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Birthday Salute To Notre Dame Icon Ara Parseghian

Ara Parseghian is given a victory ride after his Notre Dame team ends No. 1 Texas' 30-game winning streak in the 1971 Cotton Bowl with a 24-11 victory.
Ara Parseghian is given a victory ride after his Notre Dame team ends No. 1 Texas' 30-game winning streak in the 1971 Cotton Bowl with a 24-11 victory. (Notre Dame Media Relations)

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Former Notre Dame athletics director Ed “Moose” Krause (1949-81) used to note there are three stages of life: youth, middle age, and, “Hey, you look good!”

Turning 94 this Sunday, Ara Parseghian looks better and better beyond physical features. With each passing year, Parseghian’s achievements at Notre Dame during his 11-year regime from 1964-74 become more revered.

In 1963, Notre Dame experienced its second two-win season in four years, and third in eight. The 34-45 record from 1956-63 had put the once most powerful football program in the land on the scrap heap of irrelevance and living on the perfume of a vanished flower.

Behind the leadership of Parseghian, it took only six games to return to the summit. During the 9-0 start in 1964, six teams that had defeated Notre Dame the previous year while limiting it to 50 points (8.3 points per game) were this time vanquished by the new Fighting Irish, who were averaging 30.6 points in those same encounters.

Not being able to hold a 17-0 halftime lead and controversial officiating cost Notre Dame a consensus national title in the finale at USC, but the Fighting Irish renaissance was in full force again.

Born on May 21, 1923, Parseghian broke the mold of all six previous non-interim Notre Dame coaches from 1918 through 1963. He was neither a graduate of the university nor Catholic. Yet he was evidence of how a “Notre Dame man” goes beyond possessing a degree from the school. His character, charisma, competitiveness, integrity, innovation and production placed him alongside Knute Rockne and Frank Leahy in the program’s pantheon when he retired at the alarmingly young age of 51 (current Irish head coach Brian Kelly turns 56 on Oct. 25).

Twice he won consensus national titles (1966 and 1973), and in his debut campaign in 1964, the Fighting Irish were awarded the MacArthur Bowl from the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame. Along with the Grantland Rice Trophy (awarded by the Football Writers Association of America), the Associated Press and Coaches’ poll, the MacArthur Bowl was/is one of four outlets recognized by the NCAA as a share of the national title.

Devastated by personal setbacks such as a daughter Karan getting afflicted with multiple sclerosis — she passed away at age 61 in 2012 — and losing three of his grandchildren, Michael, Christa and Marcia, to the rare but deadly Niemann-Pick Disease Type C from 1997-2005, Parseghian has continued to wage the courageous battle in all endeavors.

The oldest living national championship coach in college football — ahead of Florida State’s Bobby Bowden (who turns 88 this Nov. 8) — that bit of trivia is dwarfed by so many other on-the-field achievements. Here are just a few Parseghian “By The Numbers.”


0 Back-to-back games lost in the regular season during Parseghian’s 11 years at Notre Dame. Since the hiring of Knute Rockne in 1918, Parseghian is the lone Irish coach among the 14 who did not see that occur. (The Irish did lose the 1972 regular season finale at USC, and then the Orange Bowl to Nebraska, but consecutive losses in the regular season never happened.)


.8362 Winning percentage posted at Notre Dame with his 95-17-4 record. Since 1964, only two major college football coaches have who won a better percentage with at least 10 years at the same school: Alabama's Nick Saban is .857 in his 10 seasons so far from 2007-16, and Oklahoma’s Barry Switzer was .8368 from 1973-88.

Not too far behind Parseghian are Nebraska’s Tom Osborne (.8355 from 1973-97) and Alabama’s Bear Bryant (.8274 from 1964-82).


3 Passing combinations at Notre Dame under Parseghian that earned first-team All-America honors from the AP or UPI: John Huarte to Jack Snow (1964), Terry Hanratty to Jim Seymour (1968) and Joe Theismann to Tom Gatewood (1970). A fourth, Tom Clements to Pete Demmerle (1974), saw Clements finish fourth in the Heisman Trophy balloting and Demmerle earn consensus All-America recognition.

4-0 Record at Northwestern (1956-63) against Notre Dame, with the victories occurring in consecutive years from 1959-62. That is tied for the best winning percentage of any coach who has faced the Irish at least four times in his career since the 20th century. Saban was 3-0 versus Notre Dame from 1997-99 when he was at Michigan State, and it improved to 4-0 with his victory at Alabama in the Jan. 7, 2013 BCS Championship.


7 More wins Notre Dame posted in his first season (1964) than the Irish did the previous year without him. The improvement from 2-7 in 1963 to 9-1 in 1964 is the best in Irish football annals. No. 2 is the five-game improvements from 1956-57 (2-8 to 7-3) and 2001-02 (5-7 to 10-3).


14 The lowest finish ever in the Associated Press poll under his direction (1972). The Irish placed in the final AP Top 10 nine times in Parseghian’s 11 years, including seven times in the top 5 while twice capturing the consensus national title (1966 and 1973).


37.6 Points per game averaged by Parseghian’s 1968 unit — a school record since the Jesse Harper era commenced in 1913. The next closest is 37.2 by Lou Holtz’s 1992 team that finished 10-1-1.


50-2-1 Record of the five bowl opponents Parseghian played once Notre Dame rescinded its non-bowl policy in 1969. Both Texas teams he faced in the 1970 and 1971 Cotton Bowls were 10-0, and both Alabama outfits in the 1973 Sugar Bowl and 1975 Orange Bowl were 11-0. Nebraska in the 1973 Orange Bowl was merely 8-2-1. Parseghian posted a 3-2 mark against that quintet — 3-1 against the four unbeatens.


213.6 Yards yielded per season by the Notre Dame defense under Parseghian. The Irish never finished lower than 15th in the nation in total defense during his 11 seasons, and the worst total was 258.3 in 1972. Since 1981, the best figure at Notre Dame was 270.0 in 1996. The stellar unit from 2012 finished at 305.5.


350.2 Yards rushing per game averaged by the 1973 national champs. That qualifies as one of the unbreakable marks in Notre Dame football history. The closest any Irish team has come since then is 287.7 by Lou Holtz’s 12-1 outfit in 1989.


510.5 Yards of total offense averaged per game by Parseghian’s 10-1 team in 1970 — a record that still stands. Notre Dame averaged a balanced 257.8 yards rushing and 252.2 yards passing en route to a No. 2 finish in the AP poll, highlighted by the 24-11 upset of No. 1 Texas in the Cotton Bowl to end the Longhorns’ 30-game winning streak.

That Notre Dame team also averaged 92.4 plays per game — still a single season NCAA record, believe it or not.

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