington by three (20-17 in 1990) and four (35-31) in 1988.
 
• Winning four conference championships and playing in four bowl games between 1981 and 1990
 
• Earning a promotion to the offensive coordinator position in 1987. At age 27, he was the youngest offensive coordinator in NCAA Division I-A football. In four seasons, the Spartans averaged 31 points a game, were never shutout, led the nation in passing offense in 1987, was in the top-15 in passing offense each year, and averaged at least 400 yards of total offense a game each season.

San Jose State Football (1987-90) - National rankings
 

Season Total Offense Passing Offense Scoring Offense
1987  5th - 457.6 yds/game 1st - 338.1 yds./game 6th - 35.4/game
1988 21st - 404.2 yds./game 12th - 255.4 yds./game 35th - 26.3/game
1989 20th - 412.7 yds./game 12th - 257.8 yds./game 35th - 28.3/game
1990 7th - 465.1 yds./game   8th - 291.4 yds./game 12th - 35.2/game


 
 "Coach Rasnick always made sure that we were 100% prepared to be successful. He made sure we knew what was likely coming at us, and what to do about it.  As a player, that builds great confidence and that's the only thing you can ask from your coach, really," said 1987 first-team all-conference offensive guard Jim Carter, who originally came to the San Jose State football program as a tight end prospect.
 
"Putting your players in the best position to be successful, and then let them play. That's what he did.  He was the best tactical coach I ever had."
 
"He enjoyed the game, enjoyed watching game film, enjoyed being prepared and preparing his players. …Our guards were 235 (pounds). You play Stanford. Those guys were 275, 280, 290 years ago. Back in the day, he would take middle linebackers and if you weren't starting, 'You want to come over and play guard for me.'  We had pulling guards at 235 pounds that could run. That was an advantage we did have," said the younger Rasnick about his older brother's approach to coaching.
 
Mr. Rasnick was appointed San Jose State's interim head football coach in the spring of 1990 during a time of considerable consternation surrounding the program. His steadying hand was instrumental in laying the groundwork for a 9-2-1 record, conference championship, California Raisin Bowl victory and a final national ranking of 20th in the United Press International coaches poll.  The Sporting News, the nationally-known weekly publication out of St. Louis, named him the Big West Conference's top offensive assistant coach for the 1990 season.

San Jose State all-conference lineman coached by Rick Rasnick
 

Jim Accinelli, C - 1984 (1st) David Diaz-Infante, OG - 1985 (HM), 1986 (1st) Chad Hymel, OG - 1989 (HM), 1990 (2nd) Henry Ramelli, OT - 1983 (1st)
John Aimonetti, OT - 1986 (1st) Mark Fredrick, OG - 1988 (2nd) Peni Iosefa, OT - 1990 (1st) Tim Stejskal, C - 1986 (1st)
Mike Barnard, OT - 1987 (1st) Anthony Gallegos, OG - 1989 (2nd), 1990 (1st) Tom Larson, OG - 1982 (2nd) Scott Swall, OT - 1987 (HM), 1988 (HM)
Jim Carter, OG - 1987 (1st) Pat Hinds, OT - 1989 (2nd), 1990 (1st) Manu Mulitano, OG - 1986 (2nd) Don Teague, C - 1987 (2nd)
Ara Derderian, OT - 1988 (2nd) Max Hooper, OT - 1981 (1st) Jeff Petkevicius, C - 1983 (2nd) Brian Woods, C - 1989 (HM), 1990 (1st)


 
He moved on to the University of Utah in 1991 as the Utes' assistant head coach for offense working for Spartan alum Ron McBride.
 
"Rick's talent as a coach extends far beyond his years. I've watched him coach and recruit. He is an excellent teacher of the game of football. He understands our offense, inside and out," said McBride at the time he hired Mr. Rasnick. The Utes would go on to play in three bowl games in his four seasons and be voted eighth in the final 1994 USA Today/CNN coaches poll and 10th the final Associated Press writers poll.
 
Mr. Rasnick's coaching success led to his appointment as the head coach at Eastern Michigan University in 1995 months before his 35th birthday. In his first season, EMU posted a 6-5 win-loss record, the school's only winning season between 1989 and 2016. Though his head coaching record at the Mid-American Conference school was 20-34 over five seasons, he remains Eastern Michigan's sixth winningest head football coach among the 41 to serve the school in that position.
 
His final years were spent often at the Beach Cities Health District Center for Health & Fitness in Redondo Beach, Calif., following the unfortunate diagnosis. In 2018, he was honored with the organization's "Spirit of Wellness" Award" for the year.
 
Mr. Rasnick is survived by his parents, Jim and Donna Rasnick; brother, Ryan Rasnick; sister, Kendahl Rasnick; sons, Blair and Pierce Rasnick; and companion, Annette Adams.
 
A celebration of life is set for Saturday, March 16, 2019, 2:00 to 5:00 p.m., at the Rice Mortuary, 5310 Torrance Blvd., Torrance, CA, 90503.