Watch the May 31 Dick Tomey Celebration of Life from Tucson, Ariz., here starting at 8:00 a.m. (PT)/9:00 a.m. (MT)/10:00 a.m. (CT)/11:00 a.m. (ET)/5:00 a.m. (HT).
When Dick Tomey was named San Jose State University's football head coach on December 29, 2004, he described himself as a "competitor."
"I believe San Jose State University can be successful in college football. I always felt San Jose State had tremendous possibilities. The opportunity to be the head coach is really appealing and compelling," he said upon taking the job.
In recent months, Mr. Tomey competed against lung cancer until the evening of May 10 at age 80.
"Coach Tomey was a legend. He had the unique ability to reach into your soul and get the best out of you. He was different. He loved the game of football. But it was more about the players, the coaches, the families, the TEAM. You knew he sincerely cared about the men that played and coached for him," said San Jose State football head coach Brent Brennan, one of Mr. Tomey's many coaching protegees.
"It's rare when someone you work for mentors and teaches you everyday, even when you're done working for them, but Coach Tomey is that for me. His impact is incredibly far reaching. I will miss him everyday. I love you Coach Tomey."
His professional life as a football coach dated back to 1962 when he was a graduate assistant coach at Miami University of Ohio for eventual Big Ten Conference head coaches Johnny Pont, later of Indiana and Northwestern, and Glenn "Bo" Schembechler, who would go to fame at Michigan. There would be stops as an assistant coach at Northern Illinois, Davidson, Kansas and UCLA. While at UCLA, he worked for San Jose State grad and later Rose Bowl and Super Bowl winning head coach Dick Vermeil. Later in his career, he also would serve as an assistant at Texas, the San Francisco 49ers and at Hawaii, where he was the head coach from 1977 to 1986.
Mr. Tomey also had college football head coaching opportunities at the University of Arizona (1987 to 2000) and San Jose State University (2005-09). His head coaching record was 183-145-7. After the 2018 season, he still ranked in top-50 for Football Bowl Subdivision head coaches for most games coached (19th, 335 games coached) and games won (39th with 183).
Mr. Tomey took eight teams to bowl games, seven at Arizona and the 2006 Spartans to a New Mexico Bowl victory. He was a two-time conference "Coach of the Year" – 1981, the Western Athletic Conference Coach of the Year with Hawaii and 1992, the Pac-10 Coach of the Year with Arizona.
He was most proud of being a FBS head coach to win nine games in a season at each one of his three schools and for a lineage of head coaches and assistant coaches. Current head coaches Brent Brennan of San Jose State and Dino Babers at Syracuse, and former head coaches Rich Ellerson, June Jones, Pat Hill, Tom Williams and Ron McBride are among that group.
Mr. Tomey would be known as a turnaround specialist taking Hawaii, Arizona, and San Jose State to unprecedented success on and off the field. In each case, his organizational and people skills and knowledge of college football were invaluable.
"He was a 'beacon' for me and countless others. I turned to him often for his counsel, guidance and support. Spartans everywhere are grieving his passing as we reflect on how blessed we were to know him. Our warmest thoughts and prayers to Nanci and his entire family," said San Jose State University athletics director Marie Tuite.
At Hawaii (1977-1986), he was the first coach to lead the Rainbows to a top-20 national ranking. Home attendance more than doubled from his first season to his final one in 1986. When he moved on to the University of Arizona as the Wildcats' head coach in 1987, his Hawaii teams manufactured a 63-46-3 win-loss record that included eight winning seasons.
The University of Arizona (1987-2000) was next. There were seven bowl game appearances with four bowl victories and the 1993 and 1998 teams that won at least 10 games. Prior to his arrival, the Wildcats won one bowl game in 85 seasons. Arizona was the only program to beat national powerhouses Mimai (Fla.) and Nebraska in the decade of the 1990's.
"Not only was it (Arizona) the most enjoyable five years of my life, Coach Tomey helped me grow into the man I am today," said former University of Arizona defensive lineman and New England Patriots All-Pro linebacker Tedy Bruschi.
After 14 seasons at Arizona and one-season stints with the San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League in 2002 and the University of Texas for the 2004 season, Mr. Tomey accepted the San Jose State football head coaching position.
"He's the type of guy who can help you through hard times and really wants to make you win," said former San Jose State quarterback Adam Tafralis.
The 2006 Spartans finished with a 9-4 win-loss record, were invited to play in a post-season bowl game for the first time in 16 seasons and won the inaugural New Mexico Bowl over host University of New Mexico.
More importantly, Mr. Tomey provided the necessary leadership and vision to significantly overhaul the academic deficiencies that plagued the San Jose State football program at the time he became head coach. San Jose State became the model institution among NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) for academic reform.
"I've been fortunate to have three head coaching jobs in the highest level of college football. The one here at San Jose State may be the most rewarding. We've come so far and accomplished so much in five years. Terrific young men took a leap of faith when we started in 2005 and put the program back on a sturdy foundation for future San Jose State teams," Mr. Tomey said in his 2009 retirement announcement as the Spartans' head coach.
In appreciation for his continued athletics program involvement and impact, the Dick Tomey Class Act Award is presented each spring at the SAMMY awards sponsored by the San Jose State Student-Athletes Success Services (SASS) unit.
Richard Hastings Tomey was born on June 20, 1938 in Bloomington, Ind. Mr. Tomey graduated from DePauw University in 1960 where he played football and baseball.
In addition to his coaching accomplishments, he is a past president of the American Football Coaches Association (2009), was inducted in the DePauw University Hall of Fame in 1994 and a 1999 recipient of a "Provost Award" as the University of Arizona 's "Outstanding Teacher" – the first coach in the school's history to be so honored by the university's faculty.
A Celebration of Life will be held on Friday, May 31, 9:00 to 11:00 a.m., at the McKale Center on the University of Arizona campus.
In lieu of flowers, the Dick Tomey Legacy Fund has been established through the Positive Coaching Alliance (501c3). 100% of these funds will go directly to providing scholarships and programing for underserved youth in the markets where Dick spent the majority of his years in the community as the Head Football Coach.
Visit www.positivecoach.org/TomeyFund to designate the Hawaii, Arizona or Bay Area chapter as the beneficiary to the Dick Tomey Legacy Fund.