He knew, of course.
Knew for some time. Knew since early January.
Still, LaVell
Edwards sat at the Mountain West Conference preseason football
meetings in Las Vegas last month and sidestepped questions
about his possible retirement like a BYU quarterback might a
blitzing linebacker.
"Obviously,
the day is getting closer," Edwards said. "Heck, one
of these days I'm going to die. When you get to be my age, you
run out of time. I'll address it somewhere down the
road."
Short road.
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BYU's
LaVell Edwards has 251 career victories.
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Edwards, 70,
announced last week he will walk away at season's end, walk
away from his own personal 29-year air raid, from the gaudy
records and offensive milestones. The man with the face of a
mortician and the heart of a lion had planned on becoming a
high school guidance counselor before BYU hired him.
Instead, he
transformed a nothing program into 20 conference titles, 20
bowl games and a national championship in 1984.
That's the stuff of
legend.
"He is a very
dear friend first, and that doesn't even begin to touch on the
professional respect I have for him," said San Diego
State coach Ted Tollner, who served on Edwards' staff in 1981
and has coached against him in the WAC and now Mountain West.
"He built a program that has basically dominated our
league for years. And what he did financially for that school,
leading in the expansion of their stadium and then selling out
65,000 seats each week ...
"Through it
all, he has been the one constant. His career is a tremendous
success story."
The alarm clocked
sounded in Provo this past spring, like it has for years now,
but the ring lacked its traditional high pitch. The batteries
were low. Those who saw Edwards daily spoke of a tired man, of
a 69-year-old body struggling to keep pace with its mind and
emotions.
It's a tad ironic,
really. BYU plays a schedule this season that resembles more
death march than anything. The Cougars open against defending
national champion Florida State in Saturday's Pigskin Classic.
Over the next five
weeks, BYU plays at Virginia and Syracuse and hosts
Mississippi State, while also mixing in conference games at
Air Force and against UNLV.
That alarm should
have stirred the entire state of Utah.
It didn't budge
Edwards.
"You could see
(Edwards) wasn't always himself the past several months,"
said senior safety Jared Lee. "He has been so consistent
for so long ... It's tough watching him leave, but we all know
this is what he wants. There are many other things he wants to
accomplish in his life."
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“
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I
just think it's the best time. My life has been very
good. I have my health. I've been very fortunate. ”
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—
BYU coach LaVell Edwards
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Heaven knows he
accomplished just about everything a coach possibly could.
Edwards is the third active winningest coach with 251
victories, sitting behind only Joe Paterno and Bobby Bowden,
whom he encounters tomorrow. BYU has passed for more than
100,000 yards under Edwards, just under 57 miles. He has
tutored and trotted out the likes of Jim McMahon, Steve Young
and Ty Detmer, a Heisman Trophy winner.
The game scoffed at
Edwards when he began throwing so much. He never laughed back.
He could have.
He is the gardener
and classic movie buff and doting grandfather and loving
husband of 49 years. Golf is his passion. Nature is his
escape. He is a spiritual man with a sharp wit and calm
demeanor.
And soon, he will
be gone from our view.
"I just think
it's the best time," Edwards said. "My life has been
very good. I have my health. I've been very fortunate."
There was this
theory once about BYU football:
Doug Scovil,
credited for advancing BYU's passing game in its toddler
stages, had just left as offensive coordinator to become head
coach at SDSU. Many predicted BYU's offense would never
recover, that the Cougars were speeding on a highway to
nowhere.
That was 20 years
ago.
Moral of the story:
Sometimes, it is just about one man. A man who is ahead of his
time and knows when it's time to leave.
LaVell Edwards
always was one step ahead of the game.
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